George Müller's Breakfast Table
In 1838, George Müller sat at a long wooden table in his Bristol orphanage with three hundred children. The plates were empty. The cupboards held nothing. Yet Müller bowed his head and thanked the Father for the meal they were about to receive.
Minutes later, a knock came at the door. A local baker stood outside, explaining that he had been unable to sleep the night before and felt compelled to bake fresh bread for the orphans. Before the children could finish their first slices, a milk cart broke down directly in front of the orphanage. The driver, unable to continue his route, offered all his milk rather than let it spoil.
Over sixty years, Müller cared for more than ten thousand orphans without ever sending a single fundraising letter. He recorded over fifty thousand specific answers to prayer in his journals — coal delivered on the coldest mornings, funds arriving within hours of a need, shoes showing up the day before a child's pair wore through. Each provision traced back to the same source.
James reminds us that every good and perfect gift comes down from the Father of heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows. Müller's breakfast tables proved it morning after morning. The Almighty who provided bread in Bristol still provides today — not randomly, not reluctantly, but with the steady faithfulness of a Father whose generosity never flickers, never fades, and never fails.
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