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A Psalm of Remembrance

38 min · 21 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio A Psalm of Remembrance

Descripción

Spurgeon presents the apostle John's declaration — "We have known and believed the love that God has to us" — as the truest summary of Christian experience, distinguishing between the sweeter but less heroic state of knowing God's love through visible blessings, answered prayer, restored health, and the direct inner witness of the Holy Spirit, and the grander state of believing that love in the dark when every circumstance contradicts it and the inner witness is silent. He then takes this same declaration as the believer's testimony to the world, witnessing that God's love is entirely undeserved, unconquerable in the face of repeated resistance and ingratitude, undiminished by ongoing sin and failure, perfectly immutable through all the changes of a lifetime, and an unfailing support in the deepest trials — with Spurgeon drawing freely on his own experience of suffering and public attack to confirm that not one good thing has ever failed of all that God promised. He closes with two practical applications: first, an encouragement to the sorely tried believer to honor God in the furnace by trusting him when outward evidence seems to argue against his love; and second, an invitation to despairing sinners from the lips of the whole congregation of forgiven people — drunkards, swearers, adulterers — that no sin exceeds the love of God, and to believe it now is itself evidence that God has set his heart upon them. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on May 22nd, 1859.

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260 episodios

Portada del episodio Faith Illustrated

Faith Illustrated

Spurgeon explains that the Christian’s greatest act is committing the soul entirely to Christ, just as Paul declared, “I know whom I have believed.” Spurgeon shows that saving faith involves three movements: renouncing all trust in self, placing full confidence in Christ’s power and willingness to save, and surrendering oneself wholly to Him as Lord, much like a fugitive clinging to the crucifix for refuge or a lost climber trusting a guide in the storm. He illustrates how Paul abandoned his former righteousness—his pedigree, zeal, and law‑keeping—as worthless, choosing instead to rely solely on Christ’s atonement, resurrection, and intercession. Spurgeon emphasizes that believers must continue this act of trust throughout life, resting not in their ability to keep themselves but in Christ’s ability to “keep that which I have committed unto Him.” He concludes that Paul’s confidence was justified because he knew Christ—His deity, His redeeming work, His unchanging love—and had proven Him through long experience, climbing “summit after summit” of trial until he could say with unshakable certainty that Christ would preserve him to the end. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on August 21st, 1859.

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Portada del episodio The Tabernacle of the Most High

The Tabernacle of the Most High

Spurgeon opens by forcefully dismissing all superstitious reverence for physical church buildings — arguing that bricks, stained glass, and consecrated graveyards have no moral or spiritual quality, and that true holiness can only reside in conscious, living persons — before turning to the text's claim that there is a real house of God: the living spiritual temple made of converted men and women, built on Christ as the cornerstone whose laying was cemented in his own blood, shaped from the rough quarry-stones of sinners by the saw of the law and the chisel of the gospel, and held together by love into an indestructible structure that no enemy has ever successfully stormed. He then develops the image of the church not merely as a building but as God's habitation — the place where, like a man at home, God lays aside the terror of his public majesty and shows his inner tenderness to his children, makes revelations he shares nowhere else, takes his rest and delight, and toward which all of providence — wars, angels' errands, harvests, hidden riches — ultimately tends as a household tends toward the home at its center. He closes on two notes: the security this gives the church, since a God who calls it his home will defend it as fiercely as any man defends his hearth; and the practical duty it lays on every member to keep themselves holy, since one defiled stone defiles the temple, and the Divine Inhabitant cannot share his house with sin. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on August 14th, 1859.

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Portada del episodio The Blind Beggar

The Blind Beggar

Spurgeon takes blind Bartimaeus as a picture of every spiritually blind and spiritually poor sinner, tracing how his faith likely grew simply from hearing, over and over, the story of the man born blind whom Jesus healed — a single narrative lodged in a darkness-bound mind until it became an unshakeable conviction that this Jesus must be the promised Messiah — and applying this to his hearers by asking how they can have heard far more gospel than Bartimaeus ever did, and still not believe. He follows the story beat by beat through Bartimaeus's faith seizing the slim opportunity of Christ merely "passing by" rather than waiting for better conditions, his refusal to be silenced by the crowd making him cry louder rather than quieter, his immediate leap forward the moment Christ called without needing to be dragged, and his frank four-word request — "that I might receive my sight" — holding it up as a model of earnest, specific, unhesitating prayer that knows exactly what it wants and wastes no words in asking. He closes by dwelling on the most beautiful detail: the moment Bartimaeus received his sight, he did not run to family or temple or landscape but followed Jesus in the road, using this as a portrait of the true convert whose one consuming desire after forgiveness is to stay near the one who opened his eyes — and he invites every spiritually blind person in the hall to let Bartimaeus's story be written again in their own experience. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on August 7th, 1859.

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Portada del episodio The Meek and Lowly One

The Meek and Lowly One

Spurgeon takes Christ's self-description — "I am meek and lowly in heart" — as a deliberate invitation designed to remove every fear that might keep a sinner away, spending the first half of the sermon illustrating Christ's meekness through a series of contrasts: unlike Mahomet who spread his religion by the sword, unlike the disciples who wanted fire called down on opponents, unlike Elijah whose mission was stern rebuke, unlike Moses whose majesty held people at a distance, and unlike self-regarding Jonah, Christ wept over those who rejected him, forgave his killers from the cross, dismissed the adulteress without condemnation, rode into Jerusalem surrounded by poor disciples and singing children, and rejoices rather than resents when prodigals come home. He then turns to Christ's lowliness, showing that it drives him to receive the poor over the rich, the ignorant over the learned, the openly vile over the respectable, and even the believer whose native dullness and hard-heartedness make them despair of ever being worth saving — sitting down with the slowest learner to teach the very alphabet of repentance and faith, patient enough to begin again as many times as needed. He closes by pressing sinners with the practical conclusion: if Christ is truly this meek and lowly, then every excuse for staying away — timidity, despair, the ugliness of one's sins, fear of being upbraided — dissolves, and the only thing needed is to come to him as confessor, physician, and debt-forgiver, since he has never yet used one harsh word against any soul that brought its case to him. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on July 31st, 1859.

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Portada del episodio How Saints May Help the Devil

How Saints May Help the Devil

Spurgeon warns that professing Christians often comfort sinners in their sin by their own inconsistencies, giving the ungodly excuses to remain rebellious against God. He shows how everyday faults—covetousness, worldliness, pride, church quarrels, and especially the public scandals of professing believers—lead the world to say, “You are as bad as we are,” thus dulling the rebuke that holy lives should give. Spurgeon recounts a chilling story of a young minister whose frivolous, coarse conversation after preaching destroyed the spiritual conviction of a listener, who later died declaring, “My blood is on your head.” He also exposes how Christians’ murmuring, joyless attitudes, and cold-hearted indifference make religion appear hollow, causing sinners to feel justified in ignoring the gospel. Spurgeon then presses believers to confess their guilt for strengthening sinners’ hands, quieting their consciences, and even helping to ruin souls. Finally, he turns to the unconverted, smashing their excuse that Christian hypocrisy justifies unbelief, insisting that each person will answer to God for his own sin and must not hide behind the failures of others. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on July 24th, 1859.

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