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Author: C H Spurgeon
ISBN: 9781846251450
Product Code: MSS1450
Overview
Here are 45 sermons which were awaiting publication in the Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit when it came to an abrupt end in 1917.
The 63 volumes and 3563 sermons of Spurgeon’s New Park Street and Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpits were a remarkable achievement, and it was only on account of the shortage of paper and metal caused by the First World War that publication ceased on 10th May 1917.
Many hundreds of sermons were ready and waiting for their weekly publication and notices in the last two sermons indicated that it was the intention to resume publication once peace had been restored. However, only twenty hitherto unpublished sermons were to appear in 1922 in a volume entitled ‘Able to the uttermost’.
It is the purpose of this volume to bring to light the sermons which probably would have appeared in te remainder of Volume 63 and at the start of volume 64 of the Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit, sermons which originally appeared only in magazine format from 1877 to 1881.
Author
Terence Peter Crosby holds a PhD in Classics (Greek and Latin) from London University and was for some time Secretary of the Evangelical Library, London. He is the compiler of Day One’s volumes of daily readings 365 Days with Spurgeon, My book of hobbies and God’s Book, the Bible, and the author of Greek to the Rescue.
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834-92) was England’s best-known preacher for most of the second half of the nineteenth century. In 1854, just four years after his conversion, Spurgeon, then only 20, became pastor of London’s famed New Park Street Church. The congregation quickly outgrew their building, moved to Exeter Hall, then to Surrey Music Hall. In these venues Spurgeon frequently preached to audiences numbering more than 10,000—all in the days before electronic amplification. In 1861 the congregation moved permanently to the newly constructed Metropolitan Tabernacle. Spurgeon’s printed works are voluminous.
Target readership
- Avid readers of the writers of Charles Haddon Spurgeon
- Ministers, preachers
Features and Benefits
- Hitherto unpublished sermons which have been out of public sight for a century or more
- UK foreword Peter Masters
- USA foreword Phil Johnson
Format
Clothbound with dust-jacket, 640 pages
Product Reference
MSS1450
ISBN
9781846251450
Chapter contents
1 A blessed competition
2 His manifest love
3 Two trenchant addresses
4. Sowing the seed: A revival sermon
5 Sorrowful upbraidings
6 A glimpse of the glorified
7 A notable confidence
8 The very blessing we crave
9 Sinning against the light
10 The believer's expectations
11 Rest and refreshment
12 The great interposer
13 The old, old story
14 A watchword for soul-winners
15 Are you invited?
16 The banished ones restored
17 A strong cry
18 A notable warning
19 A plant of renown
20 A request of the beloved
21 A fillip for the wayworn
22 Though often unperceived by sense faith sees him always near
23 The faithful witness
24 No condemnation
25 Things to come!
26 Our faults
27 Melting and moulding
28 A call to communion
29 Thorns and briers of the wilderness
30 The pedagogue and the pupils
31 Remember Lot's wife
32 Incessant prayer
33 De profundis
34 A miracle of mercy
35 The master's call
36 Holiness indispensable
37 A simple proof of sincere love
38 A call to communion
39 A host of fears put to flight
40 The holy war
41 The faultless assembly
42 The dew of blessing
43 The trowel and the sword
44 Our redeemer's supremacy
45 Woes to come!
Read an extract (116 KB)
Availability
This book is available now.
Key words
Spurgeon, sermons, preaching