β
Our anxiety does not empty tomorrow of its sorrows, but only empties today of its strengths.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
Have your heart right with Christ, and he will visit you often, and so turn weekdays into Sundays, meals into sacraments, homes into temples, and earth into heaven.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
You cannot slander human nature; it is worse than words can paint it.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
When you see a man with a great deal of religion displayed in his shop window, you may depend upon it he keeps a very small stock of it within.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
The greatest joy of a Christian is to give joy to Christ.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
Groanings which cannot be uttered are often prayers which cannot be refused.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
All the devils in hell and tempters on earth could do us no injury if there were no corruption in our own natures.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
Give yourself to reading.β... You need to read. Renounce as much as you will all light literature, but study as much as possible sound theological works,
especially the Puritanic writers, and expositions of the Bible.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
The egg is white though the hen is black as coal...Out of evil comes good, through the great goodness of God.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
Our motto is, βWith God, anywhere: without God, nowhere.β Barbed Arrows, Page 182
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Through the Eyes of C.H. Spurgeon: Quotes From A Reformed Baptist Preacher)
β
May every one of us believe Him better, and have greater thoughts of Him, and never let us be guilty henceforth of confining, as it were, within iron bonds the limitless One of Israel.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
I do not preach doubtingly, for I do not live doubtingly.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
economy is half the battle of life; it is notso hard to earn money as to spend it well.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
It is God that justifieth"βthat justifieth the ungodly; He is not ashamed of doing it, nor are we of preaching it.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (All of Grace (C. H. Spurgeon Collection Book 2))
β
Sometimes,indeed, the Lord purposely leaves his children, withdraws the divine inflowings of his grace, and permits them to begin to sink, in order that they may understand that faith is not their own work.
(Sermon, "Mr. fearing comforted")
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
I take leave to contradict those who say that salvation is an evolution! All that ever can be evolved out of the sinful heart of man is sin-and nothing else! Salvation is the free gift of God, by Jesus Christ, and the work of it is supernatural. It is done by the Lord Himself, and He has power to do it, however weak, no, however dead in sin, the sinner may be!
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
O prejudice, prejudice, prejudice, how many hast thou destroyed! Men who might have been wise have remained fools because they thought they were wise. Many judge what the gospel ought to be, but do not actually enquire as to what it is. They do not come to the Bible to obtain their views of religion, but they open that Book to find texts to suit the opinions which they bring to it. They are not open to the honest force of truth, and therefore are not saved by it.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
If we are indeed contending for truth and righteousness, let us not tarry till we have talent, or wealth, or any other form of visible power at our disposal; but with such stones as we find in the brook, and with our own usual sling, let us run to meet the enemy.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
Discernment,β C.H. Spurgeon once famously quipped, βis knowing the difference between right and almost right.β Tweaking that ever so slightly, discernment is knowing the difference between what is good and what is better. And sometimes, seeking what is better means learning to trust God while you wait for Him to supply it.
β
β
Hannah Anderson (All That's Good: Recovering the Lost Art of Discernment)
β
It is not your hold of Christ that saves you, but His hold of you.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
Visit many good books, but live in the Bible.
β
β
C. H. Spurgeon
β
C. H. Spurgeon was once asked if he could reconcile these two truths to each other. βI wouldnβt try,β he replied; βI never reconcile friends.β Friends?βyes, friends. This is the point that we have to grasp. In the Bible, divine sovereignty and human responsibility are not enemies. They are not uneasy neighbors; they are not in an endless state of cold war with each other. They are friends, and they work together.
β
β
J.I. Packer (Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God)
β
A philosopher has remarked that if a man knew that he had thirty years of life before him, it would not be an unwise thing to spend twenty of those in mapping out a plan of living and putting himself under rule; for he would do more with the ten well-arranged years than with the whole thirty if he spent them at random. There is much truth in that saying. A man will do little by firing off his gun if he has not
learned to take aim.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
You will win as many souls as God gives you, but no one will be converted by your own power.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
Intercessory prayer is exceedingly prevalent. What wonders it has wrought! The Word of God teems with its marvelous deeds. Believer, thou hast a mighty engine in thy hand, use it well, use it constantly, use it with faith, and thou shalt surely be a benefactor to thy brethren.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
Today isn't a "waiting period" before real life begins. Right now has Christ's name written all over it. Living passionately for God starts at this moment. Joy and satisfaction can be found in God today. I love what C.H. Spurgeon wrote, determining to make the monst of his time, "the truest lengthening of life is to live while we live, wasting no time but using every hour for the highest ends. So be it this day." And so be it tomorrow, the next day, and the next.
β
β
Hannah Farver (Uncompromising: A Heart Claimed By a Radical Love)
β
Jesus did not die for our righteousness, but He died for our sins. He did not come to save us because we were worth saving, but because we were utterly worthless, ruined, and undone. He did not come to earth out of any reason that was in us, but solely and only because of reasons which He took from the depths of His own divine love. In due time He died for those whom He describes not as godly but as ungodly, applying to them as hopeless an adjective as He could have selected.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (All of Grace)
β
The Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all." It is the most grievous sentence of the three, but it overflows with comfort. Strange is it that where misery was concentrated mercy reigned; where sorrow reached her climax weary souls find rest.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Morning and Evening)
β
Although upon doctrines of grace our views differ from those avowed by Arminian Methodists, we have usually found that on the great evangelical truths we are in full agreement, and we have been comforted by the belief that Wesleyans were solid upon the central doctrines.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (The Sword and the Trowel: Works of C. H. Spurgeon in His Magazine, 1865-66-67)
β
Do not enter the ministry if you can help it . . .
If any student in this room could be content to be
a newspaper editor, or a grocer, or a farmer, or a
doctor, or a lawyer, or a senator, or a king, in the
name of heaven and earth let him go his way; he is
not the man in whom dwells the Spirit of God in
its fullness, for a man so full of God would utterly
weary of any pursuit but that for which his inmost
soul pants.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (The Sermons of Rev. C. H. Spurgeon: A Collection of over 700 Sermons)
β
Here is the day for the man, where is the man for the day?
β
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Barbed Arrows From the Quiver of C.H. Spurgeon)
β
We are never so free as when we own our sacred serfdom...
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
Thy presence go not with me, carry us not up henceβ (Exod. 33:15).
β
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (The Prayer of Jabez (C. H. Spurgeon Collection Book 5))
β
Do not be ashamed of confessing your past folly. I think a man who says, βI was wrong,β really in effect says, βI am a little wiser to-day than I was yesterday.
β
β
Stephen McCaskell (Through the Eyes of C.H. Spurgeon: Quotes From A Reformed Baptist Preacher)
β
Those who loved you and were helped by you will remember you. So carve your name on hearts and not on marble.β β C. H. Spurgeon
β
β
Dan Miller (48 Days to the Work You Love)
β
commonly it is found in theology that that which is true is not new, and that which is new is not true.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (The Downgrade Controversy (C. H. Spurgeon Collection Book 12))
β
God is so boundlessly pleased with Jesus that in him he is altogether well pleased with us. Accepted Of The Great Father, Volume 29, Sermon #1731 - Ephesians 1:6
β
β
Stephen McCaskell (Through the Eyes of C.H. Spurgeon: Quotes From A Reformed Baptist Preacher)
β
The most important daily habit we can possess is to remind ourselves of the gospel.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
In a sermon entitled βGodβs Providence,β C. H. Spurgeon said, βNapoleon once heard it said, that man proposes and God disposes. βAh,β said Napoleon, βbut I propose and dispose too.β How do you think he proposed and disposed? He proposed to go and take Russia; he proposed to make all Europe his. He proposed to destroy that power, and how did he come back again? How had he disposed it? He came back solitary and alone, his mighty army perished and wasted, having well-nigh eaten and devoured one another through hunger. Man proposes and God disposes.
β
β
Jerry Bridges (Trusting God: Even When Life Hurts)
β
Help us, Lord, to conquer sin out of love to Thee. Help some dear strugglers that have been mastered by sin sometimes, and they are struggling against it; give them the victory, Lord, and when the battle gets very sharp, and they are tempted to give way a little, help them to be very firm and very strong, never giving up hope in the Lord Jesus, and resolving that if they perish they will perish at His feet and nowhere else but there.
β
β
Berenice Aguilera (C.H. Spurgeon's Prayers)
β
The wave of temptation may even wash you higher up upon the Rock of ages, so that you cling to it with a firmer grip than you have ever done before, and so again where sin abounds, grace will much more abound.β 7 C. H. Spurgeon
β
β
Natalie Runion (Raised to Stay: Persevering in Ministry When You Have a Million Reasons to Walk Away)
β
C. H. Spurgeon wrote:
Christ did not love you for your good works. They were not the cause of His beginning to love you. So, He does not
love you for your good works even now. They are not the cause of His continuing to love you. He loves you because He loves you.79
β
β
Derek W.H. Thomas (How the Gospel Brings Us All the Way Home)
β
Any Justification that does not lead to Biblical sanctification and mortification of sinful desires is a false justification no matter how many Solas you attach to itβ.
βSee that your chief study be about the heart, that there Godβs image may be planted, and his interest advanced, and the interest of the world and flesh subdued, and the love of every sin cast out, and the love of holiness succeed; and that you content not yourselves with seeming to do good in outward acts, when you are bad yourselves, and strangers to the great internal duties. The first and great work of a Christian is about his heart.β ~ Richard Baxter
Never forget that truth is more important to the church than peace ~ JC Ryle
"Truth demands confrontation. It must be loving confrontation, but there must be confrontation nonetheless.β ~ Francis Schaeffer
I am not permitted to let my love be so merciful as to tolerate and endure false doctrine. When faith and doctrine are concerned and endangered, neither love nor patience are in order...when these are concerned, (neither toleration nor mercy are in order, but only anger, dispute, and destruction - to be sure, only with the Word of God as our weapon. ~ Martin Luther
βTruth must be spoken, however it be taken.β ~ John Trapp
βHard words, if they be true, are better than soft words if they be false.β β C.H. Spurgeon
βOh my brethren, Bold hearted men are always called mean-spirited by cowardsβ β CH Spurgeon
βThe Bible says Iron sharpens Iron, But if your words don't have any iron in them, you ain't sharpening anyoneβ.
βPeace often comes as a result of conflict!β ~ Don P Mt 18:15-17 Rom 12:18
βPeace if possible, truth at all costs.β ~ Martin Luther
βThe Scriptures argue and debate and dispute; they are full of polemicsβ¦ We should always regret the necessity; but though we regret it and bemoan it, when we feel that a vital matter is at stake we must engage in argument. We must earnestly contend for the truth, and we are all called upon to do that by the New Testament.β Martyn Lloyd-Jones (Romans β Atonement and Justification)
βIt is one of the severest tests of friendship to tell your friend his faults. So to love a man that you cannot bear to see a stain upon him, and to speak painful truth through loving words, that is friendship.β ~ Henry Ward Beecher
βTruth bites and it stings and it has a blade on it.β ~ Paul Washer
Soft words produce hard hearts. Show me a church where soft words are preached and I will show you a church of hard hearts. Jeremiah said that the word of God is a hammer that shatters. Hard Preaching produces soft hearts. ~ J. MacArthur
Glory follows afflictions, not as the day follows the night but as the spring follows the winter; for the winter prepares the earth for the spring, so do afflictions sanctified, prepare the soul for glory. ~ Richard Sibbes
βCowards never won heaven. Do not claim that you are begotten of God and have His royal blood running in your veins unless you can prove your lineage by this heroic spirit: to dare to be holy in spite of men and devils.β ~ William Gurnall
β
β
Various
β
Lord, lead me not into temptation, and when there leave me not there; for unless thou hold me fast I feel I must, I shall decline, and prove an apostate after all." There is enough tinder in the hearts of the best men in the world to light a fire that shall burn to the lowest hell, unless God should quench the sparks as they fall. There is enough corruption, depravity, and wickedness in the heart of the most holy man that is now alive to damn his soul to all eternity, if free and sovereign grace does not prevent.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
Lord purify us in head, heart and hand; and if it be needful that we should be put into the fire to be refined as silver is refined, we would even welcome the fire if we may be rid of the dross. Lord save us from constitutional sin, from sins of temperament, from sins of our surroundings. Save us from ourselves in every shape, and grant us especially to have the light of love strong within us. May we love God; may we love Thee, O Saviour; may we love the people of God as being members of one body in connection with Thee. May we love the guilty world with that love which desires its salvation and conversion; and may we love not in word only, but in deed and in truth. May we help the helpless, comfort the mourner, sympathise with the widow and fatherless, and may we be always ready to put up with wrong, to be long suffering, to be very patient, full of forgiveness, counting it a small thing that we should forgive our fellowmen since we have been forgiven of God. Lord tune our hearts to love, and then give us an inward peace, a restfulness about everything.
β
β
Berenice Aguilera (C.H. Spurgeon's Prayers)
β
And now, Lord, during the few days that remain to us here below, be it all our business to cry, β Behold the Lamb!β Oh! teach these hearts to be always conscious of Thy love; and then these lips, that they may set out as best they can by Thy divine help the matchless story of the Cross. Oh I do give us to win many to Jesus let us not be barren, but may we have to cry that we are the beloved of the Lord, and our offspring with us. May we have many spiritual offspring that shall go with us to the throne, that we may say before Him, 'I and the children that Thou hast given me.
β
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Berenice Aguilera (C.H. Spurgeon's Prayers)
β
Repentance, as a natural feeling, is a common duty deserving no great praise: indeed, it is so generally mingled with a selfish fear of punishment, that the kindliest estimate makes but little of it. Had not Jesus interposed and wrought out a wealth of merit, our tears of repentance would have been so much water spilled upon the ground. Jesus is exalted on high, that through the virtue of His intercession repentance may have a place before God. In this respect He gives us repentance, because He puts repentance into a position of acceptance, which otherwise it could never have occupied.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (All of Grace (C. H. Spurgeon Collection Book 2))
β
We all need sympathy. And as it
is impossible that we should ever perfectly obtain it from our fellow men, there remains but One
who can give it to us. There is One
who can enter the closet where the skeleton is locked up. One who is in touch with our unmentionable grief. He weighs and measures that which is too heavy for us to bear. That blessed One! Oh,that we may each one have Him for our
Friend! Without Him we shall lack the great necessity of a happy life! A personal Savior is absolutely needful to each of us to meet our individual personality. Jesus, alone, can understand with our joy and make it still more gladsome. He,alone, can understand our grief and remove its wormwood.
"Man unknown to man sermon
β
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
We wish we knew how to do something for Thee. We pray that we may be helped to do so ere we die; yea, that every flying hour may confess that we have brought Thy Gospel some renown; that we may so live as to extend the Redeemer's kingdom at least in some little measure; that ours may not be a fruitless, wasted life that no faculty of ours may lay by and rust; but to the utmost of our capacity may we be helped of the Divine Spirit to spend our whole life in real adoration. We know that he prays that serves, he praises that gives, he adores that obeys, and the life is the best music. Oh! set it to good music, we pray Thee, and help us all through to keep to each note, and may there be no false note in all the singing of our life, but all be according to that sacred score which is written out so fully in the life music of our Lord.
β
β
Berenice Aguilera (C.H. Spurgeon's Prayers)
β
it is possible for you to have real faith, and yet to have the most grievous unbelief! "Oh!" say you, "how can faith and unbelief live together?" They cannot live together in peace, but they may dwell together in the same heart. Remember what our Lord Jesus said to Peter "O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt?" He did not say, "O thou of no faith," but "of little faith." Thus there was some faith, though there was also much doubt. So, in the psalmist, there was some faith, β there was, indeed, a great deal of faith, β for he said, "O my God," and it takes great faith truly to say "my God." Yet is there not also great unbelief here? Otherwise, would his soul have been cast down at all? But, meanwhile, had he not the yearnings of lively hope in God? If not, would he have dared to say, "Therefore will I remember thee from the land of Jordan, and of the Hermonites, from the hill Mizar ?
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
Verse 71. To feed Jacob his people. (This is a curious specimen of medieval spiritualising, and is here inserted as such. It is amusing to note that a Tractarian expositor quotes the passage with evidently intense admiration. C. H. S.) Observe, a good shepherd must be humble and faithful, he ought to have bread in a wallet, a dog by a string, a staff with a rod, and a tuneful horn. The bread is the word of God, the wallet is the memory of the word; the dog is zeal, wherewith the shepherd glows for the house of God, casts out the wolves with pious barking, following preaching and unwearied prayer: the string by which the dog is held is the moderation of zeal, and discretion, whereby the zeal of the shepherd is tempered by the spirit of piety and knowledge. The staff is the consolation of pious exhortation by which the too timid are sustained and refreshed, lest they fail in the time of tribulation; but the rod is the authority and power by which the turbulent are restrained. The tuneful horn, which sounds so sweetly, signifies the sweetness of eternal blessedness, which the faithful shepherd gently and often instils into the ears of his flock. Johannes Paulus Palanterius. 1600.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (The Treasury of David, Complete)
β
Lord look upon Thy people. We might pray about our troubles. We will not; we will only pray against our sins. We might come to Thee about our weariness, about our sickness, about our disappointment, about our poverty; but we will leave all that, we will only come about sin. Lord make us holy, and then do what Thou wilt with us. We pray Thee help us to adore the doctrine of God our Saviour in all things. If we are fighting against sin β β the sin which doth so easily beset us β β Lord lend us heavenly weapons and heavenly strength that we may cut the giants down, these men of Anak that come against us. We feel very feeble. Oh! make us strong in the Lord, in the power of His might. May we never let sin have any rest in us, may we chase it, drive it out, slay it, hang it on a tree, abhor it, and may we β cleave to that which is good.β Some of us are trying, striving after some excellent virtue. Lord help strugglers; enable those that contend against great difficulties only to greater grace, more faith, and so to bring them nearer to God. Lord we will be holy; by Thy grace we will never rest until we are. Thou hast begun a good work in us and Thou wilt carry it on. Thou wilt work in us to will and to do of Thine own good pleasure.
β
β
Berenice Aguilera (C.H. Spurgeon's Prayers)
β
O Christian, thou hast need to pray this prayer. But I think I hear you saying, "Is thy servant a dog, that I should do this thing?" So said Hazael, when the prophet told him that he would slay his master; but he went home and took a wet cloth and spread it over his master's face and choked him, and did the next day the sin which he abhorred before. Think it not enough to abhor sin, you may yet fall into it. Say not, "I never can be drunken, for I have such an abhorrence of drunkenness;" thou mayest fall where thou art most secure. Say not, "I can never blaspheme God, for I have never done so in my life;" take care; you may yet swear most profanely. Job might have said, "I will never curse the day of my birth;" but he lived to do it. He was a patient man; he might have said, "I will never murmur; though he slay me, yet will I trust in him;" and yet he lived to wish that the day were darkness wherein he was brought forth. Boast not, then, O Christian; by faith thou standest. "Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall."
But if this need to be the prayer of the best, how ought it to be the prayer of you and me? If the highest saint must pray it, O mere moralist, thou hast good need to utter it. And ye who have begun to sin, who make no pretensions to piety, how much need is there for you to pray that you may be kept from presumptuously rebelling against God.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
We just come and lie at Thy feet, obedient to that call of Thine, β Come unto Me all ye that labour and I will give you rest.β Let us feel sweet rest, since we do come at Thy call. May some come that have never come till this day, and may others who have been coming these many years consciously come again, coming unto Thee as unto a living stone, chosen of God and precious, to build our everlasting hopes upon. But, Lord, now that we are come so near Thee, and on right terms with Thee, we venture to ask Thee this, that we that love Thee may love Thee very much more. Oh! since Thou hast been precious, Thy very name has music in it to our ears, and there are times when Thy love is so inexpressibly strong upon us that we are carried away with it. We have felt that we would gladly die to increase Thine honour. We have been willing to lose our name and our repute if so be Thou mightest be glorified, and truly we often feel that if the crushing of us would lift Thee one inch the higher, we would gladly suffer it. For oh! Thou blessed King, we would set the crown on Thy head, even if the sword should smite our arm off at the shoulder blade. Thou must be King whatever becomes of us; Thou must be glorified whatever becomes of us. But yet we have to mourn that we cannot get always to feel as we should this rapture and ardour of love. Oh! at times Thou dost manifest Thyself to us so charmingly that heaven itself could scarce be happier than the world becomes when Thou art with us in it. But when Thou art gone and we are in the dark, oh! give us the love that loves in the dark, that loves when there is no comfortable sense of Thy presence. Let us not be dependent upon feeling, but may we ever love Thee, so that if Thou didst turn Thy back on us by the year together we would think none the less of Thee, for Thou art unspeakably to be beloved whatsoever Thou doest, and if Thou dost give us rough words, yet still we would cling to Thee, and if the rod be used till we tingle again, yet still will we love Thee, for Thou art infinitely to be beloved of all men and angels, and Thy Father loved Thee. Make our hearts to love Thee evermore the same. With all the capacity for love that there is in us, and with all the more that Thou canst give us, may we love our Lord in spirit and in truth.
β
β
Berenice Aguilera (C.H. Spurgeon's Prayers)
β
Here I am, a poor lost sinner, but if I can only get to Jesus I shall be forgiven and saved. Here I am, vexed with unruly passions, diseased with this sin and that, but if I may only touch him, he is so full of healing power that, mass of spiritual disease though I may be, the moment I touch him, his virtue will battle with my disease and vanquish it for ever.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
When we begin our Christian profession we mount up with wings as eagles. Further on we run without weariness; but in our best days, we walk without fainting.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
God will keep every promise He has made to the righteous and to the wicked. Those who know the terror of the Lord will persuade men. We need to be ashamed at the bare suspicion of unconcern.β-C.H. Spurgeon
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
O soul! You are at war with your conscience. You have tried to quiet it, but it will prick you. Oh, there are some of you to whom conscience is a ghost haunting you by day and night. You know the good, though you choose the evil; you prick your fingers with the thorn of conscience when you try to pluck the rose of sin.β-Spurgeon
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
My entire theology can be condensed into four words. Jesus died for me.
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β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
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JUNΒ 19Β -Β AΒ SOUNDΒ HEART
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Faith's Checkbook (C. H. Spurgeon Collection 4))
β
C. H. Spurgeonβs wicked story of the Irishman who, asked how he got on at the meeting of a small separatist church said, βOh, it was lovely; none of us knew anything, and we all taught each other,β has a message for us here.
β
β
J.I. Packer (Growing in Christ)
β
Beloved Christian reader, in matters of grace you need a daily supply. .Β .Β . Never go hungry while the daily bread of grace is on the table of mercy. C. H. Spurgeon
β
β
Lisa Appelo (Life Can Be Good Again: Putting Your World Back Together After It All Falls Apart)
β
The spirit of war is at the extremely opposite point to the spirit of the gospel...We are up to the hilt advocates for peace, and we earnestly war against war. I wish that Christian men would insist more and more on the unrighteousness of war, believing that Christianity means no sword, no cannon, no bloodshed, and that, if a nation is driven to fight in its own defence, Christianity stands by to weep and to intervene as soon as possible, and not to join in the cruel shouts which celebrate an enemyβs slaughter. . . . Today, then, my brethren, I beg you to join with me in seeking renewal.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon
β
Our seasons of fasting and prayer at the tabernacle have been high days indeed; never has heavenβs gate stood wider; never have our hearts been nearer the central glory.
β
β
C. H. Spurgeon
β
We should pray when we are in a praying mood, for it would be sinful to neglect so fair an opportunity. We should pray when we are not in a proper mood, for it would be dangerous to remain in so unhealthy a condition.
β
β
C H Spurgeon
β
There are enough in the novelty business without us; and we have something better to do. We have to give an account unto our God of what we do and say, and if we have been murderers of souls, it will be no excuse that we flourished the dagger well, or that when we gave them poison we mixed the draught cleverly, and presented it with poetical phrases.
β
β
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Barbed Arrows From the Quiver of C.H. Spurgeon)
β
Remember that we have no more faith at any time than we have in the hour of trial. All that will not bear to be tested is mere carnal confidence. Fair-weather faith is no faith. C. H. SPURGEON
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β
Lettie B. Cowman (Streams in the Desert)
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To pray is to grasp heaven in one's arms, to embrace the Deity within one's soul, and to feel one's body made a temple of the Holy Spirit. C.H. Spurgeon
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Kevin W. Shorter (Prayer Quotes: inspiration to draw you closer to God)
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The utmost zeal for Christ is consistent with common-sense and reason: raving, ranting, and fanaticism are products of another zeal which is not according to knowledge.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (The Soul Winner: How to Lead Sinners to the Saviour (C. H. Spurgeon Collection Book 9))
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May none of us contribute to the evil directly or indirectly, but may we contribute to the good that is in it.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (C.H. Spurgeon's Prayers)
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Growing a beard is a habit most natural, Scriptural, manly and beneficial.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon
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Men are microcosms, or little worldsβeach man has
his distinct sphere, wherein he dwells.
We are so many worlds and no one world of man exactly overlaps another. You cannot completely know your fellow
man. All that you know concerning your fellowsβand there is much which we can knowβleaves a great deal as un-known to us as the fixed stars.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon
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Well said our Lord, βJudge not,
that you be not judged.β Especially judge not the sons and
daughters of sorrow. Allow no ungenerous suspicions of the afflicted, the poor and the despondent
. Do not hastily say
they ought to be more brave and exhibit a greater faith.
Ask not why are they so nervous
and so absurdly
fearful? No, in this you speak as one of the foolish women speaks. I beseech you, remember that you understand not your fellow man.
sermon "Man unknown to man
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon
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with Christ, to know and to do are two things that run parallel.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (No Tears in Heaven)
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The first Adam came to the fig tree for leaves, but the Second Adam looks for figs. The Withered Fig Tree, Volume 35, Sermon #2107 - Matthew 21:17-20
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Stephen McCaskell (Through the Eyes of C.H. Spurgeon: Quotes From A Reformed Baptist Preacher)
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MORE FROM GODβS WORD We also have joy with our troubles, because we know that these troubles produce patience. And patience produces character, and character produces hope. Romans 5:3-4 NCV The LORD also will be a stronghold for the oppressed, a stronghold in times of trouble. Psalm 9:9 NASB You pulled me from the brink of death, my feet from the cliff-edge of doom. Now I stroll at leisure with God in the sunlit fields of life. Psalm 56:13 MSG Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For My yoke is easy and My burden is light. Matthew 11:28-30 NKJV The Lord is the One who will go before you. He will be with you; He will not leave you or forsake you. Do not be afraid or discouraged. Deuteronomy 31:8 HCSB For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind. 2 Timothy 1:7 NKJV SHADES OF GRACE Grace grows best in the winter. C. H. Spurgeon A PRAYER FOR TODAY Heavenly Father, You are my strength and my refuge. As I journey through this day, I know that I may
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Freeman Smith (Fifty Shades of Grace: Devotions Celebrating God's Unlimited Gift)
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Having no feeling himself, such a preacher creates none, and the people sit and listen while he keeps to dry, lifeless statements, until they come to value him for being "sound", and they themselves come to be sound, too; and I need not add, sound asleep also,
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (The Soul Winner: How to Lead Sinners to the Saviour (C. H. Spurgeon Collection Book 9))
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Look to the cross, and hate your sin, for sin nailed your Well Beloved to the tree.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon
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Human wisdom delights to trim and arrange the doctrines of the cross into a system more artificial and more congenial with the depraved tastes of fallen nature; instead, however, of improving the gospel carnal wisdom pollutes it, until it becomes another gospel, and not the truth of God at all.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Morning And Evening)
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There is an inherent blasphemy in seeking to add to what Christ Jesus in His dying moments declared to be finished, or to improve that in which the Lord Jehovah finds perfect satisfaction.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Morning And Evening)
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Well was it so ordered in the temple that the sacred chant never ceased: for evermore did the singers praise the Lord, whose mercy endureth for ever. As mercy did not cease to rule either by day or by night, so neither did music hush its holy ministry. My heart, there is a lesson sweetly taught to thee in the ceaseless song of Zion's temple, thou too art a constant debtor, and see thou to it that thy gratitude, like charity, never faileth.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Morning And Evening)
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Nor am I alone in this, for all the Lord's beloved ones have had to sing the mingled song of judgment and of mercy, of trial and deliverance, of mourning and of delight.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Morning And Evening)
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Unlikely waters may cover hopeful soil.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon
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We trust Him, and sin dies; we love Him, and grace lives; we wait for Him and grace is strengthened; we see Him as he is, and grace is perfected for ever.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Morning And Evening)
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We must not forget that the gospel of Christ is holy. It never excuses sin: it pardons it, but only through an atonement.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Morning And Evening)
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He carries the lambs in His bosom." Here is boundless affection. Would He put them in His bosom if He did not love them much? Here is tender nearness: so near are they, that they could not possibly be nearer. Here is hallowed familiarity: there are precious love-passages between Christ and His weak ones. Here is perfect safety: in His bosom who can hurt them? They must hurt the Shepherd first. Here is perfect rest and sweetest comfort. Surely we are not sufficiently sensible of the infinite tenderness of Jesus!
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Morning And Evening)
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To us, sensations such as our Lord endured would have been insupportable, and kind unconsciousness would have come to our rescue; but in His case, He was wounded, and felt the sword; He drained the cup and tasted everydrop.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Morning And Evening)
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Believer in Jesus, can you gaze upon Him without tears, as He stands before you the mirror of agonizing love? He is at once fair as the lily for innocence, and red as the rose with the crimson of His own blood. As we feel the sure and blessed healing which His stripes have wrought in us, does not our heart melt at once with love and grief?
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Morning And Evening)
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To watch with Jesus should be our business, to protect His honour our occupation, to abide by His cross our solace.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Morning And Evening)
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As John Stott writes: Expository preaching is a most exacting discipline. Perhaps that is why it is so rare. Only those will undertake it who are prepared to follow the example of the apostles and say, βIt is not right that we should give up preaching the Word of God to serve tables.Β .Β .Β . We will devote ourselves to prayer and to the ministry of the Wordβ (Acts 6:2, 4). The systematic preaching of the Word is impossible without the systematic study of it. It will not be enough to skim through a few verses in daily Bible reading, nor to study a passage only when we have to preach from it. No. We must daily soak ourselves in the Scriptures. We must not just study, as through a microscope, the linguistic minutiae of a few verses, but take our telescope and scan the wide expanses of Godβs Word, assimilating its grand theme of divine sovereignty in the redemption of mankind. βIt is blessed,β wrote C. H. Spurgeon, βto eat into the very soul of the Bible until, at last, you come to talk in Scriptural language, and your spirit is flavoured with the words of the Lord, so that your blood is Bibline and the very essence of the Bible flows from you.β6 The
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Harry L. Reeder III (From Embers to a Flame: How God Can Revitalize Your Church)
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I know men who, from head to feet, are so ministerial in their dress that no particle of manhood is visible. An individual who has no geniality about him had better be an undertaker, and bury the dead, for he will never succeed in influencing the living. I commend cheerfulness to all who would win souls; not levity and frothiness, but a genial, happy spirit.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon
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Some of the scholastic rabbis just prior to Jesus' time became embarrassed by the fact that a woman with Rahab's background was spared in the destruction of Jericho and brought into Israel as a proselyte. They proposed a different understanding of the Hebrew word for harlot in Joshua 2:1. The Hebrew term is similiar to a word meaning "to feed," they claimed. Perhaps Rahab was really just an innkeeper or a hostess, they countered.
The problem is, the actual Hebrew word really can mean only one thing: "harlot." That was the uncontested undertanding of this text for centuries. In fact, there is no ambiguity whatsoever in the Septuagint or in the Greek tests of Hebrews. The Greek word used to describe Rahab is porne, meaning harlot. Notice that the term comes from the same root as the English term pornography and has similar negative moral overtones.
The idea of sanitizing Rahab's background was revived by some churchmen with overly delicate sensibilities in the Victorian era. C>H> Spurgeon, the best-known Baptist preacher in late nineteenth-century London, replied, This woman was no mere hostess, but a real harlot....I am persuaded that nothing but a spirit of distaste for free grace would ever have led any commentator to deny her sin.
He was exactly right, of course,. Remove the stigma of sin, and you remove the need for grace. Rehab is extraordinary precisely because she received extraordinary grace. There's no need to reinvent her past to try to make her seem less of a sinner. The disturbing fact about what she once was simply magnifies the glory of divine grace, which is what made her extraodinary woman she became. That, after all, is the whole lesson of her life.
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John F. MacArthur Jr.
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I will always be with youβββnor forsake you.β The force
of that promise is, βBeing with you, I will never let you
work alone. I will help you. I will not desert you as to My
Presence and I will not desert y
ou as to My succor. I will be
with you and I will help you in all that you have to
do.β This is a double promise and it is doubly sweet!
Besides that,
this promise wards off from us the most terri
ble calamity that could possibly occur to us
. It may help to
make this promise increasingly precious to us if we think for a
minute what would become of
us if God did leave us or
forsake us. Then, indeed, might the heavens be hung with bl
ackness and the light of the sun be put out forever if God
should leave us! The straight road to
Hell would be open before us and we shoul
d soon be going there if we were forsaken
of God. It would have been far better to
never have been born, or never to have
known the way of life at all than, after
all, to be deserted of God and be left to perish! Thank God
that can never be the portion of
anyone who has truly trusted
in Him.
Recollect also that,
if He had not been God, He w
ould have forsaken us long ago
. Our patience with our fellow crea-
tures holds out but a very little while. But it is because G
od is God and, therefore, changes not, that we are not con-
sumed. Have you not done a t
housand times enough to have made Him forsake
you if He were like the
sons of men? I con-
fess sorrowfully that I know I have. And if He could turn
from His eternal purpose, and if His everlasting love could
change, then surely He would long ago have cast my poor soul
far away from His Presence, to receive its well-deserved
punishment! Is it not a blessed thing to think that the very th
ing that is most to be feared by any man can never happen to
a Believer, for God has said, βI will neve
r leave you, nor forsake youβ? You well de
serve to be forsaken
of God, but He
will never leave you! He will deal with yo
u in the way of Grace, and not of Justice.
If He left you, you would utterly pe-
rish, but He will not and cannot do so
βyou are too dear to Him for His he
art to ever turn away from you.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon
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When the old faith is gone, and the enthusiasm for the gospel is extinct, it is no wonder that people seek something else in the way of delight.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon
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THE NEED TO BE DISCIPLINED Do you not know that the runners in a stadium all race, but only one receives the prize? Run in such a way that you may win. Now everyone who competes exercises self-control in everything. However, they do it to receive a perishable crown, but we an imperishable one. 1 Corinthians 9:24-25 HCSB God is clear: we must exercise self-discipline in all matters. Self-discipline is not simply a proven way to get ahead, itβs also an integral part of Godβs plan for our lives. If we genuinely seek to be faithful stewards of our time, our talents, and our resources, we must adopt a disciplined approach to life. Otherwise, our talents are wasted and our resources are squandered. Our greatest rewards result from hard work and perseverance. May we, as disciplined believers, be willing to work for the rewards we so earnestly desire. Personal humility is a spiritual discipline and the hallmark of the service of Jesus. Franklin Graham He will clothe you in rags if you clothe yourself with idleness. C. H. Spurgeon A TIMELY TIP When you take a disciplined approach to your life and your responsibilities, God will reward your good judgment.
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Freeman (Once A Day Everyday β¦ For A Woman of Grace)
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Theories are the nuisances of science: the rubbish that must be swept away that the precious facts may be made bare. If you go to the study of a subject, saying to yourself, βThis is how the matter must shape itself,β having beforehand made up your mind what the facts ought to be, you will have put in your own way a difficulty more severe than the subject itself could place there. Prejudice is the stumbling block of advance. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
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Joseph S. Exell (The Biblical Illustrator - Vol. 41 - Pastoral Commentary on Mark)
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If any minister can be satisfied without conversions, he shall have no conversions.βC. H. Spurgeon
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E.M. Bounds (The Complete Collection of E. M. Bounds on Prayer)
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C. H. Spurgeon, who said it better and more succinctly than I ever couldβ¦. βDo what the Lord bids you, where he bids you, as He bids you, as long as He bids you, and do it at once!
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D. I. Hennessey (The Time of His Choosing (Within & Without Time #5))
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DacΔ ai o inimΔ care vrea sΔ se roage, vei gΔsi timp pentru asta, pentru cΔ nu timpul este problema, ci inima.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon
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DacΔ vrei sΔ Γl cunoΘti pe Dumnezeu, trebuie sΔ cunoΘti CuvΓ’ntul Lui.
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Charles Haddon Spurgeon