George Müller's Empty Pantry
In the winter of 1838, George Müller sat at a breakfast table in Bristol, England, with three hundred orphans and not a crumb of food in the building. The pantry was bare. The coal bin was empty. Every reasonable voice said this was the morning his faith would finally collapse.
Müller bowed his head and prayed aloud: "Father, we thank You for what You are going to give us to eat."
A knock came at the door. The local baker stood outside, explaining he had been unable to sleep the night before and felt compelled to rise at two in the morning to bake fresh bread for the orphanage. Minutes later, a milk cart broke down directly in front of the building. The driver, unable to continue his route, offered all his milk to the children rather than let it spoil.
Over the course of his lifetime, Müller cared for over ten thousand orphans and received the equivalent of millions of dollars — without ever making a single public appeal for funds. He never took a salary. He never went into debt. He simply prayed and recorded every answer.
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