
Great Christians  |
The Eye of Faith (Can You Believe? Then You Will Receive!) Shrouded in a dense fog, a large steamer edged slowly forward off the coast of Newfoundland, its foghorn crying out somber notes of warning. The captain - near exhaustion from lack of sleep - was startled by a gentle tap on his shoulder. He turned and found himself face-to-face with an old man in his late seventies.
The old man said, "Captain, I have come to tell you that I must be in Quebec on Saturday afternoon." (It was then Wednesday). The captain pondered for a moment, and then snorted: "Impossible." "Very well," the old man responded, "if your ship can't take me, God will find some other means to take me. I have never broken an engagement in fifty-seven years."
Lifting his weary hands in a gesture of despair, the captain replied, "I would help if I could - but I am helpless." Undaunted, the old man suggested, "Let's go down to the chart room and pray." The captain raised his eyebrows in utter disbelief, looking at the old man as if he had just escaped from a lunatic asylum. "Do you know how dense the fog is?" the captain demanded. The old man responded, "No, my eye is not on the thickness of the fog but on the living God who controls every circumstance of my life."
Against his better judgment, the captain accompanied the old man to the chart room and kneeled with him in prayer. With simple words a child might use, the old man prayed: "O Lord, if it is consistent with thy will, please remove this fog in five minutes. Thou knowest the engagement thou didst make for me in Quebec on Saturday. I believe it is thy will."
The captain, a nominal Christian at best, thought it wise to humor the old man and recite a short prayer. But before he was able to utter a single word, he felt a tap on his shoulder. The old man requested, "Don't pray, because you do not believe; and as I believe God has already answered, there is no need for you to pray." The captain's mouth dropped open. Then the old man explained: "Captain I have known my Lord for fifty-seven years and there has never been a single day that I have failed to gain an audience with the King. Get up, captain, and open the door, and you will find the fog is gone." The captain did as he was requested, and was astonished to find that the fog had indeed disappeared.
The captain later testified that his encounter with the aged George Muller completely revolutionized his Christian life. He had seen with his own eyes that Muller's God was the true and living God of the Bible. He had seen incredible power flow from a frail old man. . . a power rooted in simple childlike faith in God.
Ray Stedman once delivered a sermon on Jeremiah in which he said: "Faith has an apparent ridiculousness about it. You are not acting by faith if you are doing what everyone around you is doing. Faith always appears to defy the circumstances. It constitutes a risk and a venture."
This is the kind of faith George Muller demonstrated decade after decade in his long and fruitful life. During the final year of his earthly sojourn, he wrote that his faith had been increasing over the years little by little, but he emphatically insisted that there was nothing unique about him or his faith. He believed that a life of trust was open to virtually all of God's children if only they would endure when trials came instead of giving up. It was this kind of faith that enabled Muller to enjoy the Lord on a non-stop basis, regardless of the punches life threw his way. Taken From Ron Rhodes
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| CAN A SHOEMAKER WIN THE WORLD? In the 1700’s in England, many young men dreamed of exploration. One, a shoemaker’s apprentice named William, was particularly curious about geography and customs of foreign lands. He had a map on which he made notes about strange lands and peoples. He also had a leather globe that he used to share his knowledge with others. In the course of his studying, he read a sermon by Jeremy Taylor. It roused his interest in a new subject: being "born again."  When William asked an apprentice friend about this new birth, he was encouraged to go to church to get his answers. The young cobbler resisted, however, because the invitation was to a Dissenters Church, not to a Church of England. To William’s protests, the response was: "They may be called heretics, but they preach from the Bible. And that’s what counts!" For months, William Carey resisted the invitation to church. When he finally started attending, he had to admit that they did preach the Bible. One day, the preacher spoke of the reproach of following Christ. William said that during the message: "I felt ruined and helpless. I had a desire to follow Christ." He had finally come to the end of himself, and given up to Jesus. From that morning onward, he both knew what the second birth was, and actively followed Christ. This cobbler’s apprentice began to study languages, and during his daily devotions he read from the Bible: English, Hebrew, Greek and Latin. When his master died, he took over the shoe shop, married and began a night school for the village children. Seven years after his new birth, William Carey was ordained a Baptist minister. A few weeks later he asked at a minister’s meeting: "Whether or not the Great Commission is binding upon us today to go and teach all nations?" The response from the formal churchmen was: "When God pleases to convert the heathen, He will do it without your aid or mine." William Carey was not content with this answer, and continued to seek God’s leading in the matter. Almost six years later, Carey formed a missionary society, and the next year became its first missionary, taking his family to India. It was not easy work, and there was much heartache. His wife became mentally deranged, and several missionaries died of local diseases. It was seven years before he baptized his first convert, but William was not one to give up. By the end of his ministry, William Carey had translated the entire Bible into the four leading languages of India, and established one hundred and twenty-six mission schools. This cobbler’s apprentice with an interest in the world had not only found the meaning of the new birth, but had become the father of the modern missionary movement. Taken From Pastor David W. Kuykendall's Book - "Famous Christians"! |
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