Sermons by Charles Spurgeon

Charles Spurgeon Sermons

Sermons by Charles Spurgeon

19th Century
Baptist
Charles Spurgeon
Charles Spurgeon

Charles Spurgeon Sermons

Sermons by Charles Spurgeon

19th Century
Baptist

Araunah’s Threshing Floor

Charles Spurgeon • Sep 23, 1915

IT Will be fresh in your recollection that David had committed a great sin against the Lord. In truth, all the people of Israel had, for some years, gone astray from God, and when He determined to punish them, He made the sin of their ruler an occasion for vis…

Questions of the Day and the Question of the Day

Charles Spurgeon • Jan 26, 1873

IT WAS a custom among the Jews before the Paschal Lamb was killed to shut it up for several days for examination. It was at first selected with great care, for it must be “a lamb without blemish, a male of the first year.” And lest at the first choice some ble…

There Go the Ships

Charles Spurgeon

I WAS walking the other day by the side of the sea, looking out upon the English Channel. It so happened that there was a bad wind for the vessels going down the Channel, and they were lying in great numbers between the shore and the Goodwins. I should think I…

Christopathy

Charles Spurgeon • Jan 10, 1897

BRETHREN, whenever we come to talk about the passion of our Lord—and that subject is clearly brought before us here by the two words “his stripes”—our feelings should be deeply solemn and our attention intensely earnest. Put off your shoes when you draw near t…

Scriptural Salvation

Charles Spurgeon • May 18, 1890

THE shepherd on the hill is most of all anxious about his sheep, he cares for his cottage, he trains the woodbine around his porch, sows flowers before his door, and digs his little plot of garden ground, but since he is a shepherd, his chief thought follows h…

“Honey in the Mouth!”

Charles Spurgeon • Jul 19, 1891

BELOVED friends, here you have the Trinity, and there is no salvation apart from the Trinity. It must be the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. “All things that the Father has are Mine,” says Christ, and the Father has all things. They were always His; they…

The Child of Light and the Works of Darkness

Charles Spurgeon • Feb 24, 1895

SINS, especially the grosser vices, are “works of darkness.” They delight in concealment, they are not fit to be seen, they flourish in the darkness of the unrenewed heart, they are most fully maintained in the ignorance of a soul that is without the knowledge…

The Voice of the Cholera

Charles Spurgeon • Aug 12, 1866

WE have all felt grieved when reading our bills of mortality to observe the mysterious spread of cholera in our great city. It is high time that it should be made the subject of special prayer, and that the nation should seek unto the Lord for its removal. Whi…

A Visit to Bethlehem

Charles Spurgeon • Dec 22, 1904

NOT to Bethlehem as it now is, but to Bethlehem as it once was, I would lead your meditation this evening.

Three Names High on the Muster Roll

Charles Spurgeon • Aug 16, 1891

IF you read the second chapter of the Book of Daniel, you will think that Nebuchadnezzar was not far from the kingdom. His dream had troubled him, but Daniel had explained it. Then the king made this confession to Daniel, “Of a truth it is, that your God is a…

The Rent Veil

Charles Spurgeon • Mar 25, 1888

THE death of our Lord Jesus Christ was fitly surrounded by miracles, yet it is itself so much greater a wonder than all besides, that it as far exceeds them as the sun outshines the planets which surround it.

Anxiety, Ambition, Indecision

Charles Spurgeon • Feb 18, 1904

THE chief concern of a man should be, to see that his own soul is right in the sight of God. Solomon said, “Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life.” Many persons think a great deal about the adorning of the body, but do not thi…

Joy and Peace in Believing

Charles Spurgeon • May 20, 1866

I WOULD address myself this morning to a special class, and if there should be no spiritual instruction for others, I trust that they will follow what is said with their prayers, that the word may be useful to those for whom it is mainly intended.

Mediation of Moses

Charles Spurgeon • Feb 3, 1895

I SUPPOSE that I need not say that this verse speaks after the manner of men. I do not know after what other manner we can speak. To speak of God after the manner of God is reserved for God Himself and mortal men could not comprehend such speech. In this sense…

He Ran, and He Ran

Charles Spurgeon • Mar 7, 1897

THESE two texts have a measure of apparent likeness—the man runs to Jesus from afar and the father runs to the prodigal from afar. They both run—and when two run to meet each other, they soon meet. When a sinner is running to Christ and the Father is running t…

Away with Fear

Charles Spurgeon • Apr 10, 1870

IF there should be nothing in the sermon this evening, brethren, there is enough in the text to satisfy your mouth with good things, so that your youth may be renewed like the eagle’s. May the Holy Spirit spread for you a table in the wilderness, and give you…

Cries From the Cross

Charles Spurgeon • Mar 27, 1898

*This was the first evening sermon preached by Mr. Spurgeon after the fatal calamity at the Surrey Gardens Music Hall, two weeks previously. On commencing his discourse, he said, “The observations I have to make will be very brief, seeing that afterwards we ar…

Invitation to a Conference

Charles Spurgeon • Feb 1, 1903

THE persons to whom this gracious invitation was addressed were in a terrible condition, they could not well have been in a worse plight. They had provoked God above measure by their many sins. He had severely chastened them, yet they had not repented of their…

The Fair Portrait of a Saint

Charles Spurgeon • Mar 7, 1880

THUS Job speaks of himself, not by way of boasting, but by way of vindication. Eliphaz the Temanite and his two companions had brought distinct charges against Job’s character. Because they saw him in such utter misery they concluded that his adversity must ha…

Good Cheer From Forgiven Sin

Charles Spurgeon • Nov 29, 1906

[Other sermons by Mr. Spurgeon upon this miracle are as follows, #2337, The Physician Pardons His Palsied Patient, and #2417, First Forgiveness, then Healing] THIS man was paralyzed in body, but he was very far from being paralyzed in mind. From the little we…

“Your Salvation”

Charles Spurgeon • Jun 2, 1878

LAST Lord’s-day morning [No. 1416, The Faithful Saying ] we used the broad axe to clear the forest of self-righteousness—one after another human hopes were made to fall, for the axe was laid at the root of the trees. Now let us cultivate the clearing and sow t…

Christ’s Servant—His Duty and Reward

Charles Spurgeon • Aug 3, 1862

HOW many persons are of the religion of the Greeks who are mentioned in this chapter! They would see Jesus, but they would not serve Him. Impelled by curiosity they would know somewhat of this matter, they would investigate the claims of Christ to the Messiahs…

Always and for All Things

Charles Spurgeon • Feb 2, 1873

THE position of our text in the epistle is worthy of observation. It follows the precept with regard to sacred song, in which believers are bid to speak to themselves and one another in Psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in their h…

The Stern Pedagogue

Charles Spurgeon

NEITHER the Jewish law of ten commands, nor its law of ceremonies were ever intended to save anybody. It was not the intent of the ceremonial law in itself to effect the redemption of the soul, by a set of pictures it set forth the way of salvation, but it was…