Answers to Prayer by
George Müller is part of the Read & Reflect With the Classics Series (I am
reviewing the hardcover version) which provides thought provoking questions and
also prayers at the end of each chapter.
Müller's book details various accounts of God's all sufficient grace in
the works that God had prepared for him to do.
The way that Mueller
approached the ministries that God graciously gave him is very unique compared
to most present day Christian ministries (and perhaps most ministries in
Müller's day as well). Ministries today
are very focused and reliant upon, money.
They hold fundraising drives,
have commercials on the radio asking for people's support, and some will send
tons of letters and emails begging for monetary help. I think of one ministry
in particular, which, although its founders believe in God's absolute
sovereignty, they contradict their belief by implying that their ministry
cannot continue without the help of people, that "your support makes
ministry happen".
Many ministries act
as if they are the most important ministry in God's Kingdom and that if you do
not give money and they expire, that God's Word will not be given out any
more. Muller did not act like that. He knew that God did not need human beings in
order to get His work done.
Müller took a more
faith-based approach, relying upon God rather than upon people for help. He would not ask people for help with
ministries, he asked God, period. And
God provided. "Never since the Orphan work has been in
existence have I asked one single human being for any help for this work; and
yet, unasked for, simply in answer to prayer, from so many parts of the world,
as has been stated, the donations have come in, and that very frequently at a
time of the greatest need."
He also came to the
conclusion that one should not rely on people's promises to give money and that
one should not even think about those promises:
"Now this morning it came to my mind, that such promises ought to be
valued, in a certain sense, as nothing, i.e., that the mind ought never for a
moment to be directed to them, but to the living God, and to the living God
only. I saw that such promises ought not
to be of the value of one farthing, so far as it regards to thinking about them
for help." This is quite a
contrast to ministries who beg for pledges of money, and put large or regular
donors names up on plaques. They make
more of the people, more of the tools,
that God uses than the Supplier Himself!
God is the One who supplies all our need, and though he may use people
to do it, they are but channels (think "Channels Only"). God doesn't need people, or their money, AT
ALL in order to supply our needs!
As Müller puts it, "Earthly friends may lose their ability to help
us, however much they desire so to do; but He remains throughout eternity the
Infinitely Rich One. Earthly friends may
have their minds after a time diverted to other objects, and, as they cannot
help everywhere, much as they may desire it, they may, though reluctantly, have
to discontinue to help us; but He is able, in all directions, though the
requirements were multiplied a million times, to supply all that can possibly
be needed, and does it with delight, where His work is carried on, and where He
is confided in. Earthly friends may be
removed by death, and thus we may lose their help, but He lives forever, He
cannot die. In this latter point of
view, I have especially, during the past 40 years, in connection with this
Institution, seen the blessedness of trusting in the Living God alone. Not one nor two, nor even five nor ten, but
many more, who once helped me much with their means, have been removed by
death; but have the operations of the Institution been stopped on that
account? No. And how came this? Because I trusted in God,
and in God alone."
Müller would at
times give updates on God's provision for the ministries in times of great
need, but this was to encourage Christians in the faith, not to work on their
emotions to make them feel compelled to give supplies. At least one time Muller and his fellow
workers put off giving an update because at the time they were, from a human
perspective, in desperate straits, and they did not want other people to know
it, wanting to rely solely on God for help.
Many ministries want
God to give them a yearly supply rather than just their daily bread. The ministries that God gave Müller charge
over lived day by day in reliance upon God's supply, many times literally being
given the means for their daily needs DAILY on the day they were needed, rather
than in advance.
I really liked this
book. The only thing that I didn't quite like were the prayers that were added
at the end of each chapter. I would
rather that they have been commentary rather than prewritten ways that we can
use to talk to God. Yes, we do not know how to pray as we ought, but neither does the person who wrote those
prayers. Though I don't think that using
other people's prayers is necessarily wrong, Christians ought not to rely upon
other Christians to write their prayers for them, we have the best Helper of
all in the Holy Spirit who is our Interceder in our prayers (Romans
8:26-27). There are good concepts in
them though, "You provide what I need, and
if I don't have it, I can absolutely trust that I don't need it. "
Before I end, and I
really need to end because this is quite long, at the end of the book there is
an appendix containing an article by Muller on
"The Careful and Consecutive Reading of the Holy Scriptures". It is an excellent read, and describes
Muller's goal in writing this book. He
advocates the consistent daily reading of the Scriptures, over and above any
other book. He describes how he once
slacked in that area and how he had gotten into the habit of reading other
books, including Christian ones, instead of the Scripture. "…thus,
like many believers, I practically preferred, for the first four years of my
divine life, the works of uninspired men to the oracles of the living
God." As he put it, "God himself has condescended to become an
author" and this is the "book
of books" containing all that we ought to know! We should not value Christian books
(including this one) above the Scriptures, the Scriptures themselves should be
our delight.
Many thanks to the
folks at B&H Publishers for sending me a free review copy of this book (My
review did not have to be favorable).
My rating: 5 out of 5 stars
*****
This book may be purchased at (among other websites) the Christian Book Distributors website and Amazon.com
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