Norman Harrison in His in a Life of Prayer tells how Charles Inglis, while making the voyage to America a number of years ago, learned from the devout and godly captain of an experience which he had had but recently with George Muller of bristol. It seems that they had encountered a very dense fog. Because of it the captain had remained on the bridge continuously for twenty-four hours, when Mr. Muller came to him and said, "Captain, I have come to tell you that I must be in Quebec on Saturday afternoon." When informed that it was impossible, he replied: "Very well. If the ship canno0t take me, God will find some other way. I have never broken an engagement for fifty-seven years. Let us go down into the chart room and pray."
Tha captain continues the story thus:
I looked at that man of God and thought to myself, What lunatic asylum could that man have come from. I never heard such a thing as this. "Mr. Muller," I said, "do you know how dense this fog is?" "No," he replied, "my eye is not on the density of the fog, but on the living God, who controls every circumstance of my life." He knelt down and prayed one of those simple prayers, and when he had finished I was going to pray; but he put his hand on myu shoulder and told me not to pray. "Firstly," he said,, "because you do not believe God will, and secondly, I believe God has, and there is no need whatever for you to pray about it." I looked at him, and George Muller said, "Captain, I have known my Lord for fifty-seven years, and there has never been a single day that I have failed to get an audience with the King. Get up and open the door, and you will find that the fog has gone." I got up and the fog was indeed gone. George Muller was in Quebec Saturday afternoon for his engagement."
- From I Will Lift Up Mine Eyes by Glenn Clark
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