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Spurgeon takes aim at false peace — the comfortable feeling of being spiritually fine when one is not — identifying five main sources of it: the man who drowns conscience in ceaseless amusement and gaiety, beating drums so loud that the soul's own cries cannot be heard; the man who has swallowed infidel arguments not from honest intellectual conviction but because the Bible makes him too uncomfortable in his sins; the careless procrastinator who silences conscience by promising to reform later, not realizing that each delay makes the heart harder; the man living on hollow resolutions that have already been broken every time they came due; and most dangerously, the church member who has turned sound doctrine into a cover for immoral living, believing himself elect while loving sin, which Spurgeon calls a thoroughly damnable delusion against which Calvin's own teaching stands as a direct refutation. He also addresses ignorance as a source of false peace, arguing that when the gospel is not clearly preached people remain comfortable in forms and formalities without ever grasping justification, atonement, or the difference between the old and new covenants — and he reserves his most solemn warning for the possibility that some may have been given up by God as a judicial act, their conscience permanently silenced not by grace but by the withdrawal of the Spirit's striving. He closes by urging every hearer to test their peace against three standards — whether it would hold on a sickbed, in a dying hour, and at the last judgment — and insists that any peace compatible with the love of sin, trust in personal righteousness, or living outside of Christ, is a false peace that will crumble precisely when it is most needed. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on February 26th, 1860.
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