The Ledger of Ten Thousand Answers
George Müller of Bristol kept meticulous records. Over sixty years of caring for more than ten thousand orphans in Victorian England, he documented over fifty thousand specific answers to prayer. Each entry told the same story: a need arose, Müller prayed, and provision came.
One morning in 1838, three hundred children sat down to breakfast tables with empty plates and empty cups. Müller bowed his head and thanked God for what He was about to provide. Before he finished praying, a baker knocked at the door with enough fresh bread for every child. Minutes later, a milk cart broke down directly outside the orphanage, and the driver offered his entire load rather than let it spoil.
Müller never once sent out a fundraising appeal. He never publicized the orphanages' needs to anyone except the Father of Lights. And for six decades, that Father proved utterly consistent — no variation, no shadow of turning.
James reminds us that every good and perfect gift comes down from above, from a Giver who does not shift like the shadows. Müller's prayer journals — those thousands of entries spanning a lifetime — stand as one long testimony to a God who never wavers, never dims, never forgets His children. The same Almighty who fed three hundred orphans on a Bristol morning holds your need in His unchanging hands this very hour.
Scripture References
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