We didn’t make a recording of this sermon (The Exaltation of Christ), but we searched the internet high and low and found someone who did!
↓ Streaming audio provided here ↓
If you’re aware of any other recording of this sermon that we missed, contact us on social media, or at hearspurgeon@gmail.com and we’ll add it to the page! Facebook ~ Twitter ~ Instagram
We didn’t make a recording of this sermon (The Duty of Remembering the Poor), but we searched the internet high and low and found someone who did!
↓ Streaming audio provided here ↓
If you’re aware of any other recording of this sermon that we missed, contact us on social media, or at hearspurgeon@gmail.com and we’ll add it to the page! Facebook ~ Twitter ~ Instagram
We didn’t make a recording of this sermon (The Day of Atonement), but we searched the internet high and low and found someone who did!
↓ Streaming audio provided here ↓
If you’re aware of any other recording of this sermon that we missed, contact us on social media, or at hearspurgeon@gmail.com and we’ll add it to the page! Facebook ~ Twitter ~ Instagram
We didn’t make a recording of this sermon (Hatred Without Cause),
but we searched the internet high and low and found someone who did!
↓ Streaming audio provided here ↓
If you’re aware of any other recording of this sermon that we missed, contact us on social media, or at hearspurgeon@gmail.com and we’ll add it to the page! Facebook ~ Twitter ~ Instagram
Having been convicted of murder, William Palmer was put to death on June 14th, 1856. The next morning, young Charles Spurgeon, reflecting on the events of the previous day, spoke on the perfect justice of God in condemning sinners.
The topic is far from pleasant, for Spurgeon speaks often of our deserved doom. I urge you to think of Jesus every time the miseries of hell are mentioned! For He suffered in our place on the cross, so that we might escape those miseries and enjoy Him forever.
Trust Him!
“Against thee, thee only, have I sinned, and done this evil in thy sight: that thou mightest be justified when thou speakest, and be clear when thou judgest,”—Psalm 51:4.
Main Points:
1. Condemnation of the believer – 7:00
2. Condemnation of the unbeliever – 28:50
The following are select quotes from this sermon.
Please use the comment section below to share your own thoughts regarding this podcast!
When God the Holy Ghost in the soul passes sentence on the old man, and condemns it for its sins, there is felt most solemnly in the heart the great truth, that hell itself is but a rightful punishment for sin.
Ah! my dear friends, there may be some who rail at God’s justice; but no convinced sinner ever will. He sees God’s law in all its glorious holiness, and he smites his hand upon his breast, and he says, “O sinner that I am! that I ever could have sinned against such a reasonable law and such perfect commandments!” He sees God’s love towards him, and that cuts him to the very quick. He says, “Oh! that I should ever have spit on the face of that Christ who died for me! Wretch that I am, that I could ever have crowned that bleeding head with the thorns of my sins, which gave itself to slumber in the grave for my redemption!” Nothing cuts the sinner to the quick more than the fact, that he has sinned against a great amount of mercy. This indeed, makes him weep; and he says, “O Lord, seeing I have been so ungrateful, the direst doom thou canst ever sentence me to, or the fiercest punishment thou canst ever execute upon my head, would not be too heavy for the sins I have committed against thee.”
The sinner may in this world think that he can never by his sins by any possibility deserve hell; but he will not indulge that thought when he gets there. One of the miseries of hell will be that the sinner will feel that he deserves it all.
We didn’t make a recording of this sermon (The Character of Christ’s People),
but we searched the internet high and low and found others who did!
↓ Streaming audio provided here ↓
If you’re aware of any other recording of this sermon that we missed, contact us on social media, or at hearspurgeon@gmail.com and we’ll add it to the page! Facebook ~ Twitter ~ Instagram
Young Charles Spurgeon had no shortage of comforting words (See sermons 5, 6, 13, 31, and 53), and while he took no pleasure in pointing out faults in the church, he considered it a loving act to show people where they were at odds with their God.
This sermon (A Solemn Warning for all Churches) was preached on February 24th, 1856, and is still relevant for churches of the 21st century.
“You have a few names even in Sardis which have not defiled their garments; and they shall walk with me in white; for they are worthy.”—Revelation 3:4.
Main Points:
1. General defilement – 2:48
2. Special preservation – 24:38
3. A peculiar reward – 31:43
The following are select quotes from this sermon.
Please use the comment section below to share your own thoughts regarding this podcast!
But what do men say of us? “Oh! you are too excited.” Good God! excited! when men are being damned; Excited! When we have the mission of heaven to preach to dying souls. Excited! preaching too much! when souls are lost. Why should it come to pass that one man should be perpetually labouring all the week, while others are lolling upon their couches, and preach only upon the Sabbath-day? Can I bear to see the laziness, the slothfulness, the indifference of ministers, and of churches, without speaking. No! there must be a protest entered, and we enter it now.
If we would be certain that we are the people of God, we must take care that we have no blots on our dress, for each one of those spatterings of the mire of this earth will cry out, and say “Perhaps you are not a child of God.” Nothing is such a father of doubts as sin; sin is the very mother of our distress. He who is covered with sin must not expect to enjoy full assurance, but he who liveth close to his God, and keeps his garments unspotted from the world—he shall walk in white, knowing that his adoption is sure.
Sadly, we didn’t make a recording of this sermon…
But we searched the internet high and low and found someone who did!
↓ Streaming audio provided here ↓
If you’re aware of any other recording of this sermon that we missed, contact us on social media, or at hearspurgeon@gmail.com, and we’ll add it to the page! Facebook ~ Twitter ~ Instagram
Sadly, we didn’t make a recording of this sermon…
But we searched the internet high and low and found others who did!
↓ Streaming audio provided here ↓
If you’re aware of any other recording of this sermon that we missed, contact us on social media, or at hearspurgeon@gmail.com, and we’ll add it to the page! Facebook ~ Twitter ~ Instagram
Listen to a new recording of this the last sermon from Volume One of Spurgeon’s sermon collection!
‘Healing for the Wounded’ was delivered on November 11th, 1855, by a 21 year-old Charles Spurgeon.
“He healeth the broken in heart, and bindeth up their wounds.”—Psalm 147:3.
Main Points:
1. A great ill – 5:03
2. A great mercy – 27:27
The following are select quotes from this sermon.
Please use the comment section below to share your own thoughts regarding this podcast!
We very speedily care for bodily diseases; they are too painful to let us slumber in silence; and they soon urge us to seek a physician or a surgeon for our healing. Oh, if we were as much alive to the more serious wounds of our inner man; if we were as deeply sensible of spiritual injuries, how earnestly should we cry to “the Beloved Physician,” and how soon should we prove his power to save. Stabbed in the most vital part by the hand of our original parent, and from head to foot disabled by our own sin, we yet remain as insensible as steel, careless and unmoved, because though our wounds are known they are not felt. We should count that soldier foolish, who would be more anxious to repair a broken helmet than an injured limb. Are not we even more to be condemned, when we give precedence to the perishing fabric of the body, and neglect the immortal soul?
Believe O troubled one, that he is able to save thee unto the uttermost, and thou shall not believe in vain. Now, in the silence of your agony, look unto him who by his stripes healeth thee. Jesus Christ has suffered the penalty of thy sins, and has endured the wrath of God on thy behalf.