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GEORGE MUELLER OF BRISTOL
CHAPTER 13
Following The Pillar Of Cloud And Fire
"THE steps of a good man are ordered by the
Lord." (Psalm xxxvii.23.) Some one quaintly adds, "Yes, and the stops,
too!" The pillar of cloud and fire is a symbol of that divine leadership
which guides both as to forward steps and intervals of rest. Mr. Mueller
found it blessed to follow, one step at a time, as God ordered his way, and
to stand still and wait when He seemed to call for a halt.
At the end of May, 1843, a crisis was reached, which was a new example of the
experiences to which faith is liable in the walk with God; and a new
illustration of the duty and delight of depending upon Him in everything and
for everything, habitually waiting upon Him, and trusting in Him to remove
all hindrances in the way of service.
Some eighteen months previously, a German lady from W?temberg had called to
consult him as to her own plans, and, finding her a comparative stranger to
God, he spoke to her about her spiritual state, and gave her the first two
parts of his Narrative. The perusal of these pages was so blest to her that
she was converted to God, and felt moved to translate the Narrative into her
own tongue as a channel of similar blessing to other hearts.
This work of translation she partially accomplished, though somewhat
imperfectly; and the whole occurrence impressed Mr. Mueller as an indication
that God was once more leading him in the direction of Germany, for another
season of labour in his native land. Much prayer deepened his persuasion that
he had not misread God's signal, and that His time had now fully come. He
records some of the motives which led to this conclusion.
1. First, he yearned to encourage believing brethren who for conscience' sake had felt constrained to separate themselves from the state churches, and meet for worship in such conditions as would more accord with New Testament principles, and secure greater edification.
2. Being a German himself, and therefore familiar with their language, customs, and habits of thought, he saw that he was fitted to wield a larger influence among his fellow countrymen than otherwise.
3. He was minded to publish his Narrative in his own tongue wherein he was born, not so much in the form of a mere translation, as of an independent record of his life's experiences such as would be specially suited to its new mission.
4. An effectual door was opened before him, and more widely than ever, especially at Stuttgart; and although there were many adversaries, they only made his help the more needful to those whose spiritual welfare was in peril.
5. A distinct burden was laid on his heart, as from the Lord, which prayer, instead of relieving, increased―a burden which he felt without being able to explain―so that the determination to visit his native land gave him a certain peace which he did not have when he thought of remaining at home.
To avoid mistake, with equal care he records the counter-arguments.
1. The new orphan house, No. 4, was about to be opened, and his presence was desirable if not needful.
2. A few hundred pounds were needed, to be left with his helpers, for current expenses in his absence.
3. Money was also required for travelling expenses of himself and his wife, whose health called for a change.
4. Funds would be needful to publish four thousand copies of his Narrative and avoid too high a market-price.
5. A matron for the new orphan house was not yet found, suitable for the position.
In this careful weighing of matters many sincere disciples fail, prone to be impatient of delay in making decisions. Impulse too often sways, and self-willed plans betray into false and even disastrous mistakes. Life is too precious to risk one such failure. There is given us a promise of deep meaning:
"The meek will He guide in
judgment;
And the meek will He teach His way."
(Psalm xxv.9.)
Here is a double emphasis upon meekness
as a condition of such guidance and teaching. Meekness is a real
preference for God's will. Where this holy habit of mind exists, the
whole being becomes so open to impression that, without any outward sign or
token, there is an inward recognition and choice of the will of God.
God guides, not by a visible sign, but by swaying the judgment. To
wait before Him, weighing candidly in the scales every consideration for or
against a proposed course, and in readiness to see which way the
preponderance lies, is a frame of mind and heart in which one is fitted to be
guided; and God touches the scales and makes the balance to sway as He will.
But our hands must be off the scales, otherwise we need expect no
interposition of His in our favour. To return to the figure with which this
chapter starts, the meek soul simply and humbly waits, and watches the
moving of the Pillar.
One sure sign of this spirit of meekness is the entire restfulness
with which apparent obstacles to any proposed plan or course are regarded.
Then waiting and wishing only to know and do God's will, hindrances will give
no anxiety, but a sort of pleasure, as affording a new opportunity for divine
interposition. If it is the Pillar of God we are following, the Red Sea will
not dismay us, for it will furnish but another scene for the display of the
power of Him who can make the waters to stand up as an heap, and to become a
wall about us as we go through the sea on dry ground.
Mr. Mueller had learned this rare lesson, and in this case he says:
"I had a secret satisfaction in the greatness of the difficulties which were in the way. So far from being cast down on account of them, they delighted my soul; for I only desired to do the will of the Lord in this matter."
Here is revealed another secret of holy
serving. To him who sets the Lord always before him, and to whom the will of
God is his delight, there pertains a habit of soul which, in advance settles
a thousand difficult and perplexing questions.
The case in hand is an illustration of the blessing found in such meek
preference for God's pleasure. If it were the will of the Lord that this
Continental tour should be undertaken at that time, difficulties need not
cast him down; for the difficulties could not be of God; and, if not
of God, they should give him no unrest, for, in answer to prayer, they would
all be removed. If, on the other hand, this proposed visit to the Continent
were not God's plan at all, but only the fruit of self-will; if some secret,
selfish, and perhaps subtle motive were controlling, then indeed hindrances
might well be interferences of God, designed to stay his steps. In the latter
case, Mr. Mueller rightly judged that difficulties in the way would naturally
vex and annoy him; that he would not like to look at them, and would seek to
remove them by his own efforts. Instead of giving him an inward satisfaction
as affording God an opportunity to intervene in his behalf, they would arouse
impatience and vexation, preventing self-will from carrying out its own
purposes.
Such discriminations have only to be stated to any spiritual mind, to have
their wisdom at once apparent. Any believing child of God may safely gauge
the measure of his surrender to the will of God, in any matter, by the
measure of impatience he feels at the obstacles in the way; for, in
proportion as self-will sways him, whatever seems to oppose or hinder his
plans will disturb or annoy; and, instead of quietly leaving all such
hindrances and obstacles to the Lord, to deal with them as He pleases, in His
own way and time, the wilful disciple will, impatiently and in the energy of
the flesh, set himself to remove them by his own scheming and struggling, and
he will brook no delay.
Whenever Satan acts as a hinderer (1 Thess. ii.18) the obstacles which he
puts in our way need not dismay us; God permits them to delay or deter us for
the time, only as a test of patience and faith, and the satanic hinderer will
be met by a divine Helper who will sweep away all his obstacles, as with the
breath of His mouth.
Mr. Mueller felt this, and he waited on God for light and help. But, after
forty days' writing, the hindrances, instead of decreasing, seemed rather to
increase. Much more money spent than was sent in; instead of finding another
suitable matron, a sister, already at work, was probably about to withdraw,
so that two vacancies would need to be filled instead of one. Yet his rest
and peace of mind were unbroken. Being persuaded that he was yielded up to
the will of God, faith not only held him to his purpose, but saw the
obstacles already surmounted, so that he gave thanks in advance. Because
Caleb "followed the Lord fully," even the giant sons of Anak with their
walled cities and chariots of iron had for him no terrors. Their defence was
departed from them, but the Lord was with His believing follower, and made
him strong to drive them out and take possession of their very stronghold as
his own inheritance.
During this period of patient waiting, Mr. Mueller remarked to a believing
sister:
"Well, my soul is at peace. The Lord's time is not yet come; but, when it is come, He will blow away all these obstacles, as chaff is blown away before the wind."
A quarter of an hour later, a gift of
seven hundred pounds became available for the ends in view, so that three of
the five hindrances to this Continental tour were at once removed. All
travelling expenses for himself and wife, all necessary funds for the home
work for two months in advance, and all costs of publishing the Narrative in
German, were now provided. This was on July 12th; and so soon afterward were
the remaining impediments out of the way that, by August 9th, Mr. and Mrs.
Mueller were off for Germany.
The trip covered but seven months; and on March 6, 1844, they were once more
in Bristol. During this sojourn abroad no journal was kept, but Mr. Mueller's
letters serve the purpose of a record. Rotterdam, Weinheim, Cologne, Mayence,
Stuttgart, Heidelberg, etc., were visited, and Mr. Mueller distributed tracts
and conversed with individuals by the way; but his main work was to expound
the Word in little assemblies of believers, who had separated themselves from
the state church on account of what they deemed errors in teaching, practice,
modes of worship, etc.
The first hour of his stay at Stuttgart brought to him one of the sharpest
trials of faith he had ever thus far experienced. The nature of it he does
not reveal in his journal, but it now transpires that it was due to the
recalling of the seven hundred pounds, the gift of which had led to his going
to Germany. This fact could not at the time be recorded because the party
would feel it a reproach. Nor was this the only test of faith during his
sojourn abroad; in fact so many, so great, so varied, and so prolonged were
some of these trials, as to call into full exercise all the wisdom and grace
which he had received from God, and whatever lessons he had previously
learned in the school of experience became now of use. Yet not only was his
peace undisturbed, but he bears witness that the conviction so rooted itself
in his inmost being that in all this God's goodness was being shown, that he
would have had nothing different. The greatest trials bore fruit in the
fullest blessings and sometimes in clusters of blessings. It particularly
moved him to adoring wonder and praise to see God's wisdom in having delayed
his visit until the very time when it occurred. Had he gone any earlier he
would have gone too soon, lacking the full experience necessary to confront
the perplexities of his work. When darkness seemed to obscure his way, faith
kept him expectant of light, or at least of guidance in the darkness; and he
found that promise to be literally fulfilled:
" As thou goest, step by
step, the way shall open up before thee."
(See the Hebrew, of Prov. iv.12.)
At Stuttgart he found and felt, like Jude,
that it was " needful earnestly to contend for the faith once delivered to
the saints." Even among believers, errors had found far too deep root.
Especially was undue stress laid upon baptism, which was made to
occupy a prominence and importance out of all due proportion of faith. One
brother had been teaching that, without it, there is no new birth, and that,
consequently, no one could, before baptism, claim the forgiveness of sins;
that the apostles were not born from above until the day of Pentecost, and
that our Lord Himself had not been new-born until His own baptism, and had
thence, for the rest of His mortal life, ceased to be under the law! Many
other fanciful notions were found to prevail, such as that baptism is the
actual death of the old man by drowning, and that it is a covenant with the
believer into which God enters; that it is a sin to break bread with
unbaptized believers or with members of the state church; and that the bread
and the cup used in the Lord's Supper not only mean but are the
very body and blood of the Lord, etc.
A more serious and dangerous doctrine which it was needful to confront and
confute was what Mr. Mueller calls that "awful error," spread almost
universally among believers in that land, that at last "all will be saved,"
not sinful men only, but "even the devils themselves."
Calmly and courteously, but firmly and courageously, these and kindred errors
were met with the plain witness of the Word. Refutation of false teaching
aroused a spirit of bitterness in opposers of the truth, and, as is too often
the case, faithful testimony was the occasion of acrimony; but the Lord stood
by His servant and so strengthened him that he was kept both faithful and
peaceful.
One grave practical lack which Mr. Mueller sought to remedy was ignorance of
those deeper truths of the Word, which relate to the power and presence of
the Holy Spirit of God in the church, and to the ministry of saints, one to
another, as fellow members in the body of Christ, and as those to whom that
same Spirit divides severally, as He will, spiritual gifts for service. As a
natural result of being untaught in these important practical matters,
believers' meetings had proved rather opportunities for unprofitable talk
than godly edifying which is in faith. The only hope of meeting such errors
and supplying such lack lay in faithful scripture teaching, and he undertook
for a time to act as the sole teacher in these gatherings, that the word of
God might have free course and be glorified. Afterward, when there seemed to
be among the brethren proper apprehension of vital spiritual truths, with his
usual consistency and humility he resumed his place as simply a brother among
fellow believers, all of whom had liberty to teach as the Spirit might lead
and guide. There was, however, no shrinking from any duty or responsibility
laid upon him by larger, clearer acquaintance with truth, or more complete
experience of its power. When called by the voice of his brethren to expound
the Word in public assemblies, he gladly embraced all opportunities for
further instruction out of Holy Scripture and of witness to God. With strong
emphasis he dwelt upon the presiding presence of the Blessed Spirit in all
assemblies of saints, and upon the duty and privilege of leaving the whole
conduct of such assemblies to His divine ordering; and in perfect accord with
such teaching he showed that the Holy Spirit, if left free to administer all
things, would lead such brethren to speak, at such times and on such themes
as He might please; and that, whenever their desires and preferences were
spiritual and not carnal, such choice of the Spirit would always be in
harmony with their own.
These views of the Spirit's administration in the assemblies of believers,
and of His manifestation in all believers for common profit, fully accord
with scripture teaching. (1 Cor. xii., Romans xii., Ephes. iv., etc.) Were
such views practically held in the church of this day, a radical revolution
would be wrought and a revival of apostolic faith and primitive church life
would inevitably follow. No one subject is perhaps more misunderstood, or
less understood, even among professed believers, than the person, offices,
and functions of the Spirit of God. John Owen, long since, suggested that the
practical test of soundness in the faith, during the present gospel age, is
the attitude of the church toward the Holy Spirit. If so, the great
apostasy cannot be far off, if indeed it is not already upon us, for there is
a shameful ignorance and indifference prevalent, as to the whole matter of
His claim to holy reverence and obedience.
In connection with this visit to Germany, a curious misapprehension existed,
to which a religious periodical had given currency, that Mr. Mueller was
deputed by the English Baptists to labour among German Baptists to bring them
back to the state church. This rumour was of course utterly unfounded, but he
had no chance to correct it until just before his return to Britain, as he
had not until then heard of it. The Lord had allowed this false report to
spread and had used it to serve His own ends, for it was due in part to this
wrong impression of Mr. Mueller's mission that he was not molested or
interfered with by the officers of the government. Though for months openly
and undisguisedly teaching vital gospel truths among believers who had
separated from the established church, he had suffered no restraint, for, so
long as it was thought that his mission in Germany was to reclaim to the fold
of the state church those who had wandered away, he would of course be liable
to no interference from state officials.
The Lord went before His servant also in preparing the way for the publishing
of his Narrative, guiding him to a bookseller who undertook its sale on
commission, enabling the author to retain two thousand copies to give away,
while the rest were left to be sold.
Mr. Mueller, about this time, makes special mention of his joy and comfort in
the spiritual blessing attending his work, and the present and visible good,
wrought through the publication of his Narrative. Many believers had been led
to put more faith in the promises of the great Provider, and unbelievers had
been converted by their perusal of the simple story of the Lord's dealings;
and these tidings came from every quarter where the Narrative had as yet
found its way.
The name of Henry Craik, hitherto affixed to every report together with
George Mueller's, appears for the last time in the Report of 1844. This
withdrawal of his name resulted, not from any division of feeling or
diminution of sympathy, but solely from Mr. Craik's conviction that the
honour of being used of God as His instrument in forwarding the great work of
the Scriptural Knowledge Institution belonged solely to George MueIler.
The trials of faith ceased not although the occasions of praise were so
multiplied. On September 4, 1844, at day-dawn, but one farthing was left on
hand, and one hundred and forty mouths were to be fed at breakfast!
The lack of money and such supplies was, however, only one form of these
tests of faith and incentives to prayer. Indeed he accounted these the
lightest of his burdens for there were other cares and anxieties that called
for greater exercise of faith resolutely to cast them on Him who, in exchange
for solicitude, gives His own perfect peace. What these trials were, any
thoughtful mind must at once see who remembers how these many orphans were
needing, not only daily supplies of food and clothing, but education, in mind
and in morals; preparation for, and location in, suitable homes; careful
guards about their health and every possible precaution and provision to
prevent disease; also the character of all helpers must be carefully
investigated before they were admitted, and their conduct carefully watched
afterward lest any unworthy or unqualified party should find a place, or be
retained, in the conduct of the work.
These and other matters, too many to be individually mentioned, had to be
borne daily to the great Helper, without whose Everlasting Arms they could
not have been carried. and Mr. Mueller seeks constantly to impress on all who
read his pages or heard his voice, the perfect trustworthiness of God. For
any and all needs of the work help was always given, and it never once
came too late. However poor, and however long the suppliant believer
waits on God, he never fails to get help, if he trusts the promises and is in
the path of duty. Even the delay in answered prayer serves a purpose. God
permits us to call on Him while He answers not a word, both to test our faith
and importunity, and to encourage others who hears of His dealings with us.
And so it was that, whether there were on hand much or little, by God's grace
the founder of these institutions remained untroubled, confident that
deliverance would surely come in the best way and time, not only with
reference to temporal wants, but in all things needful.
During the history of the Institution thus far, encouragement had been its
law. Mr. Mueller's heart grew in capacity for larger service, and his faith
in capacity for firmer confidence, so that while he was led to attempt
greater things for God, he was led also to expect greater things from God.
Those suggestive words of Christ to Nathanael have often prompted like larger
expectations:
"Believest thou? thou shalt
see greater things than these."
(John i. 50.)
In the year 1846, the wants of the
mission field took far deeper hold of him than ever before. He had
already been giving aid to brethren abroad, in British Guiana and elsewhere,
as well as in fields nearer at home. But he felt a strong yearning to be used
of God more largely in sending to their fields and supporting in their
labours, the chosen servants of the Lord who were working on a scriptural
basis and were in need of help. He had observed that whenever God had put
into his heart to devise liberal things, He had put into his hand the means
to carry out such liberal purposes; and from this time forth he determined,
as far as God should enable him, to aid brethren of good report, labouring in
word and doctrine, throughout the United Kingdom, who were faithful witnesses
to God and were receiving no regular salary. The special object he had in
view was to give a helping hand to such as for the sake of conscience and of
Christ had relinquished former stipends or worldly emoluments.
Whatever enlargement took place in the work, however, it was no sign of
surplus funds. Every department of service or new call of duty had
separate and prayerful consideration. Advance steps were taken only when and
where and so fast as the Pillar moved, and fresh work was often undertaken at
a time when there was a lack rather than an abundance of money.
Some who heard of Mr. Mueller's absence in Germany inferred plenty of funds
on hand―a conclusion that was neither true nor legitimate. At times when
poverty was most pressing, additional expenditure was not avoided nor new
responsibility evaded if, after much prayer, the Lord seemed plainly leading
in that direction. And it was beautiful to see how He did not permit any
existing work to be embarrassed because at His bidding new work was
undertaken.
One great law for all who would be truly led by God's Pillar of cloud and
fire, is to take no step at the bidding of self-will or without the clear
moving of the heavenly Guide. Though the direction be new and the way seem
beset with difficulty, there is never any risk, provided we are only led of
God. Each new advance needs separate and special authority from Him, and
yesterday's guidance is not sufficient for to-day.
It is important also to observe that, if one branch of the work is in
straits, it is not necessarily a reason for abandoning another form of
service. The work of God depends on Him alone. If the whole tree is His
planting, we need not cut off one limb to save another. The whole body is
His, and, if one member is weak, it is not necessary to cut off another to
make it strong, for the strength of the whole body is the dependence of every
part. In our many-branching service each must get vitality and vigour from
the same source in God. Nevertheless let us not forget that the stops,
as well as the steps, of a good man are ordered of the Lord. If the
work is His work, let Him control it, and, whether we expand or contract, let
it be at His bidding, and a matter of equal satisfaction to His servant.
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