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Self-Sufficiency Slain

39 min · 6. juli 2026
episode Self-Sufficiency Slain cover

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Spurgeon expounds "Without Me you can do nothing" in three directions: to the believer, insisting that this means absolutely nothing rather than merely "almost nothing," since even the smallest acts of grace, the first step of faith, and the daily maintenance of spiritual life all depend entirely on Christ — a truth supported by the unanimous praise of all Scripture's saints, the existence of promises for strength that would be unnecessary if believers already had any, and the very existence of the Holy Spirit's office which becomes pointless if man has any native ability toward good. To the unconverted sinner, he argues this truth is even more urgently applicable, since the saint at least has a renewed nature, whereas the sinner is spiritually dead with no capacity for any spiritual good, and though this incapacity does not remove his moral responsibility or reduce God's demands by a single command, Spurgeon says he actually wants sinners to feel this paralysis deeply, because only when a person truly feels they can do nothing in their own strength will they cry out in despair to God and be truly ready to receive saving grace. He closes by applying the same truth to all who labor for others' souls — ministers, revivalists, Sunday school teachers, and parents — warning that excitement-driven "revivals" built on human enthusiasm produce shallow conversions that evaporate, and that the Church's only real power comes from the Spirit, so her first business in any gospel work must be to confess her total inability and cast herself wholly on God, at which point she will accomplish everything precisely because she attempts nothing in her own strength. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on November 11, 1860.

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292 episodes

episode The Cleansing of the Leper artwork

The Cleansing of the Leper

Spurgeon takes the Old Testament law of leprosy as a sustained picture of sin — showing the leper as loathsome in person (like sin's inner corruption), defiling in all his actions (like sin tainting everything the natural man does), shut out from society (like the sinner's alienation from God's people), and excluded from the sanctuary (like the unregenerate soul's distance from God) — and then traces the ceremony of cleansing, noting the great paradox: only the leper covered from head to foot, with no sound flesh remaining, was declared clean, while the one with any healthy patch was still unclean, which pictures the spiritual truth that only the sinner who has nothing to boast of and nothing left to trust but Christ's mercy is ready to receive salvation. He carefully explains that in the ceremony the leper was entirely passive while the priest did everything, typifying how Christ comes down to sinners, sheds his blood, and applies it to the conscience, and he argues that the basis of salvation is not the believer's feelings or realization of being saved but the actual death of Christ, just as a drowning man is saved by the lifeboat and not by his awareness that he is in it — so a sinner's only warrant is to know himself a sinner, since "Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners." He closes by noting that after the cleansing, the leper was then required to wash, shave, and bring offerings — illustrating that good works, holiness, and the full assurance of the Spirit are all after-fruits of salvation, which the cleansed sinner now pursues not to earn acceptance but in grateful response to a grace that has already fully accomplished everything. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on December 30, 1860.

8. juli 202640 min
episode A Blow at Self-Righteousness artwork

A Blow at Self-Righteousness

Spurgeon attacks self-righteousness on three fronts: the plea is self-contradicting, since claiming to be without sin is itself a sin (making God a liar), and any claim to comparative righteousness is really a guilty plea in disguise, since a single sin makes one fully guilty before a God who demands a perfect and unblemished righteousness — just as one crack spoils a costly vase entirely. The self-righteous man condemns himself in his own conscience, since deep down every boaster knows his claims are false, as proven by the fact that pride requires noise to drown out conscience's verdict, and at the deathbed and certainly at the Last Judgment the grandest self-defense collapses into speechless horror before the face of God. He closes by showing that self-righteousness in any form — whether crude ("I deserve Heaven"), refined ("I'm better than most"), despairing ("I cannot come until I feel enough"), or even pious ("I trust my faith or my repentance") — is equally fatal, since the only ground of salvation is Christ himself, not any degree of human preparation, and the moment a sinner simply trusts Christ, that sinner stands before God as fully accepted as Christ himself, all sin having been laid on him and all righteousness freely given. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on December 16th, 1860.

Yesterday37 min
episode Self-Sufficiency Slain artwork

Self-Sufficiency Slain

Spurgeon expounds "Without Me you can do nothing" in three directions: to the believer, insisting that this means absolutely nothing rather than merely "almost nothing," since even the smallest acts of grace, the first step of faith, and the daily maintenance of spiritual life all depend entirely on Christ — a truth supported by the unanimous praise of all Scripture's saints, the existence of promises for strength that would be unnecessary if believers already had any, and the very existence of the Holy Spirit's office which becomes pointless if man has any native ability toward good. To the unconverted sinner, he argues this truth is even more urgently applicable, since the saint at least has a renewed nature, whereas the sinner is spiritually dead with no capacity for any spiritual good, and though this incapacity does not remove his moral responsibility or reduce God's demands by a single command, Spurgeon says he actually wants sinners to feel this paralysis deeply, because only when a person truly feels they can do nothing in their own strength will they cry out in despair to God and be truly ready to receive saving grace. He closes by applying the same truth to all who labor for others' souls — ministers, revivalists, Sunday school teachers, and parents — warning that excitement-driven "revivals" built on human enthusiasm produce shallow conversions that evaporate, and that the Church's only real power comes from the Spirit, so her first business in any gospel work must be to confess her total inability and cast herself wholly on God, at which point she will accomplish everything precisely because she attempts nothing in her own strength. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on November 11, 1860.

6. juli 202639 min
episode A Basket of Summer Fruit artwork

A Basket of Summer Fruit

Spurgeon takes the vision of the basket of summer fruit — ripe and ready to be consumed — as a picture with three applications: that God's own purposes have a precise ripeness, coming neither too early nor too late, whether in the first advent of Christ, the second advent to come, or the personal timing of each believer's conversion, trials, and deliverances, all of which arrive exactly when divine wisdom ordains. He then applies the image to nations, tracing how Babylon, Greece, and Rome each fell at the precise point when their national sin had ripened to the point of destruction, and warning England to repent of her own national sins before the same judgment overtakes her. He closes with two personal applications — the believer who is ripening day by day in knowledge, experience, spirituality, and kindness through affliction and grace, being made ready for glory like fruit reaching perfect sweetness, and the unconverted sinner who is equally ripening but toward destruction, growing harder, bolder in sin, and more contemptuous of God with each passing year until suddenly gathered into the wrath they have been cultivating — and he pleads urgently for any sinner to turn before the gathering time arrives. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on October 28th, 1860.

5. juli 202638 min
episode Sin Slain artwork

Sin Slain

Using the story of Sisera's defeat and death, Spurgeon paints three pictures of the sinner's journey: first, a slave growing uneasy under sin's yoke without yet knowing why, beginning to pray inarticulate groans and to fight individual sins one by one in his own strength; second, the partial victory of merely conquering outward bad habits, which Spurgeon insists is never enough, since true change must reach the very root and nature of sin rather than simply driving its symptoms into temporary retreat. He then brings the discouraged fighter, who fears his sin can never truly be defeated, to a third and decisive picture — the tomb where Christ's finished work has already nailed sin to death, assuring that the believer's sins, once forgiven through faith in Christ, are not merely defeated but utterly destroyed, never to rise again or be charged against the soul. He closes by acknowledging the ongoing inward struggle every Christian feels between the old and new natures, comforting believers that though sin's full destruction awaits the resurrection, it is already counted dead in Christ, and inviting any despairing sinner who feels they cannot defeat their own sin to simply come and see their guilt nailed to the cross, their hard heart dissolved, and their fears put to eternal rest. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on July 29, 1860.

4. juli 202627 min