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Products>The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit Sermons, vol. 15

The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit Sermons, vol. 15

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Overview

This is the most complete collection of Charles Spurgeon's Sermons available in print or electronically. In this collection there are over 3,550 sermons from one of the most gifted speakers and blessed Christian leaders of our era.

This collection is an invaluable tool in both sermon preparation and understanding. Additionally, The Complete Spurgeon Sermon Collection can also serve as a full Bible commentary as there are sermons and expositions from Genesis 1:1 to Revelation 22:21.

Volume seven contains sermons 848–907.

Product Details

  • Author: Charles Spurgeon
  • Publisher: Passmore & Alabaster
  • Publication Date: 1869

Top Highlights

“Take this doctrine to be true, what is the practical lesson of it but this? If this day I tremble lest I have it not, let me learn the way by which this life must come to me if it come at all. Certainly not by my own strivings and strugglings in the way of merit, for it is represented not as a reward, but as a gift; certainly not by any power of my own apart from God, for it is spoken of as coming from Jesus Christ, and not as growing out of human nature. What, then, had I better do than make a solemn appeal to the mercy of God?” (Page 195)

“A third meaning which I think our Lord intended to convey to us was this: men ought always to pray, that is, they should persevere in prayer.” (Page 100)

“The new nature is kept alive between the jaws of death, preserved by the power of God from instant destruction; by no power less than divine could its existence be continued.” (Page 289)

“Our Lord meant by saying men ought always to pray, that they ought to be always in the spirit of prayer, always ready to pray. Like the old knights, always in warfare, not always on their steeds dashing forward with their lances in rest to unhorse an adversary, but always wearing their weapons where they could readily reach them, and always ready to encounter wounds or death for the sake of the cause which they championed. Those grim warriors often slept in their armour; so even when we sleep, we are still to be in the spirit of prayer, so that if perchance we wake in the night we may still be with God.” (Page 98)

“We have all heard of the expulsive power of a new affection; this new affection of love to God coming into the soul, expels love to sin.” (Page 402)

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    $12.49

    Print list price: $34.57
    Save $22.08 (63%)