“When the Spirit of God goes with the Word, then the Word becomes the instrument of the conversion of the souls of men.”—Volume 50, Sermon
#2870
“Many persons think a great deal about the adorning of the body, but do not think anything about the ornaments of the soul. The feeding of the
physical frame engrosses much care, but the supply of spiritual food is often neglected.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2871
“The proof that Christ came into the world should be that His followers are holy! Let their character be blameless and harmless, their conduct so
devoted and so full of self-sacrifice that it shall be a constant memorial of that Redeemer whose name they profess.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2872
“There is the same door of entrance for us as that which was opened to the very chief of sinners, for there is no difference between one sinner and
another in the sight of God, as far as the plan of salvation is concerned. There may be many differences in other matters but, in the matter of salvation,
there is nothing which places one man in a different position from another, or which allows him to be saved in any other way than the one
way which God has laid down for a sinner’s salvation.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2873
“If you simply take the name of Christ upon you and call yourself His servant, yet do not obey Him, but follow your own whim, or your own
hereditary prejudice, or the custom of some erroneous church—you are no servant of Christ. If you really are a servant of Christ, your first duty
is to obey Him.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2874
“Let us never judge men by their talents—but by the use which they make of their powers, by the end to which they devote their talents, by the
interest which they bring to those pounds which their Master has entrusted to them.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2875
“There will be no jarring note in Heaven, no whisper of human merit, no claim of a reward for good intentions—but every crown shall be cast at
Jesus’ feet and every voice shall join in the ascription, ‘Not unto us, not unto us, but unto Your name be all the glory of the salvation which You
have worked out for us from first to last.’”—Volume 50, Sermon #2876
“Yes, Beloved, we who believe in Jesus are on the winning side—we are on the side which has God with it and Christ with it, and eternity with
it—and the appointed day shall reveal that this is the conquering side!”—Volume 50, Sermon #2877
“You know right well that the value of a [Scripture] text to any soul depends upon the condition of that soul.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2878
“The true teacher should not seek to soar on the gaudy wings of brilliant oratory, pouring forth sonorous polished sentences in rhythmic harmony,
but should endeavor to speak pointed Truths of God—things that will strike and stick—thoughts that will be remembered and recalled,
again and again, when the hearer is far away from the place of worship where he listened to the preacher’s words.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2879
“It is in our most desperate straits that we often have our most joyous revelations. John must go to “the isle that is called Patmos” before he
could have the wondrous Revelation that was there given to him.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2880
“Until a man receives faith, he may think that he has it—but when he has real faith in Jesus Christ, then he shudders as he thinks how long he has
lived in unbelief—and realizes how much of unbelief is still mixed with his belief.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2881
“If any of you doubt whether there is forgiveness with God, I pray you to stand on Calvary, in imagination, and to look into the wounds of Jesus.
Gaze upon His nail-pierced hands and feet, His thorn-crowned brow, and look right into His heart where the soldier’s spear was thrust—and
blood and water flowed out for the double cleansing of all who trust Him.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2882
“Although blindness in part has happened unto Israel, yet, in due time, we know from the Word of God that the seed of Abraham will recognize
our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ as the long-promised Messiah. When that happy day comes, the Lord will give to the whole world times of
amazing blessing.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2883
“Between the will of the flesh and the will of God, there is no possible question as to which is ‘the Lord’s side.’”—Volume 50, Sermon #2884
“God’s power is never given to a man to be stored up unused. The heavenly food that is sent to strengthen us, like the manna given to the Israelites
in the wilderness, is intended for immediate use. If the Lord sends you much, you shall have nothing beyond what you can use for Him
though, blessed be His holy name, if you have but little, you shall have no need!”—Volume 50, Sermon #2885
“If you, young man, give yourself up to what is erroneously called the pursuit of pleasure, it is quite certain that you will not find rest for your
soul in that direction! You have taken a dose of poison that will make your blood hot and feverish and that will cause true rest to flee from your
pillow.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2886
Part 3 NOTABLE QUOTES OF CHARLES H. SPURGEON – PART 3 3
“You cannot heal men who are not sick, or wounded. It matters not how matchless the medicine is—even though it is the substitutionary suffering
of the Son of God, Himself—if it is to heal, it must heal some malady or other and, Brothers and Sisters, it is quite true that there is a dreadful
disease which has attacked the whole human race! You scarcely need that I should tell you that it is the disease of sin.”—Volume 50, Sermon
#2887
“The unity at Babel would have been far worse than the confusion has ever been, just as the spiritual union of Babylon, that is, Rome, the Papal
system, has been infinitely more mischievous to the Church and to the world, than the division of Christians into various sects and parties could
ever have been.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2888
“The Christ whose Gospel we preach is no unapproachable philosopher! The Glory of His Person reflects even a brighter luster than the dignity
of His office. He appeared among men not as one who had been lifted up from the ranks to obtain a position for Himself, but as one who bowed
Himself down from the Heaven of heavens that He might bring blessings to the sons of men—yet the ignorant and the illiterate may find in Him
their best Friend.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2889
“Beloved Friends, let us never look upon our own unbelief as an excusable infirmity, but let us always regard it as a sin—and as a great sin,
too.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2890
“Fine sermons never win souls—you may blaze away, young man, at a terrific rate with your brilliant oratory and your fine pieces of poetry and
quotations from eminent authors! And your length sermon may be like the set piece at a display of fireworks, or the final burst of brightness with
which it all ends—but all that will not save souls! What does save souls, then? Why, the Word of the Lord, the Truth of God as it is in Jesus!”—
Volume 50, Sermon #2891
“How long I was, myself, dictating to God instead of trusting Him! I thought I must have a certain amount of conviction of sin before I could be
saved. I really had it all the while, though I did not know that I had it. I thought I must feel a certain weight of guilt. I was feeling it and, for that
very reason, I thought I was not. I might have been spared much needless suffering if I had only believed what the Lord had taught me in His
Word—that I had nothing to do with feeling burdens or anything else by way of preparation for coming to Christ, but that I had to come to
Him just as I was… So, poor blind ones, come to my Master, blind as you are—but do not lay down any rules or regulations as to how He is to
save you, for He will do it in His own way, which is, after all, the best possible way”—Volume 50, Sermon #2892
“What Jeremiah knew was this—that the affairs of this world are not under the control of men, however much they may imagine that they are.
There is a Supreme Authority to theirs and a power which rules, overrules and works according to its own beneficent will—whatever men may
desire or determine to do.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2893
“Even if you reject the Word of God, you must believe that God is just. If there is a God, He must punish men for sinning against Him. How can
any moral government exist if sin goes unpunished, if virtue and vice lead to the same end? Conscience, fallen though it is, and no longer like
God’s candle in the soul, still has sufficient light to assure men that God must punish sin!”—Volume 50, Sermon #2894
“O Brothers and Sisters, it is a blessed proof that Divine Grace has been largely given to us when even the smallest word uttered by Jesus Christ is
more precious to us than all the diamonds in the world and we feel that we only want to know what He has said and to love whatever He has spoken!”—
Volume 50, Sermon #2895
“Flowers, what are they? They are but the thoughts of God solidified—God’s beautiful thoughts put into shape. Storms, what are they? They
are God’s terrible thoughts written out that we may read them. Thunders, what are they? They are God’s powerful emotions just opened out that
men may hear them. The world is the materializing of God’s thoughts, for the world is a thought in God’s eyes. He made it first from a thought
that came from His own mighty mind and everything in the majestic temple that He has made has a meaning!”—Volume 50, Sermon #2896
“Poor Soul, groping in the dark and trying to believe in Jesus, ought not this to enable you to believe in Him? Christ has lived, loved, bled, died
and now there is a reward due to Him which can only be met by the salvation of all for whom He died! See, then, how He has the Living Water
and come and trust Him to give it to you freely.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2897
“Those who hold a sound creed may be destitute of precious faith and those who are able to defend the Divinity of Christ with admirable scholarship
may, nevertheless, be without God in the world. To believe in Christ includes much more than a religious profession. It is so to believe the
Gospel as to forsake all other beliefs for the possession of its blessed hope! It is to imbibe the spirit of the Word of God while you accept the letter
of its pure teaching! Or, in other words, it is to come to Jesus and to prove, in your own souls, His power to save.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2898
“I like to think about how many people are going to be saved every time the Gospel is faithfully preached. It is not preached in vain—we deliver
a message from God that never misses the mark at which He aimed it!”—Volume 50, Sermon #2899
4 NOTABLE QUOTES OF CHARLES H. SPURGEON – PART 3 Part 3
“Remember this, Sinner, however far you may get away from God, you will have to come close to Him one of these days! You may go and pluck
the fruit that He forbids you to touch and then you may go and hide yourself among the thick trees in the forest and think that you have concealed
yourself—but you will have to come face to face with your Maker at some time or other!”—Volume 50, Sermon #2900
“There was never any real godly sorrow which worked repentance acceptable to God except that which was the result of the Holy Spirit’s own
work within the soul.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2901
“Now, if our text [Heb_12:4] said that without perfection of holiness, no one could have any communion with Christ, it would shut every one of
us out, for no one who knows his own heart ever pretends to be perfectly conformed to God’s will!”—Volume 50, Sermon #2902
“The material universe is but scaffolding for the Church of Christ. It is but the temporary structure upon which the amazing mystery of redeeming
love is being carried on to perfection.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2903
“That faith which is not accompanied by repentance will have to be repented of!”—Volume 50, Sermon #2904
“All that John [the Apostle] saw, he was prepared to speak of according to his ability, that others might have fellowship with him and, dear
Friends, remember that if you ever learn anything of Christ—if you have any enjoyment of His Presence at any time—it is not for you, alone,
but for others to share with you!”—Volume 50, Sermon #2905
“I suppose if any man looks long into the Doctrine of the Trinity, he will be like one who gazes upon the sun and will be apt, first, to be dazzled
and then to be blinded by the excessive light. If a man asks that he may understand this great mystery, and refuses to believe until he does, then he
will most assuredly be blinded! How can you, O man, hold the sea in the hollow of your hand? And how can you see God’s face and yet live?”—
Volume 50, Sermon #2906
“Does the Holy Spirit deal with science? What is science? Another name for the ignorance of men. Does the Holy Spirit deal with politics? What
are politics? Another name for every man getting as much as he can out of the nation. Does the Holy Spirit deal with these things? No, my Brothers,
‘He will receive of Mine.’ O my Brother, the Holy Spirit will leave you if you go gadding about after these insignificant trifles! He will leave
you if you aim at magnifying yourself, your wisdom and your plans, for the Holy Spirit is taken up with the things of Christ!”—Volume 50,
Sermon #2907
“The ship of Christ’s Church never sails so well as when she is rocked from side to side by the winds of persecution and when, at every lurch, she is
well-near overwhelmed! Nothing has helped God’s Church so much as persecution—she has been increased and strengthened by it.”—Volume
50, Sermon #2908
“Christ’s kinship with His people is to be thought of with great comfort because it is voluntary.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2909
“The best of men are, all too often, trodden down as the very mire of the street, while the worst are sitting proudly in the high places of the earth!
If there is a God at all—and we know that there is—there must be a time and a way of rectifying all this in another state! And so there is, as David
says, ‘Verily there is a reward for the righteous: verily He is a God that judges in the earth.’ And, therefore, verily there must be a time of
judgment for the ungodly—even common reason seems to teach us that!”—Volume 50, Sermon #2910
“Dear Friends, all the distress that is felt by the mind when under conviction of sin is not the work of the Spirit of God, though some of it is. I
cannot draw the line and say exactly how far it is the Spirit’s work but, certainly, there is a portion of this horror and distress which does not
come from God. Therefore, learn this lesson—that it is not necessary for you to traverse the whole ground of every other sinner’s experience in
passing from the kingdom of darkness into the Kingdom of God’s dear Son!”—Volume 50, Sermon #2911
“And I will venture to go even further and say that if you watch those in whom sin is said to be dead, you will find that if it is dead, it is not buried—
and that it smells remarkably like other dead things which ought to be buried!”—Volume 50, Sermon #2912
“The Cross that was meant to be the death of the Savior was the death of sin! The Crucifixion of Jesus, which was supposed to be the victory of
Satan, was the consummation of His victory over Satan!”—Volume 50, Sermon #2913
“There are many points and particulars in which the Gospel is offensive to human nature and revolting to the pride of the creature. It was not
intended to please man. How can we attribute such a purpose to God? Why should He devise a goal to suit the whims of our poor fallen human
nature? He intended to save men, but He never intended to gratify their depraved tastes.”—Volume 50, Sermon #2914
Part 3 NOTABLE QUOTES OF CHARLES H. SPURGEON – PART 3 5
“Whatever anyone else may think or say, I know that I must be saved by the Grace of God or else that I shall never be saved at all! I have not done
a single good work in which I cannot see any faults—not one solitary thing which I cannot perceive to be marred and stained and, like a vessel
spoiled even while it is on the potter’s wheel, not fit to be presented before God at all!”—Volume 51, Sermon #2932
“There are no suppositions and imaginations in the Gospel—it tells of positive sin, positive punishment, positive substitution and positive forgiveness,
for God would not have His people reckon upon anything which is not absolutely true.”—Volume 51, Sermon #2933
“Here, surely, is A WONDER OF GRACE—‘There are last that shall be first.’ Here is Divine Sovereignty—choosing the last to make them
first. Here is Sovereign Grace—forgiving the greatest sin to make the brightest saint. Here is almighty power changing the most degraded, turning
the current of the most strong-minded sinner and making his soul ‘willing in the day of God’s power.’”—Volume 51, Sermon #2934
“A Christian has never fully realized what Christ came to make him until he has grasped the joy of the Lord. Christ wishes His people to be happy.
When they are perfect, as He will make them in due time, they shall also be perfectly happy.”—Volume 51, Sermon #2935
“It is a very blessed thing when we are able to love one another because the Divine Grace that is in any one of us sees the Grace that is in another
and discerns in that other, not the flesh and blood of the Savior, but such a resemblance to Christ that it must love that other one for His
sake!”—Volume 51, Sermon #2936
“Everything that has to do with Christ’s work is of real, practical, vital consequence to Believers. He is to be the food for our souls. Faith is to
receive Him. Love is to embrace Him. Hope is to rejoice in Him! ”—Volume 51, Sermon #2937
“The Hindu meets the Muslim and he says, ‘No doubt you are sincere as well as we are, and you and we shall at last meet in the right place.’ They
would salute the Christian, too, and say the same to him, but it is a necessity, if our religion is true, that it should denounce every other and that
it should say unto those who know not Christ, ‘Other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ.’ Yes, it goes still further
and pronounces its anathema upon those who pretend to any other way! ‘Though we or an angel from Heaven preach any other Gospel than that
which you have received, let him be accursed.’ I simply mention certain other ways to assure you, in God’s name, that they are roads which lead
to Hell and that none of them can bring you to Heaven—for there is only one way by which the soul can came to God and find eternal life—and
that way is Christ.”—Volume 51, Sermon #2938
“You sometimes wonder that the Gospel does not spread more rapidly in the earth. But are disobedient servants likely to do their Master’s work
well? If there are commands of Jesus which we persistently ignore—if there are precepts of the Savior which, year after year, we forget—if there
are Doctrines and other parts of His teaching to which we turn a deaf ear, can we expect Him to bless us?”—Volume 51, Sermon #2939
“O Brothers, when you preach and no man gives heed to your message—when you teach, but the children yield not their hearts to your Lord—
when you sojourn in Mesech and dwell in the tents of Kedar and meet with hard and cold hearts in every place, that thaw not even beneath the
sunbeams of the love of Jesus, you are very apt to say that it does not appear that, ‘He must reign.’”—Volume 51, Sermon #2940
“The music of joy and the music of Heaven should often be upon our lips in the form of Psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs.”—Volume 51, Sermon
#2941
“This Supper sets forth to all who choose to see it, the painfulness of Christ’s death…That is the teaching of this Supper, that Christ’s death was
a painful death, and a death on behalf of others.”—Volume 51, Sermon #2942
“Prayerless souls are Christless souls, Christless souls are Graceless souls and Graceless souls shall soon be damned souls. See your peril, you that
neglect altogether the blessed privilege of prayer! You are in the bonds of iniquity, you are in the gall of bitterness. God deliver you, for His
name’s sake!”—Volume 51, Sermon #2943
“Yes, dear Friend, we cannot wonder if some reject our message when so many rejected the teaching of the Master, Himself! But we must so deliver
it that, at any rate, if they do refuse it, the blame shall lie entirely at their own door.”—Volume 51, Sermon #2944
“But see fair days have foul eventides and the Christ manifested during the day may become a Christ hidden during the night. Close on the heels
of the intense excitement of great success comes the relapse into darkness of spirit and absence of joy.”—Volume 51, Sermon #2945
“It is very hard for young people, especially in ungodly families, to dare to call themselves followers of the Crucified! Nor is it easy for a working
man, in the workshop, to bear that perpetual ‘chaffing,’ as his companions call it, which they delight to inflict on those who are better than
themselves.”—Volume 51, Sermon #2946
Part 3 NOTABLE QUOTES OF CHARLES H. SPURGEON – PART 3 7
“Happy day, happy day, when Jesus comes into the heart! Save the day when we shall be with Him where He is, I suppose there is no day that is
comparable to the first one when we behold Christ and see Him as our Savior and our King!”—Volume 51, Sermon #2947
“It is very difficult to estimate the amount of darkness that may come over the human conscience and to imagine how blind a man may become, or
how fully he may put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter—but certain it is that an unrenewed heart may become as darkened that, while we are
going posthaste to Hell, we may imagine that we are making good headway towards Heaven!”—Volume 51, Sermon #2948
“Think over the time and the place of our Lord’s Ascension and you will have some subjects worthy of your deepest meditation.”—Volume 51,
Sermon #2949
“In another sense it is true that ‘God hears not sinners,’ that is to say, He will hear none of us—no sinner among us, (and who among us is not a
sinner?) in and of ourselves. If heard, it must be through the interposition of the Mediator between God and men, the Man, Christ Jesus, for up to
the immediate Presence of the thrice-holy God the guilty sinner cannot come by himself.”—Volume 51, Sermon #2950
“There is not one among us who can afford to live in sin, or who can afford to die in sin. We may find a temporary pleasure in it, but it must end
in eternal loss to us unless there comes a time when God’s Grace saves us from it—we cannot be truly happy while we are out of gear with
God.”—Volume 51, Sermon #2951
“When a man has no self remaining, but has given himself up as a living sacrifice for Christ, that which would be a terror to another man becomes
a comfort to him.”—Volume 51, Sermon #2952
“I feel that much evil comes of a mode of address which is adopted by some of my ministerial brothers in which they speak to the entire congregation
as though all who were present were Christians. That is a false theory to go upon because it is not at all likely that any congregation ever
gathered together will consist wholly of Christians.”—Volume 51, Sermon #2953
“If we would come to Christ, we must come away from sin. Repentance must make us turn from sin, and faith must make us turn to Christ—and
we must also come away from self-righteousness if we are to come to Christ. It is very difficult for some people to part with their selfrighteousness.
They have looked in the mirror till they are in love with themselves and they cannot bear to be separated from their beloved self.
They feel so good, so proper, so respectable, so excellent, so amiable, so lovely and so dear to themselves that they would gladly hang about the
neck of their self-righteousness and embrace it as long as they can!”—Volume 51, Sermon #2954
“If the Gospel of God is true, it can stand any quantity of questioning. I am more afraid of the deadness and lethargy of the public mind about
religion than any sort of enquiry or controversy about it. As silver tried in the furnace is purified seven times, so is the Word of God—and the
more it is put into the furnace, the more it will be purified—and the more beauteously the pure ore of Revelation will glitter in the sight of the
faithful.”—Volume 51, Sermon #2955
“He who would be wise, in dealing with the daughters of grief, must let them tell their own story and, almost without a single sentence from you,
their own story will be blessed by God to the relieving of their grief.”—Volume 51, Sermon #2956
“It is a very bad thing to live upon the past—to say, ‘I believe I am a child of God because I had certain spiritual enjoyments and experiences 10
or 12 years ago.’ Ah, such stale fare as this will not feed hungry souls. They need present enjoyment, or, at least, present confidence in the everliving
God. Yet, Brothers and Sisters, we may sometimes gather fuel for today from the ashes of yesterday’s fire. Remembering the mercies of God
in the past, we may rest assured concerning the present and the future.”—Volume 51, Sermon #2957
“If your pathway has been smooth of late—if temporal mercies have abounded—if spiritual comforts have been continued to you, then, O you
happy saints, love the Lord!”—Volume 51, Sermon #2958
“What a blessing it was to us that when we woke up in this world, we looked up into a face that smiled upon us and to lips that, by-and-by, spoke
to us of Jesus Christ! The first example that we had was one that, to this day, we wish to follow.”—Volume 51, Sermon #2959
“Cold prayers court refusal. Heaven is not to be obtained by lukewarm supplications. Heat your prayers red-hot, Brothers and Sisters! Plead the
blood of Jesus! Plead like one who means to prevail—and then you shall prevail!”—Volume 51, Sermon #2960
“THIS chapter—the 8th of Romans—is, like the Garden of Eden, full of all manner of delights. Here you have all necessary doctrines to feed
upon and luxurious Truths of God with which to satisfy your soul.”—Volume 51, Sermon #2961
“THERE are some people in the world who, the moment we begin to speak of a type, try to disparage that style of speech by calling it ‘spiritualizing’
They seem to be far too wise to be able to learn anything by that mode of teaching. Yet the Holy Spirit has given us, in the Old and New
8 NOTABLE QUOTES OF CHARLES H. SPURGEON – PART 3 Part 3
“It is most for your profit that you should receive the Spirit of Truth, not through the golden vessel of Christ in His actual Presence here, but
through the poor earthen vessels of humble servants of God like ourselves. At any rate, whether we speak, or an angel from Heaven, the speaker
matters not—it is the Spirit of God, alone, that is the power of the Word and makes that Word become vital and quickening to you.”—Volume
52, Sermon #2990
“It would be far better to have half a dozen souls really brought to Jesus Christ and enduring to the end, than to have half a dozen thousand blazing
away with a false profession for a time—and then returning like the dog to his vomit, or like the sow that was washed to her wallowing in
the mire. Our Lord’s own declaration is, ‘He that endures to the end shall be saved.’ It is that endurance, that holding out to the end, which is the
point to which we would direct all our endeavors on behalf of our hearers and our converts—and the point about which we would most earnestly
pray to our God.”—Volume 52, Sermon #2991
“Even the seed of Israel, circumcised and blessed with covenants and promises—and having the immediate Presence of God in their sanctuary
could not keep the Law—a clear lesson to us that ‘by the deeds of the Law there shall no flesh be justified.’”—Volume 52, Sermon #2992
“It is possible to endure afflictions on earth and afterwards to endure eternal damnation in Hell. Sinners may go from beds of languishing to beds
of flame, from toil and poverty here to torment and all despair hereafter. There is nothing at all in sorrow that can burn out sin—there is no
power in human suffering to remove the wrath of God.”—Volume 52, Sermon #2993
“The best-taught man, apart from Divine Guidance, is capable of becoming the greatest fool possible! There is a strange weakness which sometimes
comes over noble spirits and which makes them infatuated with an erroneous novelty, though they fancy they have discovered some great
Truth of God.”—Volume 52, Sermon #2994
“The wisdom which contemplates only this life fails even in its own sphere. Its tricks are too shallow, its devices too temporary and the whole
comes down with a crash when least expected to fall!”—Volume 52, Sermon #2995
“We lose a great blessing and incur no small guilt if, professing to be the sons and daughters of our Father who is in Heaven, we never ask Him to
direct our way!”—Volume 52, Sermon #2996
“What we are taught to seek or shun in prayer we should equally pursue or avoid in action.”—Volume 52, Sermon #2997
“The weary sentinel who has stood upon the watchtower all night, keeping guard in the pitiless tempest, longs to see the first streak of daylight—
and he will not readily forget the moment when, in the East, he first perceived the glow which betokened the rising of the sun! He may
forget that, but we shall never forget the hour when, in our deepest sorrows, we caught the first glimpse of a Savior and of His wondrous plan of
salvation!”—Volume 52, Sermon #2998
“But, if ordinary life is precious, much more is the life of the soul and, therefore, it is our Christian duty never to do that which imperils either
our own or other men’s souls. To us there is an imperative call from the great Master that we care for the eternal interests of others and that we,
as far as we can, prevent their exposure to temptations which might lead to their fatal falling into sin.”—Volume 52, Sermon #2999
“The message, ‘Him that comes to me I will in no wise cast out,’ must be true, for it fell from the lips of Jesus! And, next, it is eminently consistent
with His Character. You cannot conceive of Him as casting out a soul that came to Him. The scribes and Pharisees brought to Him a woman
taken in the very act of adultery, yet He did not condemn her, but said to her, ‘Go, and sin no more.’”—Volume 52, Sermon #3000
“We say it sincerely, for we know how sadly true it is—the natural heart of man never does and never can produce so much as one single grain
that God can receive as being to His honor and glory.”—Volume 52, Sermon #3001
“If we wish to share the lot of the righteous, we must be as they are and, among other things, this text [Psa_37:31] must be realized in our experience
as it is in theirs. The Law of our God must be in our heart that our steps may not slide.”—Volume 52, Sermon #3002
“Even in His hours of keenest conflict, Christ knew that His chosen followers would leave Him alone—all would forsake Him and flee. It is true
that even then, He could say, ‘Yet I am not alone, because the Father is with Me,’ but apart from His Father’s Presence, His whole life may be
compressed into those two sentences—‘I have trodden the winepress alone. And of the people there was none with me.’”—Volume 52, Sermon
#3003
“Flesh and blood, as they are, cannot inherit the Kingdom of God and cannot even guess what that Kingdom is like. This is not the place where
the Christian is to be seen. This is the place of his veiling—Heaven is the place of his manifestation. This is the place of his night. Yonder is the
place of his day. Our portion is on the other side of the river—our days of feasting are not yet!”—Volume 52, Sermon #3004
Part 3 NOTABLE QUOTES OF CHARLES H. SPURGEON – PART 3 11