George Müller's Ten Thousand Answers
In 1836, George Müller opened an orphanage on Wilson Street in Bristol, England, with exactly zero pounds in his operating fund. He had made one audacious decision: he would never ask a single person for money. He would only pray.
Over the next six decades, Müller cared for over ten thousand orphans. The stories of provision read like a catalog of impossibilities. One morning, the children sat at tables with empty plates and empty cups. Müller bowed his head and thanked God for the breakfast they did not have. Minutes later, a baker knocked at the door — he had felt compelled to bake extra bread through the night. A milk cart broke down directly outside the orphanage, and the driver offered his entire load before it spoiled.
Müller recorded over fifty thousand specific answers to prayer in his journals. Not vague feelings of comfort, but tangible, trackable gifts — food arriving at the precise hour of need, funds appearing on the exact day rent was due.
James 1:17 tells us that every good and perfect gift comes down from the Father of heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows. Müller staked everything on this verse and found it unshakable. The Father who provided bread on a cold Bristol morning is the same yesterday, today, and forever — constant as the stars He set in place, generous beyond what any ledger could record.
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