Receiving God's Blessings.
Soul
Nourishment First
By George Müller, 1805 - 1898; A personal testimony on Meditation.
**
It has pleased the Lord to teach me a truth, the benefit of which I have not
lost, for more than fourteen years. The point is this:
I saw more clearly than ever that
the first, great and primary business to which I ought to attend every day
was, to have my soul happy in the Lord. The first thing to be concerned about
was not how much I might serve the Lord, or how I might glorify the Lord;
but how I might get my soul into a happy state, and how my inner man might
be nourished. For I might seek to set the truth before the unconverted, I
might seek to benefit believers, I might seek to relieve the distressed, I
might in other ways seek to behave myself as it becomes a child of God in
this world; and yet, not being happy in the Lord, and not being nourished
and strengthened in my inner man day by day, all this might not be attended
to in a right spirit.
Before this time my practice had been, at least for ten years previously,
as an habitual thing, to give myself to prayer, after having dressed myself
in the morning. Now, I saw that the most important thing I had to do was to
give myself to the reading of the Word of God, and to meditation on it, that
thus my heart might be comforted, encouraged, warned, reproved, instructed;
and that thus, by means of the Word of God, while meditating on it, my heart
might be brought into experiential communion with the Lord.
I began therefore to meditate on the New Testament from the beginning, early
in the morning. The first thing I did, after having asked in a few words the
Lord’s blessing upon his precious Word, was, to begin to meditate on the Word
of God, searching as it were into every verse, to get blessing out of it;
not for the sake of the public ministry of the Word, not for the sake of preaching
on what I had meditated upon, but for the sake of obtaining food for my own
soul.
The result I have found to be almost invariably this, that after a very few
minutes my soul has been led to confession, or to thanksgiving, or to intercession,
or to supplication; so that, though I did not, as it were, give myself to
prayer, but to meditation, yet it turned almost immediately more or less into
prayer. When thus I have been for a while making confession or intercession,
or supplication, or have given thanks, I go to the next words or verse, turning
all, as I go on, into prayer for myself or others, as the Word may lead to
it, but still continually keeping before me that food for my own soul is the
object of my meditation. The result of this is, that there is always a good
deal of confession, thanksgiving, supplication, or intercession mingled with
my meditation, and then my inner man almost invariably is even sensibly nourished
and strengthened, and that by breakfast time, with rare exceptions, I am in
a peaceful if not happy state of heart. Thus also the Lord is pleased to communicate
unto me that which, either very soon after or at a later time, I have found
to become food for other believers, though it was not for the sake of the
public ministry of the Word that I gave myself to meditation, but for the
profit of my own inner man.
The difference, then, between my former practice and my present one is
this:
Formerly, when I rose, I began to pray as soon as possible, and generally
spent all my time till breakfast in prayer, or almost all the time. At all
events I almost invariably began with prayer, except when I felt my soul to
be more than usually barren, in which case I read the Word of God for food,
or for refreshment, or for a revival and renewal of my inner man, before I gave
myself to prayer.
But what was the result? I often spent a quarter of an hour, or half an hour,
or even an hour, on my knees, before being conscious to myself of having derived
comfort, encouragement, humbling of soul, etc., and often, after having suffered
much from wandering of mind for the first ten minutes, or a quarter of an
hour, or even half an hour, I only then began really to pray. I scarcely ever
suffer now in this way. For my heart, first being nourished by the truth,
being brought into experiential fellowship with God, I then speak to my Father
and to my Friend, (vile though I am, and unworthy of it), about the things
that He has brought before me in His precious Word.
It often now astonishes me that I did not sooner see this point. In no book
did I ever read about it. No public ministry ever brought the matter before
me. No private intercourse with a brother stirred me up to this matter. And
yet, now, since God has taught me this point, it is as plain to me as anything,
that the first thing the child of God has to do morning by morning is, to
obtain food for his inner man. As the outward man is not fit for work for
any length of time except we take food, and as this is one of the first things
we do in the morning, so it should be with the inner man. We should take food
for that, as every one must allow.
Now, what is the food for the inner man? Not prayer, but the Word of God;
and here again, not the simple reading of the Word of God, so that it only
passes through our minds, just as water runs through a pipe, but considering
what we read, pondering over it, and applying it to our hearts. When we pray,
we speak to God. Now, prayer, in order to be continued for any length of time
in any other than a formal manner, requires, generally speaking, a measure
of strength or godly desire, and the season, therefore, when this exercise
of the soul can be most effectually performed is after the inner man has been
nourished by meditation on the Word of God, where we find our Father speaking
to us, to encourage us, to comfort us, to instruct us, to humble us, to reprove
us. We may therefore profitably meditate, with God’s blessing, though we are
ever so weak spiritually; nay, the weaker we are, the more we need meditation
for the strengthening of our inner man.
Thus there is far less to be feared from wandering of mind than if we give
ourselves to prayer without having had time previously for meditation. I dwell
so particularly on this point because of the immense spiritual profit and
refreshment I am conscious of having derived from it myself, and I affectionately
and solemnly beseech all my fellow believers to ponder this matter. By the
blessing of God, I ascribe to this mode the help and strength which I have
had from God to pass in peace through deeper trials, in various ways, than
I had ever had before; and after having now above fourteen years tried this
way, I can most fully, in the fear of God, commend it.
In addition to this I generally read, after family prayer, larger portions
of the Word of God, when I still pursue my practice of reading regularly onward
in the Holy Scriptures, sometimes in the New Testament, and sometimes in the
Old, and for more than twenty-six years I have proved the blessedness of it.
I take, also, either then or at other parts of the day, time more especially
for prayer. How different, when the soul is refreshed and made happy early
in the morning, from what it is when without spiritual preparation, the service,
the trials, and the temptations of the day come upon one.
George Müller
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