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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.
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