Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - Quotes: Volume 5

Online Resource Library

Commentary Index | Return to PrayerRequest.com | Download

Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - Quotes: Volume 5



TOPIC: Spurgeon - C.H. - Quotes (Other Topics in this Collection)
SUBJECT: Volume 5

Other Subjects in this Topic:

QUOTES BY

CHARLES H. SPURGEON

Volume Five

Word of God

Never, never neglect the Word of God. The Word will make your

heart rich with truth, rich with understanding, and then your

conversation, when it flows from your mouth, will be like your

heart—rich, soothing, and sweet. Make your heart full of rich,

generous love, and then the stream that flows from your hand will

be just as rich and generous as your heart. Above all, get Jesus to

live in your heart, and then out of your heart will flow rivers of

living water, more rich, more satisfying than the water of the well

of Sychar of which Jacob drank. Oh! Go, Christian, to the great

mine of riches, and cry to the Holy Spirit to make your heart rich

unto salvation. Then your life and conversations will be a benefit

to your fellow man; and when they see you, your face will be like

an angel of God. Wise men will stand up when they see you, and

men will give you respect and honor.

Man's Weakness

God has said it; men and women must serve Him—they must

serve Him in His own way, and they must serve Him in His own

strength too, or He will never accept their service. That which

men and women do, unaided by divine strength, can never be

accepted by God. There must be a consciousness of weakness

before there can be any victory.

Death

Life is nothing but death's hallway; and our pilgrimage on earth

is but a journey to the grave. The pulse that preserves our life

beats our death march, and the blood which circulates our life is

floating it forward to the depths of death. Today we see our

friends in health, tomorrow we hear of their death. Only

yesterday, we shook hands with a strong man, and today we close

his eyes. We rode in a coach of comfort only an hour ago, and in a

few more hours the black hearse must carry us to the home of the

living. Oh, how closely allied is death to life! The little lamb that

plays in the field must soon feel the knife. The cow that lows in the

pasture is fattening itself for the slaughter. Trees only grow to be

cut down. Yes, and greater things than these feel death. Empires

rise and flourish; they flourish only to fall into decay, they rise to

fall. How often do we take up a history book, and read of the rise

and fall of empires? We hear of the coronation and the death of

kings. Death is the somber servant who rides behind the chariot of

life. See life! and death is close behind it. Death reaches far

throughout this world, and has stamped all earthly creatures with

an arrow pointing to the grave. Stars die; it is said that large and

destructive fires have been seen in outer space, and astronomers

have marked the funerals of planets—the decay of those mighty

spheres, that we had imagined set forever in sockets of silver, to

glisten as the lamps of eternity.

But blessed be God, there is one place where death is not life's

brother—where life reigns alone; "to live" is not the first syllable

which is to be followed by the next, "to die." There is a land

where the death bells are never tolled, where grave clothes are

never put on, where graves are never dug. Blessed land beyond

the skies! To reach it, we must die.

Nothingness of Man

My God! when I survey the infinite region of space, and see those

magnificent spheres rolling through it all—when I consider how

vast is your universe—so wide that an angel's wing might flap

throughout all eternity and never reach a boundary—I marvel

that you should look on insects so obscure as man. I have looked

into my microscope and seen the short lived tiny insect on a leaf,

and I have called him minute. I will not call him "tiny" again—

compared with me, he is great, if I put myself in comparison with

God. I am so little, that I shrink into nothingness when I behold

the almightiness of Jehovah—so little that the difference between

the microscopic animal and man dwindles into nothing, when

compared with the infinite chasm between God and man.

Death of the Righteous

What a great sorrow that the good should die! That the righteous

should fall! Death, why don't you cut down the poisonous tree?

Why don't you mow down the poisonous plant? Why do you

touch the tree that has provided shade for the weary people? Why

do you touch the flower whose perfume has made the earth

joyous? Death, why do you snatch away the excellent of the earth,

in whom is all of our delight? If you would use your axe, use it on

the trees that draw nourishment, but produce no fruit; then we

would thank you. But why will you cut down the cedars, why will

you fell the godly trees of Lebanon? O Death, why don't you spare

the church? Why must the pulpit be hung in black; why must the

missionary outpost be filled with weeping? Why must the godly

family lose its spiritual leader, and the house its head? O Death,

where are you? Don't touch the earth's holy things; your hands

are not fit to pollute the Israel of God. Why do you put your hand

on the hearts of the elect? Oh, stop, stop; spare the righteous,

Death, and take the bad! But no, it must not be; death comes and

smiles at the godliest of us all; the most generous, the most

prayerful, the most holy, the most devoted must die. Weep, weep,

weep, O church, for you have lost your martyrs; weep, O church,

for you have lost your preachers, your holy men are fallen.

Weep fir tree, for the cedar has fallen, the godly fail, and the

righteous are cut off. But stay awhile; I hear another voice. Say to

the daughter of Judah, spare your weeping. Say to the Lord's

flock, Cease, cease your sorrow; your martyrs are dead, but they

are glorified; your ministers are gone, but they have ascended up

to your Father and to their Father; your brethren are buried in

the grave, but the archangel's trumpet will awaken them, and

their spirits are even now with God.

Satan the Defeated Enemy

Death was the devil's chief defense; Christ boldly opposed the lion

in his den, and fought him in his own territory; and when He took

death from him, and dismantled that once impregnable fortress,

He took away from him, not only that, but every other advantage

that he had over the saint. And now Satan is a conquered foe, not

only in the hour of death, but in every other hour and in every

other place. He is an enemy, both cruel and mighty; but he is a foe

who shudders and shrinks back when a Christian gets into battle

with him; for he knows that though the fight may waver for a

little while in his favor, the victory must fall on the side of the

saint, because Christ by his death destroyed the devil's power.

One Must Fear to Believe

See that man drowning over here—I also see another in the water

too. The one in the distance thinks he can swim—a life preserver

is thrown to him; he believes that he is in no danger of drowning.

Well, he clutches the life preserver very leisurely, and does not

seem to grab it firmly. But this poor creature over here, he knows

he cannot swim, he feels that he will soon drown. Now, put the

means of escape near him and note how desperately he clutches it;

how he seems as if he would drive his fingers through the life

preserver! He clutches it for life or death; that is his all, for he

must perish if he is not saved by that. Now, in this case, he who

fears the most believes the most; and I do think it is sometimes the

same with poor hopeless and lost spirits.

To Die is to Gain

Here we see through a glass that is dark and cloudy, but there we

will see face to face. There, what "eye has not seen nor ear heard"

will be fully revealed to us. There, paradoxes will be unraveled,

mysteries made clear, obscure texts enlightened, confusing and

questionable verses will be revealed as being amazingly simple

and true. The least of all souls in heaven knows more of God than

the greatest saint on the earth. The greatest saint on the earth

may have it said of him, "Nevertheless he who is least in the

kingdom of heaven is greater than he." Not even our greatest

preachers understand as much of theology as the lambs in the

flock of glory. Not even the greatest masterminds of the earth

understand one-millionth part of the mighty meanings which have

been discovered by souls liberated from these bodies made from

clay.

Yes, "To die is gain." Take away, take away that hearse, remove

the covering of black, adorn it in white with bright shiny

decorations. There, take away the music of the death march,

rather lend me the trumpet and the drum. O hallelujah,

hallelujah, hallelujah; why do we cry as the saints go to heaven?

They are not dead, they have simply gone to heaven before us.

Stop, stop that crying, hold back your tears, clap your hands, clap

your hands.

"They are supremely blessed,

Are done with care and sin and woe,

And with their Savior they rest."

What! weep! weep! for heads that are crowned with crowns of

heaven? Weep, weep for hands that hold the harps of gold? What,

weep for eyes that see the Redeemer? What, weep for hearts that

are washed from sin, and are throbbing with eternal bliss? What,

weep for men and women that are in the Savior's arms? No! weep

for yourselves, that you are here. Weep that the mandate has not

come which commands you to die. Weep that you must remain.

But not for them.

I see them turning back on you with loving wonder, and they

exclaim, "Why do you weep? What, weep for poverty that is

clothed in riches? What, weep for sickness, that has inherited

eternal health? What, weep for shame, that is glorified; and weep

for sinful mortality, that has become immaculate? Oh, do not

weep, but rejoice. If you knew what it was that I have said to you,

and where I have gone, you would rejoice with a joy that no one

could take from you."

Satan's Attempts to Kill the Christ

When the Lord Jesus came down to earth, Satan knew his

mission. He knew that the Lord Jesus was the Son of God, and

when he saw Him as an infant in the manger, he thought if he

could kill Him and get Him in the bonds of death, what a fine

thing it would be! So he stirred up the spirit of Herod to kill Him;

but Herod missed his mark. And many times Satan attempted to

put the personal existence of Christ in danger, so that he might

get Christ to die. Poor fool as he was, he did not know that when

Christ died he would bruise the devil's head. Once, you

remember, when Christ was in the synagogue, the devil stirred up

the people, and made them angry; and he thought, "Oh! what a

glorious thing it would be if I could kill this man; then there

would be an end of Him, and I would reign supreme forever." So

he got the people to take Him to the edge of the cliff, and he

gloated over the thought that surely now He would be thrown

down headfirst. But Christ escaped. He tried to starve Him, he

tried to drown Him; He was in the desert without food, and He

was on the sea in a storm; but there was no starving or drowning

Him, and Satan no doubt panted for His blood, and longed that

He would die. At last the day arrived; it was transmitted to the

court of hell that at last Christ would die. They rung their bells

with hellish elation and joy. "He will die now," he said; "Judas

has taken the thirty pieces of silver. Let those Scribes and

Pharisees get Him, they will no more let Him go than the spider

will let go of a poor unfortunate fly. He is as good as dead."

And the devil laughed with excitement, when he saw the Savior

stand before Pilate's judgment seat. And when it was said, "Let

Him be crucified," then Satan’s joy knew no limits, except the

limit set by his own misery. As far as he could, he rejoiced in what

was to him a delightful thought, that the Lord of glory was about

to die. In death, as Christ was being observed by angels, He also

was seen by the demons too; and that dreary march from Pilate's

palace to the cross, was one which the demons watched with

extraordinary interest. And when they saw Him on the cross,

there stood the exulting fiend, Satan, smiling to himself. "Ah! I

have the King of Glory now in my control; I have the power of

death, and I have the power over the Lord Jesus."

He exerted that power, until the Lord Jesus had to cry out in

bitter anguish, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?"

But ah! how short lived was hellish victory. How brief was the

Satanic triumph! He died; and "It is finished!" shook the gates of

hell. Down from the cross the conqueror leaped, pursued the fiend

with thunderbolts of wrath; swift to the darkness of hell the fiend

flew, and swift descending went the conqueror after him; and we

may conceive him exclaiming—"Traitor! this thunderbolt will

find and pierce you through, Though under hell's deepest, darkest

wave you seek to go, to find a sheltering grave." And He seize

him—chained him to his chariot wheel; dragged him up the steeps

of glory; angels shouting all the while, "He ascended on high, He

led captives in his train and gave gifts to men." Now, devil, you

said that you would overcome me, when I came to die. Satan, I

defy you, and laugh you to scorn! My master overcame you, and I

will overcome you yet.

You say you will overcome the saint, do you? You could not

overcome the saint's Master, and you will not overcome him. You

once thought you had conquered Jesus—you were bitterly

deceived. Ah! Satan, you may think you will overcome the little

faith and the faint heart; but you are wondrously mistaken—for

we will assuredly tread Satan under our feet shortly; and even in

our last moment on earth, with fearful odds against us, we will be

"more than conquerors through Him that loved us."

River of God

The river of God is full of water; but there is not one drop of it

that comes from earthly springs. God will have no strength used

in His own battles but the strength which He himself imparts; and

I would not have you that are now distressed to be the least

discouraged by it. Your emptiness is but the preparation for your

being filled; and your casting down is but the making ready for

your lifting up.

Kindness

Deal gently, deal kindly, deal lovingly and there is not a wolf in

human shape that won't be melted by kindness; and there is not a

tiger in woman's form that won't break down and beg for

forgiveness, if God should bless the love that is brought to bear on

her by her friend.

The Devil in Sheep's Clothing

If the devil comes to my door with his horns visible, I will never

let him in; but if he comes with his hat on as a respectable

gentleman, I would admit him at once. The metaphor may be very

strange, but it is quite true. Many men and women has taken in

an evil thing, because it has been varnished and glossed over, and

did not appear evil; and they had thought in their hearts, there is

not much harm in it; so they have let in the little thing, and it has

been like the bursting forth of water—the first drop has brought

after it a torrent. The beginning has been but the beginning of a

fearful end.

Few are Blessed

If we could see things as they are—if we were not deceived by the

masquerade of this feeble life—if we were not so easily taken in by

the masks and dresses of those who act in this great drama, be it

comedy or tragedy—if we could but see what men and women are

behind the scenes, penetrate their hearts, watch their inner

motions, and discern their secret feelings, we would find only a

few who could bear the name of "blessed."

Destroy Sin

Do not harm the bodies of men and women; but destroy their sin

with a stout heart and with a strong arm. Kill both the little sins

and the great ones; let nothing be spared that is against God and

His truth; but we have no war with the bodies of poor mistaken

men and women.

Prayer Before Blessings

If we received the blessings without asking for them, we would

think them mere common things; but prayer makes the common

pebbles of God's worldly provisions more precious than

diamonds; and our spiritual prayer cuts the diamond, and makes

it glisten more. After a long chase, the hunter prizes the animal,

because he has set his heart on it, and is determined to have it;

and even more true, after a long hunger, he who then eats finds

his food much more tasty. So prayer does sweeten the mercy.

Prayer teaches us its preciousness. It is the reading over of the bill

of sale, the account, the property lists, before the estate and the

properties are actually transferred. We know the value of the

purchase by reading over the will of it in prayer, and when we

have groaned out our own expression of its matchless price, then

it is that God bestows the blessing on us. Prayer goes before the

blessing, because it shows us the value of it.

Little Faith

We hear, sometimes, a great deal said about possessing a full

assurance of being a child of God; and then, every now and then,

we hear of a doubt, a hope. As good Joseph Irons used to say,

"They keep hope, hope, hoping—hop, hop, hopping—all their

lives, because they can't walk." Little faith is always lame.

The Great Worker of Salvation

The great King, immortal, invisible, the Divine person, called the

Holy Spirit—it is He who stimulates the soul, or else it would lie

dead forever; it is He who makes it tender, or else it would never

feel; it is He who imparts power to the Word preached, or else it

could never reach further than the ear; it is He who breaks the

heart, it is He who makes it whole; He, from first to last, is the

great worker of Salvation in us, just as Jesus Christ was the

author of Salvation for us.

God's Salvation for Sinners

As sure as God is God, if today you are seeking Him correctly,

through Christ, the day will come when the kiss of full assurance

will be on your lip, when the arms of sovereign love will embrace

you, and you will know it to be true. You may have despised Him,

but you will know Him yet to be your Father and your friend. You

may have mocked His name; yet you will one day come to rejoice

in it as better than pure gold. You may have refused to worship

Him and despised His Word; but the day is coming when worship

to Him will be your delight, and His Word your treasure. Yes, do

not wonder; you may have plunged into the wretched house of sin

and made your clothes black with sin; but you will one day stand

before His throne white as the angels are; and that tongue that

once cursed Him will yet sing His praise. If you are a real seeker,

the hands that have been stained with lust will one day grab the

harp of gold, and the head that has plotted against the Most High

will yet be crowned with gold. Doesn’t it seem a strange thing that

God should do so much for sinners? But strange though it seem, it

will be strangely true.

The God Who Hears

Our God is not a god who sits in one perpetual dream; nor does

He clothe Himself in such thick darkness that He cannot see; He is

not like Baal who does not hear. True, He may not be concerned

about battles; He does not care for the pomp and pageantry of

kings; He does not listen to the sound of military music; He does

not regard the triumph and the pride of man; but whenever there

is a heart full of sorrow, wherever there is an eye filled with tears,

wherever there is a lip quivering with agony, wherever there is a

deep groan, or a sorrowful sigh, the ear of Jehovah is wide open;

He marks it down in the registry of his memory; He puts our

prayers, like rose leaves, between the pages of His book of

remembrance, and when the volume is finally opened, there will

be a precious fragrance springing up from there.

A New World Coming

God's good pleasure is, that this world will one day be totally

redeemed from sin; God's good pleasure is, that this poor planet,

so long covered in darkness, will soon shine out in brightness, like

a new-born sun. Christ's death has done it. The stream that

flowed from His side on Calvary will cleanse the world from all its

wickedness. That hour of mid-day darkness was the rising of a

new sun of righteousness, which will never cease to shine upon the

earth. Yes, the hour is coming, when guns and cannons will be

forgotten things, when the harness of war and the pageantry of

pomp will all be laid aside as food for the worm or the

contemplation of the curious. The hour approaches when old

Rome will shake on Her seven hills, when Mohammed's crescent

will no longer increase on the earth, when all the gods of the

heathens will lose their thrones and be cast out to the moles and to

the bats; and then, from the equator to the poles Christ will be

honored, the Lord paramount on earth, when from land to land,

from the river even to the ends of the earth, one King, will reign,

one shout will be heard, "Hallelujah, hallelujah, the Lord God

Omnipotent reigns."

Christ Our Food

Without bread, I become thin like a skeleton; and, in time, I will

die. Without thought, my mind becomes dwarfed, yes, and it

deteriorates until I become an idiot, with a soul that just has life,

but little more. And without Christ, my spirit must become a

vague, shadowy emptiness. It cannot live unless it feeds on that

heavenly manna which came down from heaven. Now the

Christian can say, "The life that I live is Christ;" because Christ

is the food on which he feeds, and the sustenance of his newborn

spirit.

The Joy of a Newborn

Sinner, let this be your comfort, that God sees you when you begin

to repent. He does not see you with His usual gaze, with which He

looks on all men and women, but he sees you with an eye of

intense interest. He has been looking at you in all your sin, and in

all your sorrow, waiting for you to repent; and now He sees the

first gleam of grace, and He beholds it with joy. Never a soldier on

the lonely castle top saw the first gray light of morning with more

joy than that with which God beholds the first desire in your

heart. Never a physician rejoiced more when he saw the first

heaving of the lungs in one that was supposed to be dead, than

God rejoices over you, now that He sees the first symptom of

good.

Christian, Do Not Worry

I have seen the Christian man in the depths of poverty, when he

lived from hand to mouth, and scarcely knew where he would find

the next meal, still with his mind unruffled, calm, and quiet. If he

had been as rich as a prince, he could not have had less care; if he

had been told that his bread would always be delivered to his

door, and the stream which ran fast by should never run dry—if

he had been quite sure that ravens would bring him bread and

meat in the morning, and again in the evening, he would not have

been one, bit more calm.

Our Friends in Heaven

Oh, I believe that on the day we die that we will see the bright

spirits that are now before the throne; to grip the hand of

Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, to look into the face of Paul the

apostle, and shake the hand of Peter; to sit in flowery fields with

Moses and David, to bask in the sunlight of bliss with John and

Magdalene. Oh, how blessed! The company of poor imperfect

saints on earth is good; but how much better the society of the

redeemed. Death is no loss to us by way of friends. We leave a few,

a little group below, and say to them, "Do not fear, little flock,"

and we ascend and meet the armies of the living God—the

multitudes of His redeemed. "To die is gain."

Prayer

If anyone would ask me for a summation of the Christian religion,

I would say, it is in that one word—"prayer." If I would be asked,

"What will take in the whole of the Christian experience?" I

would answer, "Prayer." A man must have been convinced of sin

before he could pray; he must have had some hope that there was

mercy for him before he could pray. In fact, all the Christian

virtues are locked up in that word, prayer. If you tell me, that you

are a person of prayer, then I will reply at once, "Sir, I have no

doubt of the reality, as well as the sincerity, of your religion."

The Chosen Ones

In the very beginning, when this great universe was in the mind of

God, like unborn forests in a cup of acorns; long before the echoes

walked in the quiet solitudes; before the mountains were brought

forth; and long before the light flashed through the sky, God

loved His chosen men and women. Before there were men and

women—when the heavens were not yet fanned by an angel's

wing; when space itself did not exist; when there was nothing but

God alone; even then, in that loneliness of Deity, and in that deep

quiet and depth, His heart moved for His chosen ones, His elect

ones. Their names were written on His heart, and they became

dear to His soul.

The Elect of the Elect

There are elect out of the elect, I will acknowledge, as to gifts and

standing, and as to the works they may accomplish in this world;

but there is no election out of the elect on the basis of a deeper

extent of the love of God. They are all loved the same; they are all

written in the same book of eternal love and life.

The Rich Church

When I hear of a church where everyone is wealthy and members

of the upper class of our society, then I always say farewell to

them, for where there are no poor people, the ship will soon sink.

If there are no poor, then, Christ will soon give them some, if they

are a real Gospel church.

Our Tears

Oh! It is a glorious fact, that prayers are noticed in heaven. The

poor broken hearted sinner, going into their bedroom, bends their

knee, but can only utter their mournful cry in the language of

sighs and tears. Look! that groan has made all the harps of

heaven thrill with music; that tear has, been caught by God, and

put into a vase made especially for tears, to be perpetually

preserved. The tearful praying Christian, whose distress prevents

his words, will be clearly understood by the Most High.

Slow Moving Christians

You crippled ones! I don't fear; you will not be thrown out. Two

snails entered the ark; how they got there, I don’t know. It must

have taken them a long time. They must have started rather early,

unless Noah took them part of the way. So, some of you are snails;

you are on the right road, but it will take a long while, unless some

blessed Noah helps you into the ark.

God Knows His Children

Jesus recognizes His family when their sins make them as black as

the tents of Kedar, and He knows they will be as bright as the

curtains of Solomon. He knows His children when they do not

know themselves; when they believe they are lost beyond

recovery, or when they foolishly conceive that they can save

themselves.

Living in the Light of God

Give me the support of God, and I can easily bear the insults of

men. Let me lay my head on the chest of Jesus, and I will not fear

the interruptions of anxieties and trouble. If my God will forever

give me the light of His smile, and a glimpse of His blessing—it

will be enough. Come on enemies, persecutors, demons, yes, the

Devil himself, for "the Lord God is my sun and shield." Gather,

you clouds, and surround me, I carry a Sun within me; blow,

wind of the frozen north, I have a fire of living coal within me;

yes, death, kill me, but I have another life—a life in the light of

God's countenance.

Backsliders

Backsliders! fallen ones! God will have mercy on you if you are

repentant. Glorious fact! the sorrowing backslider will not be left

behind. Backsliders will sing above, as God's restored children,

He has forever loved. Blind and crippled ones! believe in the

Lord, and you will be found among the children of the Lamb at

last.

God's Throne

You may erect little thrones for those whom you love; but God's

throne must be the glorious high throne; you may set your loved

ones on the steps leading up to His throne, but God must sit on the

very seat itself. He is to be enthroned, the royal One within your

heart, the king of your affections.

Do not Love the World

Hate the world, value its treasure at a cheap price, estimate its

gems as nothing but fakes, and its strength as nothing but dreams.

Do not think that you will lose any pleasure, but rather remember

the saying of that early Church leader Chrysostom, "Despise

riches, and you will be rich; despise glory, and you will be

glorious; despise injuries, and you will be a conqueror; despise

rest, and you will gain rest; despise the earth, and you will gain

heaven!"

True Beauty

I gaze on beauty, and may myself be deformed. I admire the light,

and may yet dwell in darkness, but if the light of the face of God

rests on me, I will become like Him. The characteristics of His

appearance will be on me, and the great outline of His attributes

will be mine. Oh, wondrous mirror, which renders the beholder

lovely! Oh, admirable mirror, which does not reflect self with its

imperfections, but gives a perfect image to those that are

unattractive.