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GEORGE MUELLER OF BRISTOL
CHAPTER 5
The Pulpit And The Pastorate
No work for God surpasses in dignity and
responsibility the Christian ministry. It is at once the consummate flower of
the divine planting, the priceless dower of His church, and through it works
the power of God for salvation.
Though George Mueller had begun his "candidacy for holy orders" as an
unconverted man, seeking simply a human calling with a hope of a lucrative
living, he had heard God's summons to a divine vocation, and he was from time
to time preaching the Gospel, but not in any settled field.
While at Teignmouth, early in 1830, preaching by invitation, he was asked to
take the place of the minister who was about to leave, but he replied that he
felt at that time called of God, not to a stationary charge, but rather to a
sort of itinerant evangelism. During this time he preached at Shaldon for
Henry Craik, thus coming into closer contact with this brother, to whom his
heart became knit in bonds of love and sympathy which grew stronger as the
acquaintance became more intimate.
Certain hearers at Teignmouth, and among them some preachers, disliked his
sermons, albeit they were owned of God; and this caused him to reflect upon
the probable causes of this opposition, and whether it was any indication of
his duty. He felt that they doubtless looked for outward graces of oratory in
a preacher, and hence were not attracted to a foreigner whose speech had no
rhetorical charms and who could not even use English with fluency. But he
felt sure of a deeper cause for their dislike, especially as he was compelled
to notice that, the summer previous, when he himself was less spiritually
minded and had less insight into the truth, the same parties who now opposed
him were pleased with him. His final conclusion was that the Lord meant to
work through him at Teignmouth, but that Satan was acting, as usual, the part
of a hinderer, and stirring up brethren themselves to oppose the truth. And
as, notwithstanding the opposers, the wish that he should minister at the
chapel was expressed so often and by so many, he determined to remain for a
time until he was openly rejected as God's witness, or had some clear divine
leading to another field of labour.
He announced this purpose, at the same time plainly stating that, should they
withhold salary, it would not affect his decision, inasmuch as he did not
preach as s hireling of man, but as the servant of God, and would willingly
commit to Him the provision for his temporal needs. At the same time,
however, he reminded them that it was alike their duty and privilege to
minister in carnal things to those who served them in things spiritual, and
that while he did not desire a gift, he did desire fruit that might abound to
their account.
These experiences at Teignmouth were typical: "Some believed the things which
were spoken, and some believed not;" some left the chapel, while others
stayed; and some were led and fed, while others maintained a cold
indifference, if they did not exhibit an open hostility. But the Lord stood
by him and strengthened him, setting His seal upon his testimony; and Jehovah
Jireh also moved two brethren, unasked, to supply all the daily wants of His
servant. After a while the little church of eighteen members unanimously
called the young preacher to the pastorate, and he consented to abide with
them for a season, without abandoning his original intention of going from
place to place as the Lord might lead. A stipend, of fifty-five pounds
annually, was offered him, which somewhat increased as the church membership
grew; and so the university student of Halle was settled in his first pulpit
and pastorate.
While at Sidmouth, preaching, in April, 1830, three believing sisters held in
his presence a conversation about "believers' baptism," which proved
the suggestion of another important step in his life, which has a wider
bearing than at first is apparent.
They naturally asked his opinion on the subject about which they were
talking, and he replied that, having been baptized as a child, he saw no need
of being baptized again. Being further asked if he had ever yet prayerfully
searched the word of God as to its testimony in this matter, he frankly
confessed that he had not.
At once, with unmistakable plainness of speech and with rare fidelity, one of
these sisters in Christ promptly said: "I entreat you, then, never again
to speak any more about it till you have done so."
Such a reply George Mueller was not the man either to resent or to resist. He
was too honest and conscientious to dismiss without due reflection any
challenge to search the oracles of God for their witness upon any given
question. Moreover, if, at that very time, his preaching was emphatic in any
direction, it was in the boldness with which he insisted that all pulpit
teaching and Christian practice must be subjected to one great test,
namely, the touch-stone of the Word of God. Already an Elijah in
spirit, his great aim was to repair the broken-down altar of the Lord to
expose and rebuke all that hindered a thoroughly scriptural worship and
service, and, if possible, to restore apostolic simplicity of doctrine and
life.
As he thought and prayed about this matter, he was forced to admit to himself
that he had never yet earnestly examined the Scriptures for their teaching as
to the position and relation of baptism in the believer's life, nor had he
even prayed for light upon it. He had nevertheless repeatedly spoken against
believers' baptism, and so he saw it to be possible that he might himself
have been opposing the teaching of the Word. He therefore determined to study
the subject until he should reach a final, satisfactory, and scriptural
conclusion; and thenceforth, whether led to defend infant baptism or
believers' baptism, to do it only on scriptural grounds.
The mode of study which he followed was characteristically simple, thorough,
and business-like, and was always pursued afterward. He first sought from God
the Spirit's teaching that his eyes might be opened to the Word's witness,
and his mind illumined; then he set about a systematic examination of the New
Testament from beginning to end. So far as possible he sought absolutely to
rid himself of all bias of previous opinion or practice, prepossession or
prejudice; he prayed and endeavoured to be free from the influence of human
tradition, popular custom, and churchly sanction, or that more subtle
hindrance, personal pride in his own consistency. He was humble enough
to be willing to retract any erroneous teaching and renounce any false
position, and to espouse that wise maxim: "Don't be consistent, but
simply be true."
Whatever may have been the case with others who claim to have examined the
same question for themselves, the result in his case was that he came to the
conclusion, and, as he believed, from the word of God and the Spirit of God,
that none but believers are the proper subjects of baptism, and that only
immersion is its proper mode. Two passages of Scripture were very marked in
the prominence which they had in compelling him to these conclusions, namely:
Acts viii. 36-38, and Romans vi. 3-5. The case of the Ethiopian eunuch
strongly convinced him that baptism is proper, only as the act of a believer
confessing Christ; and the passage in the Epistle to the Romans equally
satisfied him that only immersion in water can express the typical burial
with Christ and resurrection with Him, there and elsewhere made so prominent.
He intended no assault upon brethren who hold other views, when he thus
plainly stated in his journal the honest and unavoidable convictions to which
he came; but he was too loyal both to the word of God and to his own
conscience to withhold his views when so carefully and prayerfully arrived at
through the searching of the Scriptures.
Conviction compelled action, for in him there was no spirit of compromise;
and he was accordingly promptly baptized. Years after, in reviewing his
course, he records the solemn conviction that "of all revealed truths, not
one is more clearly revealed in the Scriptures―not even the doctrine of
justification by faith―and that the subject has only become obscured by men
not having been willing to take the Scriptures alone to decide the
point."
He also bears witness incidentally that not one true friend in the Lord had
ever turned his back upon him in consequence of his baptism, as he supposed
some would have done; and that almost all such friends had, since then, been
themselves baptized. It is true that in one way he suffered some pecuniary
loss through this step taken in obedience to conviction, but the Lord did not
suffer him to be ultimately the loser even in this respect, for He
bountifully made up to him any such sacrifice, even in things that pertain to
this life. He concludes this review of his course by adding that through his
example many others were led both to examine the question of baptism anew and
to submit themselves to the ordinance.
Such experiences as these suggest the honest question whether there is not
imperative need of subjecting all current religious customs and practices to
the one test of conformity to the scripture pattern. Our Lord sharply rebuked
the Pharisees of His day for making "the commandment of God of none effect by
their tradition," and, after giving one instance, He added, "and many other
such like things do ye."*
*Matthew xv. 6, Mark vii 8.
It is very easy for doctrines and practices to gain acceptance, which are the outgrowth of ecclesiasticism, and neither have sanction in the word of God, nor will bear the searching light of its testimony. Cyprian has forewarned us that even antiquity is not authority, but may be only vetustas erroris―the old age of error. What radical reforms would be made in modern worship, teaching and practice,―in the whole conduct of disciples and the administration of the church of God if the one final criterion of all judgment were:
"What do the Scriptures teach?"
And what revolutions in our own lives as
believers might take place, if we should first put every notion of truth and
custom of life to this one test of scripture authority, and then with the
courage of conviction dare to do according to that word―counting no cost,
but studying to show ourselves approved of God! Is it possible that there are
any modern disciples who "reject the commandment of God that they may keep
their own tradition"?
This step, taken by Mr. Mueller as to baptism, was only a precursor of many
others, all of which, as he believed, were according to that Word which, as
the lamp to the believer's feet, is to throw light upon his path.
During this same summer of 1830 the further study of the Word satisfied him
that, though there is no direct command so to do, the scriptural and
apostolic practice was to break bread every Lord's day. (Acts
xx 7, etc.) Also, that the Spirit of God should have unhindered liberty to
work through any believer according to the gifts He had bestowed, seemed to
him plainly taught in Romans xii.; 1 Cor. xii.; Ephes. iv., etc. These
conclusions likewise this servant of God sought to translate at once into
conduct, and such conformity brought increasing spiritual prosperity.
Conscientious misgivings, about the same time, ripened into settled
convictions that he could no longer, upon the same principle of obedience to
the word of God, consent to receive any stated salary as a minister of
Christ. For this latter position, which so influenced his life, he assigns
the following grounds, which are here stated as showing the basis of his
life-long attitude:
1. A stated salary implies a fixed sum, which cannot well be paid without a fixed income through pew-rentals or some like source of revenue. This seemed plainly at war with the teaching of the Spirit of God in James ii. 1-6, since the poor brother cannot afford as good sittings as the rich, thus introducing into church assemblies invidious distinctions and respect of persons, and so encouraging the caste spirit.
2. A fixed pew-rental may at times become, even to the willing disciple, a burden. He who would gladly contribute to a pastor's support, if allowed to do so according to his ability and at his own convenience, might be oppressed by the demand to pay a stated sum at a stated time. Circumstances so change that one who has the same cheerful mind as before may be unable to give as formerly, and thus be subjected to painful embarrassment and humiliation if constrained to give a fixed sum.
3. The whole system tends to the bondage of the servant of Christ. One must be unusually faithful and intrepid if he feels no temptation to keep back or in some degree modify his message in order to please men, when he remembers that the very parties, most open to rebuke and most liable to offence, are perhaps the main contributors toward his salary.
Whatever others may think of such reasons as
these, they were so satisfactory to his mind that he frankly and promptly
announced them to his brethren; and thus, as early as the autumn of 1830,
when just completing his twenty-fifth year, he took a position from which he
never retreated, that he would thenceforth receive no fixed salary for any
service rendered to God's people. While calmly assigning scriptural grounds
for such a position he, on the same grounds, urged voluntary offerings,
whether of money or other means of support, as the proper acknowledgment of
service rendered by God's minister, and as a sacrifice acceptable,
well-pleasing to God. A little later, seeing that, when such voluntary gifts
came direct from the givers personally, there was a danger that some might
feel self-complacent over the Iargeness of the amount given by them, and
others equally humbled by the smallness of their offerings, with consequent
damage to both classes of givers he took a step further: he had a box put
up in the chapel, over which was written, that whoever had a desire to do
something for his support might put such an offering therein as ability and
disposition might direct. His intention was, that thus the act might be
wholly as in God's sight, without the risk of a sinful pride or false
humility.
He further felt that, to be entirely consistent, he should ask no help
from man, even in bearing necessary costs of travel in the Lord's
service, nor even state his needs beforehand in such a way as indirectly to
appeal for aid. It's of these methods he conceived to be forms of trusting in
an arm of flesh, going to man for help instead of going at once, always and
only, to the Lord. And he adds: "To come to this conclusion before God
required more grace than to give up my salary."
These successive steps are here recorded explicitly and in their exact order
because they lead up directly to the ultimate goal of his life-work and
witness. Such decisions were vital links connecting this remarkable man and
his "Father's business," upon which he was soon more fully to enter; and they
were all necessary to the fulness of the world-wide witness which he was to
bear to a prayer-hearing God and the absolute safety of trusting in Him and
in Him alone.
On October 7, 1830, George Mueller, in finding a wife, found a good thing and
obtained new favour from the Lord. Miss Mary Groves, sister of the
self-denying dentist whose surrender of all things for the mission field had
so impressed him years before, was married to this man of God, and for forty
blessed years proved an help meet for him. It was almost, if not quite, an
ideal union, for which he continually thanked God; and, although her kingdom
was one which came not "with observation," the sceptre of her influence was
far wider in its sway than will ever be appreciated by those who were
strangers to her personal and domestic life. She was a rare woman and her
price was above rubies. The heart of her husband safely trusted in her, and
the great family of orphans who were to her as children rise up even to this
day to call her blessed.
Married life has often its period of estrangement, even when, temporary
alienation yields to a deeper love, as the parties become more truly wedded
by the assimilation of their inmost being to one another. But to Mr. and Mrs.
Mueller there never came many such experiences of even temporary alienation.
From the first, love grew, and with it, mutual confidence and trust. One of
the earliest ties which bound these two in one was the bond of a common
self-denial. Yielding literal obedience to Luke xii.33, they sold what little
they had and gave alms, henceforth laying up no treasures on earth (Matthew
vi. 19-34; xix. 21.) The step then taken―accepting, for Christ's sake,
voluntary poverty―was never regretted, but rather increasingly rejoiced in;
how faithfully it was followed in the same path of continued self-sacrifice
will sufficiently appear when it is remembered that, nearly sixty-eight years
afterward, George Mueller passed suddenly into the life beyond, a poor man;
his will, when admitted to probate, showing his entire personal property,
under oath, to be but one hundred and sixty pounds! And even that would not
have been in his possession had there been no daily need of requisite
comforts for the body and of tools for his work. Part of this amount was in
money, shortly before received and not yet laid out for his Master, but held
at His disposal. Nothing, even to the clothes he wore, did he treat as his
own. He was a consistent steward.
This final farewell to all earthly possessions, in 1830, left this newly
married husband and wife to look only to the Lord. Thenceforth they were to
put to ample daily test both their faith in the Great Provider and the
faithfulness of the Great Promiser. It may not be improper here to
anticipate, what is yet to be more fully recorded, that, from day to day and
hour to hour, during more than threescore years, George Mueller was enabled
to set to his seal that God is true. If few men have ever been permitted so
to trace in the smallest matters God's care over His children, it is partly
because few have so completely abandoned themselves to that care. He dared to
trust Him, with whom the hairs of our head are all numbered, and who
touchingly reminds us that He cares for what has been quaintly called "the
odd sparrow." Matthew records (x. 29) how two sparrows are sold for a
farthing, and Luke (xii. 6) how five are sold for two farthings; and so it
would appear that, when two farthings were offered, an odd sparrow was thrown
in, as of so little value that it could be given away with the other four.
And yet even for that one sparrow, not worth taking into account in the
bargain, God cares. Not one of them is forgotten before God, or falls to the
ground without Him. With what force then comes the assurance:
"Fear ye not therefore; ye are of more value than many sparrows"!
So George Mueller found it to be. He was
permitted henceforth to know as never before, and as few others have ever
learned, how truly God may be approached as "Thou that hearest prayer." God
can keep His trusting children not only from falling but from stumbling; for,
during all those after-years that spanned the lifetime of two generations,
there was no drawing back. Those precious promises, which in faith and hope
were '"laid hold" of in 1830, were "held fast" until the end. (Heb. vi. 18,
x. 23.) And the divine faithfulness proved a safe anchorage―ground in the
most prolonged and violent tempests. The anchor of hope, sure and steadfast,
and entering into that within the veil, was never dragged from its secure
hold on God. In fifty thousand cases, Mr. Mueller calculated that he could
trace distinct answers to definite prayers; and in multitudes of instances in
which God's care was not definitely traced, it was day by day like an
encompassing but invisible presence or atmosphere of life and strength.
On August 9, 1831, Mrs. Mueller gave birth to a still-born babe, and for six
weeks remained seriously ill. Her husband meanwhile laments that his heart
was so cold and carnal, and his prayers often so hesitating and formal; and
he detects, even behind his zeal for God, most unspiritual frames. He
especially chides himself for not having more seriously thought of the peril
of child-bearing, so as to pray more earnestly for his wife; and he saw
clearly that the prospect of parenthood had not been rejoiced in as a
blessing, but rather as implying a new burden and hindrance in the Lord's
work.
While this man of God lays bare his heart in his journal, the reader must
feel that "as in water face answereth to face, so the heart of man to man."
How many a servant of God has no more exalted idea of the divine privilege of
a sanctified parenthood! A wife and a child are most precious gifts of God
when received, in answer to prayer, from His hand. Not only are they not
hindrances, but they are helps, most useful in fitting a servant of Christ
for certain parts of his work for which no other preparation is so adequate.
They serve to teach him many most valuable lessons and to round out his
character into a far more symmetrical beauty and serviceableness. And when it
is remembered how a godly association in holiness and usefulness may
thus be supplied, and above all a godly succession through many
generations, it will be seen how wicked is the spirit that treats holy
wedlock and its fruits in offspring, with lightness and contempt. Nor let us
forget that promise:
"If two of you agree on earth
as touching any thing that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of My
Father which is in heaven."
(Matt. xviii. 19.)
The Greek word for "agree" is symphonize,
and suggests a musical harmony where chords are tuned to the same key and
struck by a master hand. Consider what a blessed preparation for such
habitual symphony in prayer is to be found in the union of a husband and wife
in the Lord! May it not be that to this the Spirit refers when He bids
husband and wife dwell in unity, as "heirs together of the grace of life,"
and adds, "that your prayers be not hindered." (1 Peter iii. 7.)
God used this severe lesson for permanent blessing to George Mueller. He
showed him how open was his heart to the subtle power of selfishness and
carnality, and how needful was this chastisement to teach him the sacredness
of marital life and parental responsibility. Henceforth he judged himself,
that he might not be judged of the Lord." (1 Cor. xi. 31.)
A crisis like his wife's critical illness created a demand for much extra
expense, for which no provision had been made, not through carelessness and
improvidence, but upon principle. Mr. Mueller held that to lay by in store is
inconsistent with full trust in God, who in such case would send us to our
hoardings before answering prayer for more supplies. Experience in this
emergency justified his faith; for not only were all unforeseen wants
supplied, but even the delicacies and refreshments needful for the sick and
weak; and the two medical attendants graciously declined all remuneration for
services which extended through six weeks. Thus was there given of the Lord
more than could have been laid up against this season of trial, even had the
attempt been made.
The principle of committing future wants to the Lord's care, thus acted upon
at this time, he and his wife consistently followed so long as they lived and
worked together. Experience confirmed them in the conviction that a life of
trust forbids laying up treasures against unforeseen needs, since with God
no emergency is unforeseen and no want unprovided for; and He may be as
implicitly trusted for extraordinary needs as for our common daily bread.
Yet another law, kindred to this and thoroughly inwrought into Mr. Mueller's
habit of life, was never to contract debt, whether for personal
purposes or the Lord's work. This matter was settled on scriptural grounds
once for all (Romans xiii. 8), and he and his wife determined if need be to
suffer starvation rather than to buy anything without paying for it when
bought. Thus they always knew how much they had to buy with, and what they
had left to give to others or use for others' wants.
There is yet another law of life early framed into Mr. Mueller's personal
decalogue. He regarded any money which was in his hands already designated
for, as appropriated to, a specific use, as not his to use, even temporarily,
for any other ends. Thus, though he was often reduced to the lowest point
of temporal supplies, he took no account of any such funds set apart for
other outlays or due for other purposes. Thousands of times he was in straits
where such diversion of funds for a time seemed the only and the easy way
out, but where this would only have led him into new embarrassments. This
principle, intelligently adopted, firmly adhered to, that what properly
belongs to a particular branch of work, or has been already put aside for a
certain use, even though yet in hand, is not to be reckoned on as available
for any other need, however pressing. Trust in God implies such knowledge on
His part of the exact circumstances that He will not constrain us to any such
misappropriation. Mistakes, most serious and fatal, have come from lack of
conscience as well as of faith in such exigencies―drawing on one fund to
meet the overdraught upon another, hoping afterward to replace what is thus
withdrawn. A well-known college president had nearly involved the institution
of which he was the head, in bankruptcy, and himself in worse moral ruin, all
the result of one error―money given for endowing certain chairs had been
used for current expenses until public confidence had been almost hopelessly
impaired.
Thus a life of faith. must be no less a life of conscience. Faith and trust
in God, and truth and faithfulness toward man, walked side by side in this
life-journey in unbroken agreement.
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