A Narrative of Some of the Lord's Dealings with George Müller. Part 3
1845
A Narrative of Some of the Lord's Dealings with George Müller. Part 3
1845
In 19th-century Bristol, George Müller built something impossible: orphanages caring for thousands of children without ever asking a single person for money. Part 3 of his narrative chronicles the daily tension of this radical experiment in faith, where each meal, each roof repair, each winter's coal arrived not through fundraising letters or donation drives, but through prayer alone. Müller documented everything in meticulous journals, recording the specific dates when the orphanage's coffers reached near-empty, the desperate pleas to God, and the remarkable timings of providential deliveries arriving just as need peaked. These aren't abstract theological claims, they are recorded facts, cross-referenced in ledgers a Victorian accountant would respect. The narrative operates on two levels: it's both a practical manual for radical trust in divine provision and an unflinching look at what it costs to believe when the rent is overdue and the pantry is bare. For readers drawn to stories of faith tested against impossible odds, this remains a singular document, unvarnished, specific, and utterly convinced that the universe leans toward generosity.







