George Müller and the Unwavering Father of Lights
In nineteenth-century Bristol, England, George Müller opened his orphanages with nothing but prayer and an unshakable conviction about the character of God. One morning in 1844, three hundred children sat at tables set with empty plates and empty cups. There was no food in the house, not a single penny in the funds. Müller bowed his head and gave thanks for what God would provide.
Minutes later, a knock came at the door. A baker stood outside, explaining he had been unable to sleep the night before and felt compelled to bake enough bread for every child. Before Müller could carry the loaves inside, a milk cart broke down directly in front of the orphanage. The driver, unable to make his deliveries before the milk spoiled, asked if the children could use it.
Over sixty years, Müller cared for over ten thousand orphans. He never once asked a human being for money. He recorded fifty thousand specific answers to prayer in his journals — each one a gift descending from the same Source.
James reminds us that every good and perfect gift comes down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no variation or shadow of turning. Müller's entire life was built on that single truth: the God who gives today is the same God who gave yesterday and will give tomorrow. The Almighty does not flicker. His generosity has no off season. What He begins, He sustains — steadily, faithfully, without shadow.
Scripture References
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