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The Call of Abraham

28 min · 29. maj 2026
episode The Call of Abraham cover

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Spurgeon traces Abraham's call — what he left (family, homeland, settled comfort, known pastures), where he went (an unknown land with nothing but a promise), and how he went (immediately, cheerfully, without hesitation or conditions) — and holds him up as the model of a faith that acts before it understands, trusting the Guide rather than needing to know the road. He then applies this pattern to four situations his congregation would recognize: the new convert who must leave an ungodly family; the believer whose views on doctrine or baptism change and who must bear the cost of following conviction even among friends; the wealthy or well-connected person who must choose Christ over respectability; and anyone whose circumstances are suddenly overturned by providence and who must go forward into uncertainty. He closes with a personal application to his own congregation — then facing the loss of their meeting place at the Surrey Music Hall — urging them not to be distressed, since the God who gathered them will keep them together wherever he leads, and finally extending the image to death itself, that last journey taken without a map, where the only certainty the believer carries is that God goes with them. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on July 10th, 1859.

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274 episodes

episode Woman’s Memorial artwork

Woman’s Memorial

In this sermon, Spurgeon tells the story of a woman who showed great love for Jesus by breaking a very expensive jar of perfume and pouring it on His head. Other people complained that she wasted money, but Jesus said her act would be remembered forever. Spurgeon explains that what made her action special was that she did it from her heart, without worrying about what others thought, and she did it only for Jesus, not for attention or praise. He encourages people to serve Jesus with the same kind of love — doing good things not because they “have to,” but because they truly want to, even if others don’t understand. The woman’s gift shows that real love for Jesus is willing to give its best, even when it seems unusual or costly. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on November 27th, 1859.

Yesterday40 min
episode Man’s Ruin and God’s Remedy artwork

Man’s Ruin and God’s Remedy

Spurgeon presents the sinner's ruin under four heads — the sheer number and aggravation of sins, including the special guilt of those who have sinned against light and a praying mother's example; the legal sentence of condemnation already passed, so that the sinner stands not as someone awaiting trial but as someone already convicted with the rope around their neck; utter helplessness to do anything toward their own rescue; and the final, most devastating charge, that even if they could save themselves they would not, because their nature is so corrupted that they love darkness, hate their own mercy, and would remain unwilling unless grace overcame them. He then turns to the remedy through the brazen serpent principle — like cures like — showing how Christ as Substitute answers each point of the indictment precisely: he bore sin as the sin-offering and suffered in enough abundance to cover every form and degree of wickedness anyone might urge as a reason to despair; he was himself condemned and executed so that condemned sinners need never face execution; he laid aside his omnipotence on the cross so that helpless sinners find strength in his very weakness; and he comes down to the unwilling sinner rather than waiting for the sinner to come, since it is Christ's own presence and the sight of his wounds that overcomes depravity and creates the very faith and willingness he requires. He closes by putting words in the mouth of the crucified Christ himself — who asks what wrong he has ever done, and points to a face marred by suffering for those who hated him — and invites every hearer to simply come and try him, since he has never yet rejected a trusting soul and never will. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on November 20th, 1859.

19. juni 202638 min
episode One Antidote for Many Ills artwork

One Antidote for Many Ills

Spurgeon takes the repeated refrain of Psalm 80 — "Turn us again, O Lord, cause your face to shine, and we shall be saved" — as the church's one all-sufficient prayer for every ill, arguing that because all problems trace to one source (the withdrawal of God's favor) they can all be cured by one remedy (his return), and he identifies the genuine benefits of revival as the salvation of sinners, the healing of church quarrels and divisions that flourish in idleness, the silencing of enemies by holy living, and above all the glory of God which only a spiritually alive church can render. He then turns the two-part prayer into a searching personal application — "turn us again" is addressed in turn to the minister (who must preach with fearless fidelity), to workers (who must serve with deeper dependence on the Spirit), to intercessors (who must pray with greater agonizing earnestness), and to every member (whose daily business, family life, speech, and habits must be brought into full honesty and godliness) — and "cause your face to shine" is identified as the indispensable divine element without which all human effort and increased numbers amount to nothing. He closes by urging every believer to turn present resolutions immediately into prayers rather than letting them dissolve, and with a tender appeal to unconverted hearers to recognize how much God's people groan over their souls and how precious those souls are in heaven's reckoning, before turning with a final corporate prayer that God would do what no human effort can — pour out revival upon his church and bring many reluctant hearts to himself. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on November 9th, 1859.

18. juni 202640 min
episode Christ's Estimate of His People artwork

Christ's Estimate of His People

Spurgeon takes Christ's words to his bride in Song of Solomon 4:10-11 as a genuine expression of how Jesus actually estimates his people — their love is to him better than wine (a luxury and a refreshment), their graces smell sweeter than all spices, their words drop like honeycomb, the thoughts they never quite manage to speak lie under their tongue like honey and milk, and their daily actions smell to him like the cedars of Lebanon — and he argues this is not flattery but Christ's sincere valuation, which he set so high that even during his agony on the cross it was the thought of his people's love that cheered him. He is at pains to show that Christ does not estimate these things by their strength but by their sincerity, so the believer's feeble prayers, cold faith, stumbling words, and humble daily work are all precious to him — and he delights especially in the thought that even unspoken groans, unformed meditations, and the things too good to quite come out in words, are all observed and treasured. He closes with a practical application: since Christ so values the common actions of servants, tradespeople, and shopkeepers done honestly and conscientiously as much as sermons preached from pulpits, every believer can serve him all day long in any calling — and rather than producing pride, this knowledge of Christ's approval should overwhelm the soul with humility and drive it to love him more, pray more richly, and live more holily in grateful response. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on January 23rd, 1859.

16. juni 202640 min
episode The Savior's Many Crowns artwork

The Savior's Many Crowns

Spurgeon organizes his meditation on "many crowns" into three categories: crowns of dominion — Christ reigns as King of Heaven commanding angels, King of Hell holding the chains of the damned, King of creation who spoke the universe into being, King of providence who sustains every atom, and King of grace who opens and shuts the door of mercy — making the point that there is nowhere a believer can go where Christ does not reign, so every fear is groundless and every burden should be left in his hands. He then turns to crowns of victory — won in fierce battles against the world (which tried poverty, threats, and blandishments and failed), against sin (whose poison Christ absorbed in his own body), against death (whose domain he broke open at the resurrection), against Satan (whose head he crushed in the very hour of his own wounding), and against the hard human heart (which yields only to the sight of the bleeding Savior on the cross). He closes with the sweetest category — crowns of thanksgiving — tracing how prophets, apostles, martyrs, soul-winners, infants, aged saints, and chief sinners all stream into heaven and without exception take their crowns off and lay them at Christ's feet, because every crown was won by his grace and blood, and he invites every hearer to make this day their day of espousals to Christ and so put one more crown on his already-adorned head. Sermon delivered by Charles Spurgeon on October 30th, 1859.

15. juni 202634 min