Mentoring Men for Ministry
Most people know George Müller for his orphanages, for feeding thousands of children, and for his remarkable dependence on God without ever asking for financial support. But the true source of his strength wasn’t found in the visible work of ministry—it was found in the quiet. Before the needs, before the decisions, before the responsibilities of the day, Müller prioritized a still, deliberate time alone with the Lord. He once wrote that the first great and primary business of his life was to make his soul happy in God. That perspective reshapes everything. His priority was not productivity, not problem-solving, not even ministry itself—it was the condition of his heart before God. Müller was careful not to rush into his day. He didn’t begin with letters, responsibilities, or pressing concerns. Instead, he opened the Scriptures and lingered there, not reading merely out of habit or duty, but until his heart was genuinely affected. He read slowly, thoughtfully, allowing truth to move from the page into his affections. As his heart was stirred, he would turn what he read into prayer, speaking it back to God line by line. This wasn’t mechanical; it was relational. It was in this quiet communion that his burdens were lifted, his faith strengthened, and his peace established long before the challenges of the day arrived. This hidden time with God explains the remarkable calm that marked Müller’s life. When faced with overwhelming needs—like hundreds of children to feed and no food in sight—he was not anxious or frantic. He was at rest. That kind of faith was not produced in the moment of crisis; it was cultivated in the quiet place. His public trust in God was simply the overflow of his private fellowship with Him. Müller didn’t build his life on dramatic miracles, though many followed—he built it on daily, unseen communion with God. His example confronts us with a simple but searching question: what is the true priority of our lives? We often ask how we can do more for God, but Müller’s life suggests a better question—have we learned to sit quietly before Him long enough for our souls to be satisfied in Him? The strength to trust God in the hardest moments is formed in the stillness of daily fellowship. The secret of George Müller’s life was not found in noise, activity, or recognition, but in the quiet, steady pursuit of God.
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