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Products>The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit Sermons, vol. 38

The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit Sermons, vol. 38

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Print list price: $34.57
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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 2,237–2,288.

Product Details

  • Author: Charles Spurgeon
  • Publisher: Passmore & Alabaster
  • Publication Date: 1892

Top Highlights

“Our afflictions may come distinctly from man, as the result of persecution or malice; and yet they may come with even greater certainty from the Lord, and may be the needful outcome of his special love to us.” (Page 3)

“There are two great certainties about things that shall come to pass—one is that God knows, and the other is that we do not know.” (Page 64)

“You and I can have no idea of how high an honour it is to be equal with God. How can we, therefore, measure the descent of Christ, when our highest thoughts cannot comprehend the height from which he came? The depth to which he descended is immeasurably below any point we have ever reached; and the height from which he came is inconceivably above our loftiest thought. Do not, however, forget the glory that Jesus laid aside for a while. Remember that he is very God of very God, and that he dwelt in the highest heaven with his Father; but yet, though he was thus infinitely rich, for our sakes he became poor, that we, through his poverty, might be rich.” (Pages 529–530)

“What will not Christ do for us who have been given to him by his Father? There is no measure to his love; you cannot comprehend his grace. Oh, how we ought to love him, and serve him! The lower he stoops to save us, the higher we ought to lift him in our adoring reverence. Blessed be his name, he stoops, and stoops, and stoops, and, when he reaches our level, and becomes man, he still stoops, and stoops, and stoops lower and deeper yet: ‘Being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself.’” (Page 531)

“III. Once more, Paul’s argument is that, if there be no resurrection, faith becomes delusion.” (Page 605)

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    $12.49

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