do you like Spurgeon preaching?

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May 2, 2011
1,134
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#21
I thought it would be nice to listen to some sermons by Spurgeon. Has anyone else heard them yet? What do you think?


Repentance: According to 2 Corinthians 7:11 - By John Calvin

Institutes of the Christian Religion
Vol 3 pages 76-86

15. REPENTANCE ACCORDING TO 2 CORINTHIANS 7:11
16. OUTWARD AND INWARD REPENTANCE
17. THE OUTWARD PRACTICE OF PENANCE MUST NOT BECOME THE CHIEF THING

Next Post:

18. CONFESSION OF SIN BEFORE GOD AND BEFORE MEN

19. REPENTANCE AND FORGIVENESS ARE INTERRELATED

20. IN WHAT SENSE IS REPENTANCE THE PRIOR CONDITION OF FORGIVENESS?

21. REPENTANCE AS GOD'S FREE GIFT


THE SERMON:

15. REPENTANCE ACCORDING TO 2 CORINTHIANS 7:11
It is for a very good reason that the apostle enumerates seven
causes, effects, or parts
in his description of repentance. They are
earnestness or carefulness, excuse, indignation,fear, longing, zeal, and
avenging [ 2 Corinthians 7:11]. It should not seem absurd that I
dare not
determine whether they ought to be accounted causes or effects, for
either is
debatable. And they can also be called inclinations joined with
repentance. But because,
leaving out those questions, we can
understand what Paul means, we shall be content
with a simple
exposition.


Therefore, he says that from "sorrow…according to God" [2 Corinthians
7:10]
careful ness
arises. For he who is touched with a lively feeling of
dissatisfaction with self because he
has sinned against his God is at the
same time aroused to diligence and attention, that he
may escape from
the devil's snares, that he may better take precaution against his
wiles,
and that he may not afterward fall away from the governance of
the Holy Spirit, nor be
lulled into a sense of security.

Next is "excuse," which in this passage does not signify a defense
whereby the sinner, in
order to escape God's judgment, either denies
that he has offended or extenuates his
fault; but rather purification,
which relies more on asking pardon than on confidence in
one's own
cause. Just as children who are not froward, while they recognize and
confess
their errors, plead for pardon, and to obtain it, testify in
whatever way they can that they
have not at all abandoned that
reverence which they owe their parents. In short, they so
excuse
themselves not to prove themselves righteous and innocent, but only
to obtain
pardon. There follows indignation, when the sinner moans
inwardly with himself, finds
fault with himself, and is angry with himself,
while recognizing his own perversity and his
own ungratefulness
toward God.


By the word "fear" Paul means that trembling which is produced in our
minds as often as
we consider both what we deserve and how dreadful
is the severity of God's wrath toward
sinners. We must then be troubled
with an extraordinary disquiet, which both teaches us
humility and
renders us more cautious thereafter. But if that carefulness of which we

have previously spoken arises from fear, we see the bond by which
these two are joined
together.

It seems to me that he has used the word "longing" to express that
diligence in doing our
duty and that readiness to obey to which
recognition of our sins ought especially to
summon us. To this also
pertains the "zeal" that he joins directly to it, for it signifies an
ardor by
which we are aroused when those spurs are applied to us. What have I
done?
Whither had I plunged if God's mercy had not succored me?

Lastly, there is "avenging." For the more severe we are toward
ourselves, and the more
sharply we examine our own sins, the more we
ought to hope that God is favorable and
merciful toward us. And truly, it
could not happen otherwise than that the soul itself,
stricken by dread of
divine judgment, should act the part of an avenger in carrying out its
own punishment. Those who are really religious experience what sort
of punishments are
shame, confusion, groaning, displeasure with self,
and other emotions that arise out of a
lively recognition of sin. Yet we
must remember to exercise restraint, lest sorrow engulf
us. For nothing
more readily happens to fearful consciences than falling into despair.
And
also by this stratagem, whomever Satan sees overwhelmed by the
fear of God he more
and more submerges in that deep whirlpool of
sorrow that they may never rise again.


That fear cannot, indeed, be too great which ends in humility, and does
not depart from
the hope of pardon. Nevertheless, in accordance with
the apostle's injunction the sinner
ought always to beware lest, while he
worries himself into dissatisfaction weighed down
by excessive fear, he
become faint [Hebrews 12:3]. For in this way we flee from God, who
calls
us to himself through repentance. On this matter Bernard's admonition
is also useful:
"Sorrow for sins is necessary if it be not unremitting. I beg
you to turn your steps back
sometimes from troubled and
anxious remembering of
your ways, and to go forth to the
tableland of serene
remembrance of God's benefits. Let us
mingle honey with
wormwood that its wholesome bitterness
may bring
health when it is drunk tempered with sweetness.
If you
take thought upon yourselves in your humility, take
thought likewise
upon the Lord in his goodness." (The fruits
of repentance: holiness of life, confession
and remission of
sins; repentance is lifelong
,
16-20)


16. OUTWARD AND INWARD REPENTANCE
Now we can understand the nature of the fruits of repentance: the
duties of piety toward
God, of charity toward men, and in the whole of
life, holiness and purity
. Briefly, the more
earnestly any man measures
his life by the standard of God's law, the surer are the signs
of
repentance that he shows. Therefore, the Spirit, while he urges us to
repentance, often
recalls us now to the individual precepts of the law,
now to the duties of the Second Table.
Yet in other passages the Spirit
has first condemned uncleanness in the very wellspring of
the heart,
and then proceeded to the external evidences that mark sincere
repentance. I
will soon set before my readers' eyes a table of this matter
in a description of the life of
the Christian. I will not gather evidences
from the prophets, wherein they sometimes
scorn the follies of those
who strive to appease God with ceremonies and show them to
be mere
laughingstocks, and at other times teach that outward uprightness of
life is not
the chief point of repentance, for God looks into men's
hearts.


Whoever is moderately versed in Scripture will understand by himself,
without the
admonition of another, that when we have to deal with God
nothing is achieved
unless we begin from the inner disposition of
the heart. And the passage from Joel will
contribute no little to the
understanding of the rest:
"Rend your hearts and not your garments" [Joel 2:13].
Both of these exhortations also are briefly expressed in
these
words of James,
"Cleanse your hands, you sinners, and purify your hearts,
you men of
double mind" [James 4:8],
where there is indeed an addition in the first clause; yet the source and
origin is then shown: namely, that men must cleanse away secret filth in
order
that an altar may be erected to God in the heart itself.

Besides, there are certain outward exercises that we use privately as
remedies, either to
humble ourselves or to tame our flesh, but publicly
as testimony of repentance [2
Corinthians 7:11]. Moreover, they arise
from that "avenging" of which Paul speaks [IBID
]. For these are the
characteristics of an afflicted mind: to be in squalor,
groaning, and
tears; to flee splendor and any sort of trappings; to depart from all
delights.
Then he who feels what a great evil rebellion of the flesh is
seeks every remedy to
restrain it. Moreover, he who well considers
how serious it is to have run counter to God's
justice cannot rest until,
in his humility, he has given glory to God.


The old writers often mention exercises of this sort when they discuss
the fruits of
repentance. But although they do not place the force
of repentance in them - my
readers will pardon me if I say what I think - it
seems to me that they depend too much
upon such exercises. And if
any man will wisely weigh this matter, he will agree with me, I
trust, that
they have in two respects gone beyond measure. For when they urged
so
much and commended with such immoderate praises that bodily
discipline, they
succeeded in making the people embrace it with greater
zeal; but they somewhat
obscured what ought to have been of far
greater importance. Secondly, in inflicting
punishments they were
somewhat more rigid than the gentleness of the church would call
for,
as we shall have occasion to show in another place.


17. THE OUTWARD PRACTICE OF PENANCE MUST NOT BECOME THE CHIEF THING
Some persons, when they hear weeping, fasting, and ashes spoken of
in various passages,
and especially in Joel [ Joel 2:12], consider that
repentance consists chiefly of fasting and
weeping. This delusion of
theirs must be removed. What is there said concerning the
conversion
of the entire heart to the Lord, and concerning the rending not of
garments
but of the heart, belongs properly to repentance. But weeping
and fasting are not
subjoined as perpetual or necessary effects of this,
but have their special occasion.
Because he had prophesied that the
Jews were threatened with a very great disaster, he
counseled them to
forestall the wrath of God; not only by repenting, but also by
manifesting
their sorrow. For just as an accused man is wont to present himself as a

suppliant with long beard, uncombed hair, and mourner's clothing to
move the judge to
mercy; so it behooved them when arraigned before
the judgment seat of God to beg, in
their miserable condition, that his
severity be averted. But although perhaps sackcloth
and ashes better
fitted those times, it is certain that there will be a very suitable use

among us for weeping and fasting whenever the Lord seems to
threaten us with any ruin
or calamity.

When he causes some danger to appear, he announces that he is ready
and,
after a manner, armed for revenge. Therefore, the prophet does
well to exhort his people
to weeping and fasting - that is, to the sorrow
of accused persons, for he had just stated
that their evil deeds were
brought to trial. In like manner, the pastors of the church would
not be
doing ill today if, when they see ruin hanging over the necks of their
people, they
were to cry out to them to hasten to fasting and weeping;
provided - and this is the
principal point - they always urge with greater
and more intent care and effort that "they
should rend their hearts and
not their garments" [ Joel 2:13]. There is no doubt
whatsoever that
fasting is not always closely connected with repentance, but is
especially
intended for times of calamity. Accordingly, Christ links it with
mourning when he releases
the apostles from need of it, until, deprived
of his presence, they should be overwhelmed
with grief [ Matthew 9:15].
I am speaking concerning a public fast, for the life of the godly
ought to
be tempered with frugality and sobriety that throughout its course a sort
of
perpetual fasting may appear. But because that whole matter is to be
investigated
again where we discuss the discipline of the church, I now
touch upon it rather sparingly.



 
A

AnandaHya

Guest
#22
this thread is suppose to be about Spurgeon NOT a calvin versus arminian debate. :(

why can't anyone respect the topic and start another one if they want to discuss something else?

Anyway I just listened to this sermon:

Print Page - Sermon: Divided Heart - CH Spurgeon

It talks on the disease of a divided heart and hypocrites. Alas most are too blind to know if it refers to them or not....

"I must observe once more, and then I will leave this point of the disease, that, according to the Hebrew of my text, this disease is a very difficult one to deal with, from the fact that it is a flattering disease. The text might be rendered—"Their heart flatters them; now are they found faulty." There are many cunning flatterers in the world, but the most cunning is man's own heart. A man's own heart will flatter him even about his sins. A man is a grasping miser—his heart flatters him that he is only exercising proper business habits. A man on the other hand is extravagant and spends the good gifts of God upon his own evil passions; then his heart tells him that he is a liberal soul. The heart turns "sweet into bitter and bitter into sweet." It is so "deceitful above all things," and so "desperately wicked," that it has the impudence to "put darkness for light and light for darkness." Now when a man has a divided heart, he generally flatters himself. "Well," says he, "it is true I drink too much, but then there is never a time that I refuse a guinea towards a charity. It is true," says he "I am not certainly what I should be in my moral character, but still, see how regularly I keep to my church or chapel. It is true," says he, "I don't now and then mind a trick or two in my trade, but I am always ready to help the poor." And so he imagines that he blots out an evil trait in his character with a good one and thus flatters his heart. And see how self-contented and satisfied he is. The poor child of God is trying his own heart with the deepest possible anxiety; this man knows of no such thing. He is always fully assured that he is right. The true believer is sitting down and turning over his accounts day by day to see whether he be really on the road to heaven or whether he has mistaken his evidence and has been deceived. But this man, self-satisfied, bandages his own eyes and walks deliberately on, singing at every step, straight to his own destruction. I know of some such now. It will not suffice for me simply to state what their character is unless God the Holy Spirit open their eyes. They will be sure not to know their own likeness, even though I should paint it to the very life, and put in every touch and stroke, yet they will say, "Ah he could not refer to me. I am so good and so godly, there could have been no reference to me in anything that he said." Do you know a class of people that pull the most tremendously long faces, that always look so serious, that talk the English language with a kind of unctuous twang, that give a savoury pronunciation to every word they utter? Beware of them. When a man wears all his religion in his face, he has generally but a very small stock in his heart. Those tradesmen that put such a great display in their windows, frequently have very little behind. So with these professors; no one would know they were religious, so they label themselves that you may not make a mistake. You would think they were worldlings, if it were not for their sanctimonious appearance. But by putting that on, they think to glide through the world with credit. I hope they are not imagining that they shall stand accepted before the bar of God and deceive the Omniscient. Alas for them! Their heart is divided. This is no uncommon disease, despite its loathsomeness and its terrible fatality."
 
May 2, 2011
1,134
8
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#23
Repentance: According to 2 Corinthians 7:11 - By John Calvin

Institutes of the Christian Religion
Vol 3 pages 76-86

Previous Post:
15. REPENTANCE ACCORDING TO 2 CORINTHIANS 7:11
16. OUTWARD AND INWARD REPENTANCE
17. THE OUTWARD PRACTICE OF PENANCE MUST NOT BECOME THE CHIEF THING


18. CONFESSION OF SIN BEFORE GOD AND BEFORE MEN
19. REPENTANCE AND FORGIVENESS ARE INTERRELATED
20. IN WHAT SENSE IS REPENTANCE THE PRIOR CONDITION OF FORGIVENESS?
21. REPENTANCE AS GOD'S FREE GIFT


18. CONFESSION OF SIN BEFORE GOD AND BEFORE MEN

Nevertheless, I shall insert this point here: when the term "repentance"
is applied to this external profession, it is improperly diverted from its
true meaning, which I have set forth. For it is not so much a turning to
God as a confession of guilt, together with a beseeching of God to
avert punishment and accusation.' Thus, to "repent in sackcloth and
ashes" [ Matthew 11:21; Luke 10:13] is only to evidence our
self-displeasure when God is angry with us because of our grave
offenses. Public, indeed, is this kind of confession, by which we,
condemning ourselves before the angels and the world, anticipate the
judgment of God. For Paul, rebuking the slothfulness of those who are
indulgent toward their own sins, says: "If we judged ourselves…we
should not be judged" by God [ 1 Corinthians 11:31].

Now, while it is not always necessary to make men open and conscious
witnesses of our repentance, yet to confess to God privately is a part of
true repentance that cannot be omitted.
For there is nothing less
reasonable than that God should forgive those sins in which we flatter
ourselves, and which we hypocritically disguise lest he bring them to
light.

Not only is it fitting to confess those sins which we commit daily, but
graver offenses ought to draw us further and recall to our minds those
which seem long since buried. David teaches us this by his example.
For, touched with shame for his recent crime, he examines himself even
to the time when he was in his mother's womb, and acknowledges that
even then he was corrupted and infected with the filthiness of the flesh
[ Psalm 51:3-5]. And he does not do this to extenuate his guilt, as many
hide themselves in a crowd and seek to go unpunished by involving
others with them. David does far otherwise. He openly magnifies his
guilt, confessing that, corrupted from his very infancy, he has not
ceased to heap misdeeds upon misdeeds. Also, in another passage, he
undertakes such an investigation of his past life as to implore God's
mercy for the sins of his youth [Psalm 15:7]. Surely then, at last, we shall
prove that our drowsiness has been shaken from us, if we seek from
God a release by groaning under our burden, by bewailing
our evil deeds.

Moreover, we ought to note that the repentance which we are enjoined
constantly to practice differs from that repentance which, as it were,
arouses from death those who have either shamefully fallen or with
unbridled vices cast themselves into sinning, or have thrown off God's
yoke by some sort of rebellion. For often Scripture, in exhorting to
repentance, means by it a kind of passage and resurrection from death
to life. And in referring to a people as having "repented," it means that
they have been converted from idol worship and other gross offenses.

For this reason, Paul declares that he will mourn for those
sinners who
"have not repented of lewdness, fornication,
and licentiousness" [ 2
Corinthians 12:21].
We ought carefully to observe this distinction, lest when we hear that
few are called to repentance we become careless, as if mortification of
the flesh no longer concerned us.
For the base desires that always
pester us, and the vices that repeatedly sprout in us, do not allow us to
slacken our concern for mortification.

Therefore, the special repentance that is required only of certain ones
whom the devil has wrenched from fear of God and entangled in deadly
snares does not do away with the ordinary repentance to which
corruption of nature compels us to give attention throughout our lives.

19. REPENTANCE AND FORGIVENESS ARE INTERRELATED

Now if it is true - a fact abundantly clear - that the whole of the gospel is
contained under these two headings, repentance and forgiveness of
sins, do we not see that the Lord freely justifies his own in order that he
may at the same time restore them to true righteousness by
sanctification of his Spirit? John, a messenger sent before the face of
Christ to prepare his ways [ Matthew 11:10], proclaimed:
"Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven has come near"
[Matthew 3:2; 4:17, Vg.].

By inviting them to repentance, he admonished them to recognize that
they were sinners, and their all was condemned before the Lord, that
they might with all their hearts desire the mortification of their flesh,
and a new rebirth in the Spirit.
By proclaiming the Kingdom of God, he
was calling them to faith, for by the Kingdom of God, which he taught
was at hand, he meant the forgiveness of sins, salvation, life, and
utterly everything that we obtain in Christ. Hence we read in the other
Evangelists: "John came preaching a baptism of repentance for the
remission of sins" [ Mark 1:4; Luke 3:3]. What else is this than that they,
weighed down and wearied by the burden of sins, should turn to the
Lord and conceive a hope of forgiveness and salvation?
So, also, Christ entered upon his preaching: "The Kingdom
of God has come near; repent, and believe in the gospel" [ Mark 1:15].

First he declares that the treasures of God's mercy have been opened
in himself; then he requires repentance; finally, trust in God's promises.
Therefore, when he meant to summarize the whole gospel in
brief, he said that he "should suffer rise from the dead, and
that repentance and
forgiveness of sins should be preached
in his name" [ Luke 24:26, 46-47].

And after his resurrection the apostles preached this: "God
raised Jesus…to give repentance to Israel and forgiveness
of sins" [ Acts 5:30-31].

Repentance is preached in the name of Christ when, through the
teaching of the gospel, men hear that all their thoughts, all their
inclinations, all their efforts, are corrupt and vicious. Accordingly, they
must be reborn if they would enter the Kingdom of Heaven.

Forgiveness of sins is preached when men are taught that for them
Christ became redemption, righteousness, salvation, and life
[1 Corinthians 1:30], by whose name they are freely accounted righteous
and innocent in God's sight. Since both kinds of grace are received
by faith, as I have elsewhere proved, still, because the proper object of
faith is God's goodness, by which sins are forgiven, it was expedient
that it should be carefully distinguished from repentance.

20. IN WHAT SENSE IS REPENTANCE THE PRIOR CONDITION OF FORGIVENESS?

Now the hatred of sin, which is the beginning of repentance, first gives
us access to the knowledge of Christ, who reveals himself to none but
poor and afflicted sinners, who groan, toil, are heavy-laden, hunger,
thirst, and pine away with sorrow and misery [ Isaiah 61:1-3; Matthew
11:5, 28; Luke 4:18]. Accordingly, we must strive toward repentance
itself, devote ourselves to it throughout life, and pursue it to the very
end if we would abide in Christ.
For he came to call sinners, but it was
to repentance [cf. Matthew 9:13]. He was sent to bless the unworthy, but
in order that every one may turn from his wickedness [ Acts 3:26; cf.
Acts 5:31]. Scripture is full of such testimonies.

For this reason, when God offers forgiveness of sins, he usually
requires repentance of us in turn, implying that his mercy ought to be a
cause for men to repent. He says,

"Do judgment and righteousness, for salvation has come near." [ Isaiah 56:1 p.]
Again, "A redeemer will come to Zion, and to those in Jacob
who repent of their sins." [ Isaiah 59:20.]
Again, "Seek the Lord while he can be found, call upon him
while he is near; let the wicked man forsake his way and the
unrighteousness of his thoughts; let him return to the Lord,
and he will have mercy upon him." [ Isaiah 55:6-7 p.]
Likewise, "Turn again, and repent, that your sins may be
blotted out." [ Acts 3:19.]


Yet we must note that this condition is not so laid down as if our
repentance were the basis of our deserving pardon, but rather,
because the Lord has determined to have pity on men to the end that
they may repent, he indicates in what direction men should proceed if
they wish to obtain grace. Accordingly, so long as we dwell in the prison
house of our body we must continually contend with the defects of our
corrupt nature, indeed with our own natural soul. a Plato sometimes
says that the life of a philosopher is a meditation upon death; but we
may more truly say that the life of a Christian man is a continual effort
and exercise in the mortification of the flesh, till it is utterly slain, and
God's Spirit reigns in us.
Therefore, I think he has profited greatly who
has learned to be very much displeased with himself, not so as to stick
fast in this mire and progress no farther, but rather to hasten to God
and yearn for him in order that, having been engrafted into the life and
death of Christ, he may give attention to continual repentance. Truly,
they who are held by a real loathing of sin cannot do otherwise. For no
one ever hates sin unless he has previously been seized with a love of
righteousness. This thought, as it was the simplest of all, so has it
seemed to me to agree best with the truth of Scripture.(Sins for which
there is no repentance or pardon, 21-25)

21. REPENTANCE AS GOD'S FREE GIFT

Further, that repentance is a singular gift of God I believe to be so clear
from the above teaching that there is no need of a long discourse to
explain it.
Accordingly, the church praises God's benefit, and marvels
that he "granted repentance to the Gentiles unto salvation"
[ Acts 11:18, cf. 2 Corinthians 7:10].

And Paul bids Timothy be forbearing and gentle toward unbelievers: If
at any time, he says, God may give them repentance to recover from the
snares of the devil [ 2 Timothy 2:25- 26]. Indeed, God declares that he
wills the conversion of all, and he directs exhortations to all in common.
Yet the efficacy of this depends upon the Spirit of regeneration. For it
would be easier for us to create men than for us of our own power to
put on a more excellent nature. Accordingly, in the whole course of
regeneration, we are with good reason called "God's handiwork,
created… for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we
should walk in them" [ Ephesians 2:10, cf. Vg.]. Whomsoever God wills
to snatch from death, he quickens by the Spirit of regeneration. Not that
repentance, properly speaking, is the cause of salvation, but because it
is already seen to be inseparable from faith and from God's mercy,

when, as Isaiah testifies,
"a redeemer will come to Zion, and to those in Jacob who
turn back from iniquity" [ Isaiah 59:20].

This fact indeed stands firm: wherever the fear of God flourishes, the
Spirit has worked toward the salvation of man. Therefore, believers,
according to Isaiah, while they complain and grieve that they have been
forsaken by God, set this as a sort of sign of reprobation, that their
hearts have been hardened by him [ Isaiah 63:17]. The apostle, also
wishing to exclude apostates from the hope of salvation, gives the
reason that "it is impossible to restore them to repentance" [ Hebrews
6:4- 6 p.]. For obviously God, renewing those he wills not to perish,
shows the sign of his fatherly favor and, so to speak, draws them to
himself with the rays of his calm and joyous countenance. On the other
hand, he hardens and he thunders against the reprobate, whose impiety
is unforgivable. With this sort of vengeance the apostle threatens
willful apostates who, while they fall away from faith in the gospel, mock
God, scornfully despise his grace, profane and trample Christ's blood
[ Hebrews 10:29], yea, as much as it lies in their power, crucify him again
[ Hebrews 6:6].

For Paul does not, as certain austere folk would preposterously have it,
cut off hope of pardon from all voluntary sins. But he teaches that
apostasy deserves no excuse, so that it is no wonder God avenges
such sacrilegious contempt of himself with inexorable rigor. " For," he
teaches,
"it is impossible to restore again to repentance those who
have once been enlightened, who have tasted the heavenly
gift, have
become partakers of the Holy Spirit, and have
tasted the goodness of
the word of God and the powers of
the age to come, if they fall away,
since they crucify the Son
of God on their own account and hold him up
to contempt." [ Hebrews 6:4-6.]
Another passage: "If we sin willfully," he says, "after
receiving the knowledge of the truth, there remains no

longer a sacrifice for sins, but a certain dreadful expectation
of
judgment," etc. [ Hebrews 10:26].
These are, also, the passages from the wrong understanding of which
the Novatianists long ago found occasion for their ravings. Offended by
the harshness in these passages, certain good men believed this to be
a spurious letter, even though in every part it breathes an apostolic
spirit. But since we are contending only against those who accept this
letter, it is easy to show how these statements do not at all support their
error. First, it is necessary for the apostle to agree with his Master, who
declares that "every sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven…but the sin
against the Holy Spirit," which is forgiven "neither in this age nor in the
age to come"
[ Matthew 12:31-32; Mark 3:28-29; Luke 12:10].

It is certain, I say, that the apostle was content with this exception,
unless we would make him an opponent of the grace of Christ. From
this it follows that pardon is not denied to any individual sins except
one, which, arising out of desperate madness, cannot be ascribed to
weakness, and clearly demonstrates that a man is possessed by the
devil.


Please share your thoughts both here and in the related Forum thread:
PRACTICAL REPENTANCE UNTO SALVATION

Link-->> http://christianchat.com/bible-discussion-forum/28385-practical-repentance-unto-salvation.html


 
May 2, 2011
1,134
8
0
#24
this thread is suppose to be about Spurgeon NOT a calvin versus arminian debate. :(

why can't anyone respect the topic and start another one if they want to discuss something else?
No disrespect intended. Spurgeon is so tied to Calvin, and the fundamental Doctrines of
Regeneration, Repentance/Sanctification are so important, I thought to start with Calvin,
and to follow up with Spurgeon on the same topic(s).

Spurgeon was such a prolific speech maker that I would not dare post all his sermons here,
but again, the fundamental Doctrines as cited above are so important, I took the liberty to
share for discussion purposes.
 
A

AnandaHya

Guest
#25
mmmm how about we start with spurgeon and allow him to make reference to Calvin.

as you said he has a lot of speeches and so does Calvin. I don't want it to be a debate about calvinism but about finding nuggets of gospel truth in Spurgeon's speeches that shed light on Bible verses and helps people live Christian lives.

I would really prefer if this thread not derail and become a bitter doctrinal battle and is used to edify in search of God's truth instead of "opinions" , bitterness and contention. If you what DA you can start a thread about Calvinism and discuss those doctrines there. most who read one thread read the others too.
 
May 2, 2011
1,134
8
0
#26
A Sermon - Delivered on Sabbath Morning, September 23,
1855,
by the REV. C. H. Spurgeon - At New Park Street Chapel,
Southwark.
- Sermon #44

"Then hath God also to the Gentiles granted repentance unto life."—Acts 11:18.

Spurgeon Says ...

"Repentance unto life "is the act of salvation of the soul, the germ
which contains all the essentials of salvation, which secures them to us,
and prepares us for them.

I. First, then, we will consider certain FALSE REPENTANCES. I will
begin with this remark—that trembling beneath the sound of the gospel
is not "repentance."



II. Now, having thus warned you that there are many false kinds of
repentance, I propose to occupy a short time by some remarks on TRUE
REPENTANCE, and the signs whereby we may discern whether we have
that "repentance" which is "unto life."


There must be in this repentance, I think, not only sorrow, but there
must be practice—practical repentance.



"'Tis not enough to say we're sorry, and repent,
And then go on from day to day just as we always went"



III. Now comes the concluding and third point, and that "THE BLESSED
BENEFICENCE OF GOD in granting to men "repentance unto life."
"Repentance," my dear friends, is the gift of God.



I think the same thing happens with regard to "repentance." If a man
says, "I want to believe," and tries by some mechanical means to work
himself into repentance, it is an absurdity, and he will never accomplish
it. But the way for him to repent is by God's grace to believe, to believe
and think on Jesus.



Then beloved, if you would have "repentance," this is my best advice to
you—look to Jesus. And may the blessed Giver of all "repentance unto
salvation" guard you from the false repentances which I have
described, and give you that "repentance," which existeth unto life.


Excerpted from SPURGEONS SERMON #44
Link -->> Repentance Unto Life



Please share your thoughts both here and in the related Forum thread:
PRACTICAL REPENTANCE UNTO SALVATION

Link-->> http://christianchat.com/bible-discussion-forum/28385-practical-repentance-unto-salvation.html

 
May 2, 2011
1,134
8
0
#27
A Sermon - (No. 460)
Delivered on Sunday Morning, July 13th, 1862, by
C. H. SPURGEON, At the Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington

[
The excerpts herein, while many, and of good summation, should
encourage one to read and 'ponder in their hearts' the entire sermon.
Here, Spurgeon:
Refutes Calvinism and Spurgeonism, refutes "The Name-god" Hashem,
refutes 'it is finished' and 'rest', refutes the anti latter rain, refutes
Reformed and all claim-it systems. In these (latter) sermons, Spurgeon
is coming to the truth, a veritable Bin, Laden with important revelations
--

Excerpted From - Link -->>
Faith and Repentance Inseparable
]
"Repent ye, and believe the gospel."—Mark 1:15
Our Lord Jesus Christ commences his ministry by announcing its
leading commands. He cometh up from the wilderness newly anointed,
like the bridegroom from his chamber; his love notes are repentance
and faith.


I. I shall commence my remarking that the gospel which Christ preached
was, very plainly, a command. "Repent ye, and believe the gospel."
Our
Lord does condescend to reason. Often his ministry graciously acted
out the old text, "Come, now, and let us reason together; though your
sins be as scarlet, they shall be as wool." He does persuade men by
telling and forcible arguments, which should lead them to seek the
salvation of their souls. He does invite men, and oh, how lovingly he
woos them to be wise.


The gospel contemplates, I say, invitations, entreaties, and
beseechings, but it also takes the higher ground of authority. "Repent
ye" is as much a command of God as "Thou shalt not steal." "Believe on
the Lord Jesus Christ" has as fully a divine authority as "Thou shalt
love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, with all thy soul, with all thy
strength." Think not, O men, that the gospel is a thing left to your option
to choose it or not!


II. While the gospel is a command, it is a two-fold command explaining
itself. "Repent ye, and believe the gospel."


and I have known some of them who have tried to get over the difficulty
by softening down the apparent hardness of the word repentance, by
expounding it according to its more usual Greek equivalent, a word
which occurs in the original of my text, and signifies "to change one's
mind."


Moreover, there is another word which is also used in the original
Greek for repentance, not so often I admit, but still is used, which
signifies "an after-care," a word which has in it something more of
sorrow and anxiety, than that which signifies changing one's mind.
There must be sorrow for sin and hatred of it in true repentance, or
else I have read my Bible to little purpose.


To repent does mean a change of mind; but then it is a thorough
change of the understanding and all that is in the mind, so that it
includes an illumination, an illumination of the Holy Spirit; and I think it
includes a discovery of iniquity and a hatred of it, without which there
can hardly be a genuine repentance.


Then, there is another spurious repentance which makes the sinner
dwell upon the consequences of his sin, rather than upon the sin itself,
and so keeps him from believing. I have known some sinners so
distressed with fears of hell, and thoughts of death and of eternal
judgment, that to use the words of one terrible preacher, "They have
been shaken over the mouth of hell by their collar," and have felt the
torments of the pit before they went thither.


There is, again, a false repentance which leads men to hardness of
heart and despair. We have known some seared as with a hot iron by
burning remorse. They have said, "I have done much evil; there is no
hope for me; I will not hear the Word any more."


The repentance that ejects sin as an evil tenant, and the faith which
admits Christ to be the sole master of the heart; the repentance which
purges the soul from dead works, and the faith that fills the soul with
living works; the repentance which pulls down, and the faith which
builds up; the repentance that scatters stones, and the faith which puts
stones together; the repentance which ordains a time to weep, and the
faith that gives a time to dance— these two things together make up the
work of grace within, whereby men's souls are saved.


Having shown you what this repentance is not, let us dwell for a
moment on what it is. The repentance which is here commanded is the
result of faith; it is born at the same time with faith—they are twins, and
to say which is the elder-born passes my knowledge.

This brings me to the second half of the command, which is,
"Believe the gospel." Faith means trust in Christ.

yet there is a difficulty and a danger; it may be that in
preaching simple trust in Christ as being the way of
salvation, that they omit to remind the sinner that no faith
can be genuine but such as is perfectly consistent with
repentance for past sin;

Such men as have a faith which allows them to live carelessly in the
present who say, "Well, I am saved by a simple faith"; and then sit on the
ale-bench with the drunkard, or stand at the bar with the spirit-drinker,
or go into worldly company and enjoy the carnal pleasures and the lusts
of the flesh, such men are liars; they have not the faith which will save
the soul. They have a deceitful hypocrisy; they have not the faith which
will bring them to heaven.


III. But we must pass on to a third remark. These commands of Christ
are of the most reasonable character.

Is it an unreasonable thing to demand of a man that he should repent?
You have a person who has offended you; you are ready to forgive him;
do you think it is at all exacting or overbearing if you ask of him an
apology; if you merely ask him, as the very least thing he can do, to
acknowledge that he has done wrong?

What, you think to have poison in your veins, and yet be
healthy? What, man, keep the thief in doors, and yet be
acquitted of dishonesty? Be stained, and yet be thought
spotless? Harbour the disease and yet be in health?
Ridiculous! Absurd! Repentance is founded on the necessity
of things.

"Repent and believe the gospel." O friends, O friends, how sad, how
sad is the state of man's soul when he will not do this! We may preach to
you, but you never will repent and believe the gospel. We may lay God's
command, like an axe, to the root of the tree, but, reasonable as these
commands are, you will still refuse to give God his due;
you will go on in
your sins; you will not come unto him that you may have life; and it is
here the Spirit of God must come in to work in the souls of the elect to
make them willing in the day of his power.
for had the things which are preached in London
been proclaimed in Sodom and Gomorrah, they
would have repented long ago in sackcloth and in
ashes. Woe unto you, inhabitants of London!
Woe unto you, subjects of the British Empire! for
if the truths which have been declared in your
streets had been preached to Tyre and Sidon,
they would have continued even unto this day.


IV. But still, to pass on, I have yet a fourth remark to make, and that is,
this is a command which demands immediate obedience.
I do not know
how it is, let us preach as we may, we cannot lead others to think that
there is any great alarm, that there is any reason why they should think
about their souls now.

Yes, sirs, but it is real, and it is your
procrastination, it is your self-confidence that is
the sham, the bubble that is soon to burst.

But now, lastly, this command, while it has an immediate power, has also
a continual force.
"Repent ye, and believe the gospel," is advice to the
young beginner, and it is advice to the old grey-headed Christian, for
this is our life all the way through—"Repent ye, and believe the
gospel." St. Anselm, who was a saint—and that is more than many of
them were who were called so—St. Anselm once cried out "Oh! sinner
that I have been, I will spend all the rest of my life in repenting of my
whole life!"


Now, this I have to say to you this morning: In that great day when a
congregation ten thousand times larger than this shall be assembled,
and on the great white throne the Judge shall sit, there will be not a
man, or woman, or child, who is here this morning, able to make excuse
and say, "I did not hear the gospel; I did not know what I must do to be
saved!" You have heard it: "Repent ye, and believe the gospel."


If I have spoken in my own name, who am I that you should care one whit
for me? But if I have preached that which Christ preached, "Repent ye,
and believe the gospel," I charge you by the living God, I charge you by
the world's Redeemer, I charge you by cross of Calvary, and by the
blood which stained the dust at Golgotha, obey this divine message and
you shall have eternal life; but refuse it, and on your heads be
your blood for ever and ever!


Excerpted From - Link -->>
Faith and Repentance Inseparable

Please share your thoughts both here and in the related Forum thread:

PRACTICAL REPENTANCE UNTO SALVATION

Link-->>
http://christianchat.com/bible-discussion-forum/28385-practical-repentance-unto-salvation.html
 
A

AnandaHya

Guest
#28
I just finished listening to this sermon entitled " A free Salvation" and I don't think Spurgeon is a Calvanist since he has some strong words about the Calvanist in this sermon.

A Free Salvation

here are my favorite quotes from the sermon you can read and listen it by clicking on the links above.

"Yea, come, buy wine and milk without money and without price."—Isaiah 55:1.

"The gospel was evidently meant for manhood; it is adapted to it in its every part. There is knowledge for the head; there is love for the heart; there is guidance for the foot. There is milk and wine, in the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ."


Now, I think I have explained the figure in my text; but still some will say, "What is the gospel?" Well, the gospel, as I take it, can be looked at in various ways, but I will put it to night as this—the gospel is the preaching of a full, free, present, everlasting pardon to sinners through Jesus Christ's atoning blood. If I understand the gospel at all, it has in it a great deal more than this; but still this is the substance of it. I have to preach to night the great fact that while all have sinned, Christ hath died, and to all penitents who now confess their sins and put their trust in Christ, there is a full, free pardon—free in this respect, that you have nothing to do in order to get it. The meanest sin-stricken sinner has simply to pour out his plaintive griefs before God; that is all he asks. There is no fitness needed;—

"All the fitness he requireth,
Is to feel your need of him:
This he gives you;
'Tis his Spirit's rising beam."
 
A

AnandaHya

Guest
#29
I just finished listening to this sermon entitled " A free Salvation" and I don't think Spurgeon is a Calvanist since he has some strong words about the Calvanist in this sermon.

A Free Salvation

here are my favorite quotes from the sermon you can read and listen it by clicking on the links above.

"Yea, come, buy wine and milk without money and without price."—Isaiah 55:1.

"The gospel was evidently meant for manhood; it is adapted to it in its every part. There is knowledge for the head; there is love for the heart; there is guidance for the foot. There is milk and wine, in the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ."


Now, I think I have explained the figure in my text; but still some will say, "What is the gospel?" Well, the gospel, as I take it, can be looked at in various ways, but I will put it to night as this—the gospel is the preaching of a full, free, present, everlasting pardon to sinners through Jesus Christ's atoning blood. If I understand the gospel at all, it has in it a great deal more than this; but still this is the substance of it. I have to preach to night the great fact that while all have sinned, Christ hath died, and to all penitents who now confess their sins and put their trust in Christ, there is a full, free pardon—free in this respect, that you have nothing to do in order to get it. The meanest sin-stricken sinner has simply to pour out his plaintive griefs before God; that is all he asks. There is no fitness needed;—

"All the fitness he requireth,
Is to feel your need of him:
This he gives you;
'Tis his Spirit's rising beam."

I knew a minister who told me he was once sent for to the dying bed of a Roman who was very well to do in the world, and she said, "Mr. Baxter, do you think when I get to heaven Betsy my servant will be there?" "Well," he said, "I don't know much about you, but Betsy will be there; for if I know any one who is a pious girl, it is she." "Well," said the lady, "don't you think there will be a little distinction? for I never could find it in my heart to sit down with a girl of that sort, she has no taste, no education, and I could not endure it. I think there ought to be a little difference." "Ah! you need not trouble yourself, madam," said he, "there will be a great distinction between you and Betsy, if you die in the temper in which you now are; but the distinction will be on the wrong side; for you will see her in Abraham's bosom, but you yourself will be cast out. As long as you have such pride in your heart, you can never enter into the kingdom of heaven." He spoke to her very plainly, and she was mightily offended. But I believe she preferred to be found out of heaven to submitting to sit with her servant Betsy. Let us respect rank and title here, if you please: but when we preach the gospel we know no such thing. If I preached to a congregation of kings, I would preach just the same gospel that I would preach to a congregation of clodhoppers. The king on his throne, and the queen in her palace, have no gospel different from you and me. However humble and obscure we may be there stands the gate of heaven wide open; there is the king's royal highway for us. The highway is as much for the poor man as for the rich man; so is the kingdom of heaven—"without money and without price."
Now I hear my friend the Calvinist over there say, "Well, I like that, but still I think I can come, and though I can say with you,—
'nothing in my hands I bring, simply to thy cross I cling.'

Yet I can say this—I have had a deep experience, sir, I have been led to see the plague of my own heart, and I have felt a great deal. When I come to Christ I rely a great deal upon my feelings. I do not think you are right in calling all kinds of sinners to come to Christ, but you are right in calling me, for I am one of the right sort. I am one of the publican sort; I am pharisaical enough to think that; I think that I most certainly have a special commission to come, for I have such an experience that if I were to write my biography, you would say, 'This is a good experience; this man has a right to come to Christ.' " Well, friend, I am sorry to upset you, but I shall be compelled to do so. If you bring your experience to Christ when you come to him, you are as bad as the Romanist who brings his masses and Ave-Marias. I like your experience very well, if it be the work of God's grace in your heart, but if you bring it when you come to Christ, you put that before Christ, and it is an Anti-Christ. Away with it! away with it! When we have been preaching to poor sinners and tried to describe their state by nature and their feelings, I have been afraid after all, that we were fostering a spirit of self righteousness, and teaching our hearers to think that they must get certain feelings, before they can come to Christ. Let me just, if I can, preach the gospel in the broadest way possible, and that is the most truthful way. Christ wants your feelings no more than he does your money, and that is, not at all. If you want good experience you must come to Christ:—
"All the fitness he requireth, is to feel your need of him."

Yes, but stop—
"This he gives you, 'tis his Spirit's rising beam."

You are to come to Christ to get everything. You are not to say, "Well, I will believe first, and then come." No; go to Christ for faith. You must look to the cross even to get a sense of sin. We do not feel our sins so much before we see the cross, but we feel them most afterwards. We look to Christ first; then repentance flows from both our streaming eyes. Remember, if you go anywhere else to find a Saviour, you are on the wrong track. If you try to bring anything to Christ, to use a homely proverb, it is like bringing coals to Newcastle. He has plenty—he does not want any of yours, and what is more, as soon as he sees anything in your hands he will turn you straight away. He will have nothing to do with you until you can say—
"Nothing in my hands I bring, simply to thy cross I cling."
 
A

AnandaHya

Guest
#30
I just finished listening to this sermon entitled " A free Salvation" and I don't think Spurgeon is a Calvanist since he has some strong words about the Calvanist in this sermon.

A Free Salvation

http://media.sermonindex.net/1/SID1650.mp3

here are my favorite quotes from the sermon you can read and listen it by clicking on the links above.

"Yea, come, buy wine and milk without money and without price."—Isaiah 55:1.

"The gospel was evidently meant for manhood; it is adapted to it in its every part. There is knowledge for the head; there is love for the heart; there is guidance for the foot. There is milk and wine, in the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ."


Now, I think I have explained the figure in my text; but still some will say, "What is the gospel?" Well, the gospel, as I take it, can be looked at in various ways, but I will put it to night as this—the gospel is the preaching of a full, free, present, everlasting pardon to sinners through Jesus Christ's atoning blood. If I understand the gospel at all, it has in it a great deal more than this; but still this is the substance of it. I have to preach to night the great fact that while all have sinned, Christ hath died, and to all penitents who now confess their sins and put their trust in Christ, there is a full, free pardon—free in this respect, that you have nothing to do in order to get it. The meanest sin-stricken sinner has simply to pour out his plaintive griefs before God; that is all he asks. There is no fitness needed;—

"All the fitness he requireth,
Is to feel your need of him:
This he gives you;
'Tis his Spirit's rising beam."

I knew a minister who told me he was once sent for to the dying bed of a Roman who was very well to do in the world, and she said, "Mr. Baxter, do you think when I get to heaven Betsy my servant will be there?" "Well," he said, "I don't know much about you, but Betsy will be there; for if I know any one who is a pious girl, it is she." "Well," said the lady, "don't you think there will be a little distinction? for I never could find it in my heart to sit down with a girl of that sort, she has no taste, no education, and I could not endure it. I think there ought to be a little difference." "Ah! you need not trouble yourself, madam," said he, "there will be a great distinction between you and Betsy, if you die in the temper in which you now are; but the distinction will be on the wrong side; for you will see her in Abraham's bosom, but you yourself will be cast out. As long as you have such pride in your heart, you can never enter into the kingdom of heaven." He spoke to her very plainly, and she was mightily offended. But I believe she preferred to be found out of heaven to submitting to sit with her servant Betsy. Let us respect rank and title here, if you please: but when we preach the gospel we know no such thing. If I preached to a congregation of kings, I would preach just the same gospel that I would preach to a congregation of clodhoppers. The king on his throne, and the queen in her palace, have no gospel different from you and me. However humble and obscure we may be there stands the gate of heaven wide open; there is the king's royal highway for us. The highway is as much for the poor man as for the rich man; so is the kingdom of heaven—"without money and without price."
Now I hear my friend the Calvinist over there say, "Well, I like that, but still I think I can come, and though I can say with you,—
'nothing in my hands I bring, simply to thy cross I cling.'

Yet I can say this—I have had a deep experience, sir, I have been led to see the plague of my own heart, and I have felt a great deal. When I come to Christ I rely a great deal upon my feelings. I do not think you are right in calling all kinds of sinners to come to Christ, but you are right in calling me, for I am one of the right sort. I am one of the publican sort; I am pharisaical enough to think that; I think that I most certainly have a special commission to come, for I have such an experience that if I were to write my biography, you would say, 'This is a good experience; this man has a right to come to Christ.' " Well, friend, I am sorry to upset you, but I shall be compelled to do so. If you bring your experience to Christ when you come to him, you are as bad as the Romanist who brings his masses and Ave-Marias. I like your experience very well, if it be the work of God's grace in your heart, but if you bring it when you come to Christ, you put that before Christ, and it is an Anti-Christ. Away with it! away with it! When we have been preaching to poor sinners and tried to describe their state by nature and their feelings, I have been afraid after all, that we were fostering a spirit of self righteousness, and teaching our hearers to think that they must get certain feelings, before they can come to Christ. Let me just, if I can, preach the gospel in the broadest way possible, and that is the most truthful way. Christ wants your feelings no more than he does your money, and that is, not at all. If you want good experience you must come to Christ:—
"All the fitness he requireth, is to feel your need of him."

Yes, but stop—
"This he gives you, 'tis his Spirit's rising beam."

You are to come to Christ to get everything. You are not to say, "Well, I will believe first, and then come." No; go to Christ for faith. You must look to the cross even to get a sense of sin. We do not feel our sins so much before we see the cross, but we feel them most afterwards. We look to Christ first; then repentance flows from both our streaming eyes. Remember, if you go anywhere else to find a Saviour, you are on the wrong track. If you try to bring anything to Christ, to use a homely proverb, it is like bringing coals to Newcastle. He has plenty—he does not want any of yours, and what is more, as soon as he sees anything in your hands he will turn you straight away. He will have nothing to do with you until you can say—
"Nothing in my hands I bring, simply to thy cross I cling."
 
A

AnandaHya

Guest
#31
Greetings AnandaHya, I appreciate you bringing attention to the preaching ministry of Charles Spurgeon. I've read 26 of his sermons thus far, and I've come to agree with many others that Spurgeon is indeed the "Prince of Preachers." I am blessed tremendously by his preaching because it is Christ-centered, impassioned, and I would even say somewhat poetic with how he beautifully uses the English language in his sermons (in some cases, he is almost "Shakespearean").

If you're interested AnandaHya, back in June I put together a brief YouTube video of some of my favourite Charles Spurgeon quotes, all of which deal specifically with Jesus and His cross. The link is below if you'd like to watch it, I hope it will bless you!

‪"Were You There When They Crucified My Lord"‬‏ - YouTube

thanks :) i'll ck out the video :)
 
Jan 26, 2009
639
22
18
37
#32
C. H. Spurgeon Audio Sermons

I thought it would be nice to listen to some sermons by Spurgeon. Has anyone else heard them yet? What do you think?

A Divided Heart by C. H. Spurgeon

Topic:
Scripture(s): Hosea 10:2
Description: Charles Spurgeon said in a 1859 sermon that the main fault with the Church was that it is not only divided “somewhat” in its creeds and ordinances, it is also “somewhat” divided in its heart. When Christians no longer can love each other unconditionally, when divisions in doctrine become so acid that we cannot cooperate, when we can no longer extend the hand of fellowship to those with whom we disagree, “then, indeed, is the Church of God found faulty.”

i have his sermon read by someone else hehe don know if anyone has his sermons recorded,again have no clue if there were any device were available around that time hehe i could be rong
 
A

AnandaHya

Guest
#33
lol no one has his voice recorded though they had the equipment back then :) lol I don't think anyone thought to do it. i like the guy reading it he has a nice accent :) wb sam :) its good to see you on forums again :)