[LAST LOOKS, BACKWARD AND FORWARD]

APPENDIX.

[A. SCRIPTURE TEXTS THAT MOULDED GEORGE MÜLLER]
[B. APPREHENSION OF TRUTH]
[C. SEPARATION FROM THE LONDON SOCIETY, ETC.]
[D. THE SCRIPTURAL KNOWLEDGE INSTITUTION FOR HOME AND ABROAD]
[E. REASONS WHICH LED MR. MÜLLER TO ESTABLISH AN ORPHAN HOUSE]
[F. ARGUMENTS IN PRAYER FOR THE ORPHAN WORK]
[G. THE PURCHASE OF A SITE, ETC.]
[H. GOD'S FAITHFULNESS IN PROVIDING]
[K. FURTHER RECOLLECTIONS OF MR. MÜLLER]
[L. CHURCH FELLOWSHIP, BAPTISM, ETC.]
[M. CHURCH CONDUCT]
[N. THE WISE SAYINGS OF GEORGE MÜLLER]

George Müller of Bristol

CHAPTER I

FROM HIS BIRTH TO HIS NEW BIRTH

A HUMAN life, filled with the presence and power of God, is one of God's choicest gifts to His church and to the world.

Things which are unseen and eternal seem, to the carnal man, distant and indistinct, while what is seen and temporal is vivid and real. Practically, any object in nature that can be seen or felt is thus more real and actual to most men than the Living God. Every man who walks with God, and finds Him a present Help in every time of need; who puts His promises to the practical proof and verifies them in actual experience; every believer who with the key of faith unlocks God's mysteries, and with the key of prayer unlocks God's treasuries, thus furnishes to the race a demonstration and an illustration of the fact that "He is, and is a Rewarder of them that diligently seek Him."

George Müller was such an argument and example incarnated in human flesh. Here was a man of like passions as we are and tempted in all points like as we are, but who believed God and was established by believing; who prayed earnestly that he might live a life and do a work which should be a convincing proof that God hears prayer and that it is safe to trust Him at all times; and who has furnished just such a witness as he desired. Like Enoch, he truly walked with God, and had abundant testimony borne to him that he pleased God. And when, on the tenth day of March, 1898, it was told us of George Müller that "he was not," we knew that "God had taken him": it seemed more like a translation than like death.