Contents:
Volume 19, Sermons by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Volume 19, Sermons Volume 26 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More.
Volume 27 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Volume 28 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Volume 29 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Volume 30 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Volume 31 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Volume 32 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Volume 33 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Volume 34 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More.
Volume 35 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Volume 36 by Charles Haddon Spurgeon.
Volume 36 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Volume 37, Sermons by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Volume 37, Sermons Volume 38 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Volume 39 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Volume 40 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More.
Volume 41 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Volume 42, Sermons by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Volume 42, Sermons Volume 43, Sermons by Charles Haddon Spurgeon.
Volume 43 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Volume 43, Sermons Volume 44 by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Volume 44, Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Volume 45 by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Volume 45 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Volume 46 by Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Volume 46 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More.
Volume 47 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Volume 48 Sermons Charles Spurgeon 19… More. Heligoland This is surely the best and funniest of Mr. Hindhead "If you perish from want of shelter it will not be because there was no room for you in Christ. For Young Preachers "Abhor the practice of some men, who will not bring out the letter 'r,' such a habit is 'vewy wuinous and wediculous, vewy wetched and wepwehensible. We confess that all quickening must be wrought by the Lord alone, and our humble petition is that, if the Lord will use us in connection with his miracles of grace, he would now show us what he would have us to do.
Spurgeon at a prayer-meeting, when a friend had been carried out in a fit. Interviews with Three of the King's Captains "Poor pieces of common clay are all these men by nature; their luster and excellence are entirely due to their common Lord, who counts them all his own blood-bought jewels.
THE AGES DIGITAL LIBRARY. COLLECTIONS. THE SWORD AND THE TROWEL. VOLUME 3 by Charles H. Spurgeon, editor. To the Students of the Words. Full text of "Charles Haddon Spurgeon, Sword And Trowel, Seven Volumes" 3 CONTENTS VOLUME 5 — YEAR: Index to Texts of Sermons (S & T, Vols.
We delight in them as his workmanship, and feel it to be right to admire his grace in them. Spurgeon "No Tabernacle enterprise has ever yet been in debt. No building raised under our immediate auspices has ever been opened without being paid for. Is this to be an exception to an admirable rule? Shall we tarnish our laurels?
A Plea "We cut out from an American paper the other day a short article. Let its professors see to it that it becomes to them no dry doctrine, empty and void and waste. Bartholomew It must not be supposed that in consequence of the respectable appearance which Catholicism is now necessitated to put on that the nature of Popery is changed. It is, and from its organization must continue to be, ambitious of supremacy.
Moody and Sankey in Great Britian "Of the work in London, we can only say that various opinions are held, but no one can doubt that the two beloved workers did their utmost to bring down a blessing, and that in a measure the blessing did come. Grant on "The Darby Brethren" "There is nothing which they have so much to dread as being thoroughly unearthed and exposed; for their grosser errors are not generally made known to their dupes until they are fairly in their meshes. Newton and the "Brethren" "You have mentioned his name in your remarks in such a way as may lead to the impression that he is a leader of one party of the "Brethren.
Spurgeon among the Costermongers "It is believed that several were convinced of sin during the services, and certainly Mr. Spurgeon's appeals will never be forgotten by many who had been unaccustomed to sympathetic, earnest entreaty. Spurgeon and the Church of England in "May the Lord whom we serve convince all true believers connected with the State Church of their inconsistency in remaining in it. There is no sense in being a sort of doctrinal game-cock, to be carried about to show your spirit, or a terrier of orthodoxy, ready to tackle heterodox rats by the score.
Practice the suaviter in modo, as well as the fortiter in re. Be prepared to fight, and always have your sword buckled on your thigh, but wear a scabbard; there can be no sense in waving your weapon about before everybody's eyes to provoke conflict, after the manner of our beloved friends of the Emerald Isle, who are said to take their coats off at Donnybrook Fair, and drag them along the ground, crying out, while they flourish their shillelahs, "Will any gentleman be so good as to tread on the tail of my coat?
Royal rather than spiritual authority, was the reason for sparing those Popish mummeries which have survived the reformers' pruning knife. On Bazaars "The first tabernacle. On Returning to the Renovated Tabernacle "Do we not all need in our own souls, every now and then, just what this building required, namely, restoration and renovation? Ourselves and the Annexationists "There is no bigotry in the world equal to the bigotry of modern liberalism.
Sectarianism may be bitter, but latitudinarianism is wormwood and gall. Its funeral oration has been pronounced many times before now, but the performance has been premature.
She employs the watchword of the opposite camp to obtain the key of the position she assails. But the French are awaking to the conviction that they must not give up common-sense under the magic spell of three syllables. If they would defend the fortress of freedom they must not put the key into the hands of the foe. Peter's, and Paul would wonder how Pio Nono could dare to claim apostolical succession, when his palaces, and his teachings, and his pretensions are things unknown in the word of God. Sermons in Candles "The candle among illustrations is one of the most shining, and beams of truth dart from it on every side.
Union with unsound churches, and compliance with unscriptural ceremonies stain the integrity of many. What man can help slipping when everybody is intent upon greasing his ways? The Holy Ghost is called by David 'thy free Spirits' and so he is; working after his own sweet will, and not according to some invariable standard. But why this aversion to being known and read of all men? The Christian's motives and springs of action should be so honest and pure that he might safely defy inspection.