Charles Spurgeon • May 8, 1870
THESE three precious things, when put together, present to us a treasure of priceless things, altogether without parallel. When Moses was about to die he pronounced a blessing upon all the tribes, but the benediction which he allotted to the tribe of Joseph wa…
Charles Spurgeon • Aug 19, 1915
WE shall have two things to consider this evening— the misery of our past estate, and the great deliverance which God has wrought for us . As for—
Charles Spurgeon • Jan 5, 1905
LAST Sabbath our spirits flew forward as far as the judgment day. We stood with wondering awe to gaze upon the great white throne and the fillet of gold about the head of the reaper who gathered in the harvest of the earth. We trembled as we saw the other ange…
Charles Spurgeon • Jun 2, 1904
AMONG the greatest privileges of the believer in Christ are those choice blessings, rest and peace.
Charles Spurgeon • May 11, 1884
I HAVE preached before to you upon the types of our Lord’s Sacrifice, the subject is as large as it is important. We began with the laying of the hands upon the offering, and we went on to the all-important matter of the slaying of the victim [See Sermon Nos.…
Charles Spurgeon • Jul 6, 1879
MAN was made to rule. In the divine original he was intended for a king who should have dominion over the beasts of the field and the fowl of the air and the fish of the sea. He was designed to be the lordlieutenant of this part of creation and the form of his…
Charles Spurgeon • Apr 22, 1877
BRETHREN, the heathen are perishing, and there is but one way of salvation for them, for there is but one name given under heaven among men whereby they must be saved. God in the glorious unity of His divine nature is calling for messengers who shall proclaim…
Charles Spurgeon • Jan 8, 1914
THE art of husbandry was taught to man by God. He would have starved while he was discovering it, and so the Lord, when he sent him out of the Garden of Eden, gave him a measure of elementary instruction in agriculture, even as the prophet puts it, “His God do…
Charles Spurgeon • Apr 4, 1869
YOU have been busy all week with external things. You have had to deal with the questions, “What shall we eat, and what shall we drink, and wherewithal shall we be clothed?” It is well that at least on this one day in seven we should turn our eyes away from th…
Charles Spurgeon • Jun 22, 1902
EVERY careful reader can see the connection between this 115 th psalm and the one which precedes it. In the 114 th psalm, we see the gracious and grateful Jews sitting around the passover table, having eaten of the lamb, and singing of the miracles of JEHOVAH…
Charles Spurgeon
IN reading this chapter, one is led to feel that it is not, after all, an easy thing to be a sincere Christian. The way is hard, the road is narrow. Who will may represent the way to heaven as being easy, our Savior does not speak so of it. “Strait is the gate…
Charles Spurgeon • Dec 22, 1878
THIS is the first verse of one of the Songs of degrees. These Songs were probably sung by the pilgrims as they went up to Jerusalem, when they halted at the various stations or passed certain places of interest. It is very possible that this psalm burst forth…
Charles Spurgeon
WHEN soldiers are on the march or advancing to the battle, military men think it wise to let the trumpet sound, that the warriors may be stimulated by the thrilling music. Many a weary soldier has tramped on with new vigor when the band has struck up a lively…
Charles Spurgeon • May 31, 1891
JOB was in great pain when he thus bitterly complained. These moans came from him when his skin was broken and had become loathsome, and he sat upon a dunghill and scraped himself with a potsherd.
Charles Spurgeon • Feb 9, 1868
IN the chapter before us, our Savior is described as JEHOVAH God. He is spoken of as clothed with irresistible power, “He shall come with strong hand, and his arm shall rule for him.” But as if to soften a glory far too bright for the weak eyes of the tremblin…
Charles Spurgeon • Jan 29, 1871
I SHOULD mislead you if I called these verses my text, for I intend only to lay stress upon the closing expression, and I read the two verses because they are needful for its explanation. It would require several discourses to expound the whole of so rich a pa…
Charles Spurgeon • Apr 5, 1906
THE occasion on which these words were spoken was the last meal of which Jesus partook in company with His disciples before He went from them to His shameful trial, and His ignominious death.
Charles Spurgeon • May 31, 1868
EZEKIEL was sent to arouse the people of Jerusalem to a sense of danger. This task was in itself difficult enough, since he had to deal with a slumbering people who were carnally secure. But the difficulty was much increased by the fact that a large number of…
Charles Spurgeon • Feb 22, 1891
OUR Lord, on this occasion, was surrounded by quibblers. We must not be astonished if the like should happen to us when declaring the gospel. Our Lord went on preaching all the same, and He did not conceal objectionable truth because of opposition; say, rather…
Charles Spurgeon • Aug 31, 1879
I AM a firm believer, not only in the inspiration of the psalms themselves, but also in the correctness of their order. I believe that Paul was right when he called a certain psalm, “the second psalm,” and that those are wrong who so disarrange the book as to…
Charles Spurgeon • Dec 29, 1910
[Mr. Spurgeon preached many sermons upon this verse, among those already published are #1762, High Doctrine and Broad Doctrine, #2349, All Comers to Christ Welcomed, #2954, The Big Gates Wide Open, and #3000, No. 3000—Or Come and Welcome.] WE have come to the…
Charles Spurgeon • May 29, 1892
I TOLD you in the reading, that Israel had a golden age, a time of great familiarity with God, when JEHOVAH was very near His people in their sufferings, and was afflicted in their affliction, when He helped them in everything they did and the angel of His pre…
Charles Spurgeon • Oct 31, 1897
I SAW this text advertised as being printed in colors and it was called, “Mr. Moody’s Text.” When I saw him yesterday, I asked him how it was his text any more than it is mine. He said that he was sure he did not know—he never called it his text, so far as he…
Charles Spurgeon
WHEN Christ calls us by His grace we ought not only to remember what we are, but we ought also to think of what He can make us . It is, “Follow me, and I will make you .” We should repent of what we have been, but rejoice in what we may be. It is not “Follow m…