Archives For saturday spurgeon

This week’s Saturday Spurgeon comes from Spurgeon’s Morning by Morning for 19 January.

bleat saturday spurgeon“I sought him, but I found him not.”—Song of Solomon 3:1

Tell me where you lost the company of Christ, and I will tell you the most likely place to find Him. Have you lost Christ in the closet by restraining prayer? Then it is there you must seek and find Him. Did you lose Christ by sin? You will find Christ in no other way but by the giving up of the sin, and seeking by the Holy Spirit to mortify the member in which the lust doth dwell. Did you lose Christ by neglecting the Scriptures? You must find Christ in the Scriptures. It is a true proverb, “Look for a thing where you dropped it, it is there.” So look for Christ where you lost Him, for He has not gone away. But it is hard work to go back for Christ. Bunyan tells us, the pilgrim found the piece of the road back to the Arbour of Ease, where he lost his roll, the hardest he had ever travelled. Twenty miles onward is easier than to go one mile back for the lost evidence.

Take care, then, when you find your Master, to cling close to Him. But how is it you have lost Him? One would have thought you would never have parted with such a precious friend, whose presence is so sweet, whose words are so comforting, and whose company is so dear to you! How is it that you did not watch Him every moment for fear of losing sight of Him? Yet, since you have let Him go, what a mercy that you are seeking Him, even though you mournfully groan, “O that I knew where I might find Him!” Go on seeking, for it is dangerous to be without thy Lord. Without Christ you are like a sheep without its shepherd; like a tree without water at its roots; like a sere leaf in the tempest—not bound to the tree of life. With thine whole heart seek Him, and He will be found of thee: only give thyself thoroughly up to the search, and verily, thou shalt yet discover Him to thy joy and gladness.

The preaching of mere morality in a country that is abandoning all sense of moral thought and action is certainly a temptation. Immorality is offensive to God and those who love righteousness. However, the preacher must never preach mere morality to the neglect of preaching Christ crucified. This week’s Saturday Spurgeon comes from Sermon 139.

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This week’s Saturday Spurgeon comes from the sermon “Lost Through One – Saved Through One” delivered on April 24, 1879.

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This week’s Saturday Spurgeon comes from Sermon No. 226, “The Feast of the Lord.” Though a bit longer than previously posted sections, it is worth the read!

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This week’s Saturday Spurgeon comes from Sermon No. 49 delivered on November 4, 1855.

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This week’s Saturday Spurgeon comes from a sermon (No. 392) delivered on Sunday Morning, May 12th, 1861. Continue Reading…

This week’s Saturday Spurgeon comes from the preface to Volume 9 0f the Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit. Continue Reading…

This week’s Saturyday Spurgeon comes from Sermon #2254, “The Two Guards Praying and Watching.” Continue Reading…

Spurgeon viewed communing with non-Baptists as a must. This week’s Saturday Spurgeon comes from a sermon delivered in February, 1861 titled The Earnest of Heaven. Continue Reading…

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This week’s Saturday Spurgeon comes from Spurgeon’s Morning by Morning for August 11. Continue Reading…

Below is a slide from David Dockery’s presentation at the Kentucky Baptist Convention’s Calvinism conference being held today in Louisville.  Continue Reading…

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The preaching of doctrine to the neglect of lifting up the glory of Christ from the pulpit is an understandable temptation in today’s doctrinally deficient church era. Spurgeon warns against this kind of preaching. Continue Reading…

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