Spurgeon Christmas Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Spurgeon Christmas. Here they are! All 4 of them:

It is no use for you to attempt to sow out of an empty basket, for that would be sowing nothing but wind,” wrote Spurgeon.
Ann Voskamp (The Greatest Gift: Unwrapping the Full Love Story of Christmas)
When your heart is full of Christ you want to sing. CHARLES SPURGEON, ENGLISH PREACHER (1834–1892)
David McLaughlan (It's a Wonderful Life: A 31-Day Devotional Based on Favorite Christmas Classics)
Now with angels round the throne, Cherubim and seraphim, And the church, which still is one, Let us swell the solemn hymn; Glory to the great I AM! Glory to the Victim Lamb. Blessing, honour, glory, might, And dominion infinite, To the Father of our Lord, To the Spirit and the Word; As it was all worlds before, Is, and shall be evermore.
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Good Tidings of Great Joy: A Collection of Christmas Sermons)
Then, note, if angels shouted before and when the world was made, their hallelujahs were more full, more strong, more magnificent, if not more hearty, when they saw Jesus Christ born of the Virgin Mary to be man’s redeemer—“Glory to God in the highest.” What is the instructive lesson to be learned from this first syllable of the angels’ song? Why this, that salvation is God’s highest glory. He is glorified in every dew drop that twinkles to the morning sun. He is magnified in every wood flower that blossoms in the copse, although it live to blush unseen, and waste its sweetness in the forest air. God is glorified in every bird that warbles on the spray; in every lamb that skips the mead. Do not the fishes in the sea praise him? From the tiny minnow to the huge Leviathan, do not all creatures that swim the water bless and praise his name? Do not all created things extol him? Is there aught beneath the sky, save man, that doth not glorify God? Do not the stars exalt him, when they write his name upon the azure of heaven in their golden letters? Do not the lightnings adore him when they flash his brightness in arrows of light piercing the midnight darkness? Do not thunders extol him when they roll like drums in the march of the God of armies? Do not all things exalt him, from the least even to the greatest? But sing, sing, oh universe, till thou hast exhausted thyself, thou canst not afford a song so sweet as the song of incarnation. Though creation may be a majestic organ of praise, it cannot reach the compass of the golden canticle—incarnation. There is more in that than in creation, more melody in Jesus in the manger, than there is in worlds on worlds rolling their grandeur round the throne of the Most High. Pause Christian, and consider this a minute. See how every attribute is here magnified.
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (Good Tidings of Great Joy: A Collection of Christmas Sermons)