Gleanings among the Sheaves
Charles Spurgeon, 1869
Spurgeon-Charles-Gleanings-among-the-Sheaves.pdf (646 downloads )
Posted by WLue777 on May 28, 2025
Posted in Illustrations • S | Tagged With: gleaning, sheaves, Spurgeon
Gleanings among the Sheaves
Charles Spurgeon, 1869
Spurgeon-Charles-Gleanings-among-the-Sheaves.pdf (646 downloads )
Posted by WLue777 on May 17, 2025
Posted in Grace • S • Salvation | Tagged With: Grace, Spurgeon
All of Grace
by Charles Spurgeon
CONTENTS
To You
What Are We At?
God Justifieth The Ungodly
“It Is God That Justifieth”
“Just and the Justifier”
Concerning Deliverance from Sinning
By Grace Through Faith
Faith, What Is It?
How May Faith Be Illustrated?
Why Are We Saved by Faith?
Alas! I Can Do Nothing!
The Increase of Faith
Regeneration and the Holy Spirit
“My Redeemer Liveth”
Repentance Must Go with Forgiveness
How Repentance Is Given
The Fear of Final Falling
Confirmation
Why Saints Persevere
Posted by WLue777 on May 12, 2025
Posted in Eschatology • S | Tagged With: eternity, Heaven, Hell, shower
May 25
22
Spurgeon Sermons from the Pentateuch
Posted by WLue777 on May 22, 2025
Posted in 01-Genesis • 02-Exodus • 03-Leviticus • 04-Numbers • 05-Deuteronomy • Com-OT-Pentateuch • Commentary-OT • S • Sermon
Source: Wikipedia
The descendant of several generations of Independent ministers, he was born at Kelvedon, Essex, and became a Baptist in 1850. In the same year he preached his first sermon, and in 1852 he was appointed paster of the Baptist congregation at Waterbeach. In 1854 he went to Southwark, where his sermons drew such crowds that a new church, the Metropolitan Tabernacle in Newington Causeway, had to be built for him. Apart from his preaching activites he founded a pastors’ college, an orphanage, and a colportage association for the propagation of uplifting literature. Spurgeon was a strong Calvinist. He had a controversy in 1864 with the Evangelical party of the Church of England for remaining in a Church that taught Baptismal Regeneration, and also estranged considerable sections of his own community by rigid opposition to the more liberal methods of Biblical exegesis. These differences led to a rupture with the Baptist Union in 1887. He owed his fame as a preacher to his great oratorical gifts, humour, and shrewd common sense, which showed itself especially in his treatment of contemporary problems. Among his works are The Saint and his Saviour (1857), Commenting and Commentaries (1876) and numerous volumes of sermons (translated into many languages).
—The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church