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What Matters About Me

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I am who I am, not what I have done. For those who care about pedigree, I have little more than being a former public school teacher and a pastor/denominational adminstrator. The following insights come from a couple of tests I took. They may explain why I am a Contrarian and why I decided to do a blog about it. The first test is a standardized personality profile. The second is something strange called a Brain Type test! 1)“Jack lives outside traditional boundaries and ahead of the curve. When others focus on limitations, Jack creates new possibilities and ideas. He is a doer, not just a dreamer. Well grounded in reality, logic and analytical thinking. He enjoys meeting and working with other creative and ambitious people...a fearless leader. Only 3-5% of U.S. population has these qualities.” 2) Jack's Intellectual Type is Word Warrior. This means he has exceptional verbal skills. He can can easily make sense of complex issues and takes an unusually creative approach to solving problems. His strengths also make him a visionary. Even without trying he's able to come up with lots of new and creative ideas. (Like blogging as Contrarian?)

This challenges common ideas about the purpose of praying. Not a rehash of old dogma.

This challenges common ideas about the purpose of praying. Not a rehash of old dogma.
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Tuesday, March 8, 2011


MY TAKE

Trusting in Tough Times

by Jack C. Getz

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In these tough economic times, when almost everyone’s focus is on the sinking dollar and rising employment rates, Christians are hard–pressed to find the financial means to vigorously pursue their mission. That challenge is especially daunting for a movement like The Salvation Army, whose mission is to “…preach the gospel of Jesus Christ and to meet human needs in His name, without discrimination.” How can the Army achieve those lofty goals when even its most faithful supporters find themselves facing financial meltdown?
The story of George Müeller, who lived in even more troubled economic times than ours, provides an answer to that question that is also a challenge to deeper faith.
Born in 1805 in Prussia, Müeller immigrated to England as a young man. As a seminary student, he was a playboy who had no time for the things of God, much less any notion of spending the next 70 years of his life in spiritual warfare on behalf of homeless street waifs.
But by 1843, Müeller had turned his life over to God, and he responded to a sense of calling to feed and educate the masses of orphaned children who roamed the mean streets of Bristol, England. This was the era of the Industrial Revolution, whose dark side Charles Dickens painted vividly in his novels. The sad reality for thousands of children in that day was a life of poverty, thieving just to survive, and general hopelessness.
Müeller began his outreach ministries with free meals and Bible stories for a few dozen children. Soon, demand grew to a point that his resources were strained, but his faith never wavered.
As a young pastor and new husband, George and his wife tested God’s promises and refused to accept a salary. He learned that he could not trust himself and God at the same time, so he chose to put himself in a position to depend completely on God for all his needs and the needs of the children in his care. A few decades later, General William Booth of The Salvation Army demonstrated a similar faith when he said: “The promises of God are sure, if only you will believe.”
Müeller accomplished his work in relative silence. He didn’t use mail campaigns, Christmas kettles, or development professionals. Amazingly, his only method was fervent prayer. For years the Müellers lived by just two principles: One, live completely by faith. Two, never tell anyone but God about financial or physical needs. Yet in the multiple facilities Müeller ran, no child ever missed a meal.
The numbers associated with Müeller’s ministry are staggering by any standard. It is estimated that during 50 years of providing critical daily services to children, he raised the equivalent of about $180 million and touched the lives of more than 120,000 orphans. In his 1898 obituary in The Daily Telegraph, Müeller was called “the robber of the streets,” not because he was a thief, but because he was said to have “robbed the cruel streets of thousands of victims, the gaols [jails] of thousands of felons, and the workhouses of thousands of helpless waifs.”
Like Müeller, The Salvation Army has always trusted God to provide. The record of how God has blessed and multiplied the Salvation Army’s “loaves and fishes” is nothing short of miraculous. And it is humbling to think that even though Army polices discourage paid advertising, the Army has always had enough, and usually more than enough, to accomplish what is needed most.
Some might believe the current financial crisis is God’s way of cleansing the church from pride and self–reliance so that we will learn to trust Him more. That may or may not be the case, but in such times, everyone is forced to re–evaluate their priorities and realign their methods. Perhaps this is a good time, possibly the best time, to adjust the balance of trust that will allow God to do what He has always done: provide for His work through the ministry of those who trust Him, especially in tough times.
The expanded work of George Müeller continues today through The Müeller Charitable Trust in Bristol, England.

This article was published in Priority! Magazine. Read my latest article in the current issue.  Google it!

5 comments:

  1. George Mueller has always stood as a challenge, not just to the church, but to every one of us who doesn't have faith strong enough to simply rely on God to provide.

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  2. Great article, Jack.

    I remember when I first encountered George Mueller in the stacks of the gigantic library at U of I. I was supposed to be doing research for a paper, but ended up spending the entire afternoon reading of his inspiring life.

    How I wish I had the faith of a George Mueller!

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  3. He was a literalist, and I bet a little quirky to be around. The people who stand out in history as giants in many fields, like George, are usually a little eccentric, wouldn't you agree? Einstein? Bill Gates? I'm quirky too but unlike the farmer, I'm not outstanding in my field! :=)

    There is a GREAT book out there called "Outliers" that rose very quickly to near the top of my favorite book list. It's a series of studies about the greatest people in a number of fields that explains why they got there. It's not what you might think at all. Amazing reading.

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  4. You're always a good source for a good book recommendation, a good illustration or a good quote (I ripped one off from you just the other day & posted it on my Facebook page! People liked it & probably thought I was brilliant for finding it. But, don't worry; I gave you props.)

    God is testing my willingness to trust Him for provision right now! The circumstances suck, but I'm glad He's taking a chance on teaching me to really trust Him. At least, I think I am....

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  5. I am usually put off by modern Christians who claim all sorts of St. Paul level commitments, like singing "For me to live is Christ" or "I count all things loss..." etc. when they don't live that way by choice. Christians talk way too big now-a-days. I don't know anyone who has the right to consider themselves Paul's peers. I think my man George Mueller could, but when we have a choice, we always choose security and ease over sacrificial faith, despite how much we enjoy singing and talking (on Facebook!)about our amazing dependence on Christ.

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