Browse by Topic
62 topics across 10 sermons
Salvation
7 sermonsBaptismal Regeneration
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon passionately denounces baptismal regeneration as taught by the Church of England, arguing that salvation comes solely through faith in Jesus Christ, not through any ceremony or sacrament.
Compel Them to Come In
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon urgently compels sinners to come to Christ using every means available — declaring the gospel, commanding as God's ambassador, sharing his own conversion, appealing to self-interest, entreating with visions of death and judgment, and finally offering tears and prayers for the unconverted.
Particular Redemption
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon defends particular redemption by measuring Christ's atonement five ways: the enormity of human guilt, the inflexibility of divine justice, the agonizing price Christ paid, the glorious deliverance believers experience, and the definite design of salvation for a chosen multitude.
Justification by Grace
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon expounds Romans 3:24, unfolding three great truths: Christ's complete and accepted ransom paid at Calvary, the forensic nature of justification whereby Christ and the sinner exchange places, and the stunning freeness of this gift — received not by works, ceremony, or moral improvement, but by faith alone in the finished work of Christ.
Turn or Burn
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon expounds Psalm 7:12, defining true repentance as actual, entire, immediate, and hearty — a hatred of sin itself, not merely its punishment. He demonstrates from Scripture and conscience that God must punish sin, then directs sinners to Christ alone for saving grace.
Effectual Calling
Charles Spurgeon
Using the story of Zacchaeus, Spurgeon expounds eight characteristics of effectual calling — it is gracious, personal, hastening, humbling, affectionate, abiding, necessary, and fruitful — demonstrating that God's sovereign call overcomes every barrier of sin, pride, and resistance to bring His chosen ones irresistibly to salvation.
Heaven and Hell
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon contrasts heaven's glorious rest and fellowship with the horror of outer darkness, urging sinners that sovereign grace saves the most hopeless while mere religious heritage cannot, and calling all to simply look to Christ.
Faith
5 sermonsBaptismal Regeneration
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon passionately denounces baptismal regeneration as taught by the Church of England, arguing that salvation comes solely through faith in Jesus Christ, not through any ceremony or sacrament.
Compel Them to Come In
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon urgently compels sinners to come to Christ using every means available — declaring the gospel, commanding as God's ambassador, sharing his own conversion, appealing to self-interest, entreating with visions of death and judgment, and finally offering tears and prayers for the unconverted.
Justification by Grace
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon expounds Romans 3:24, unfolding three great truths: Christ's complete and accepted ransom paid at Calvary, the forensic nature of justification whereby Christ and the sinner exchange places, and the stunning freeness of this gift — received not by works, ceremony, or moral improvement, but by faith alone in the finished work of Christ.
Heaven and Hell
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon contrasts heaven's glorious rest and fellowship with the horror of outer darkness, urging sinners that sovereign grace saves the most hopeless while mere religious heritage cannot, and calling all to simply look to Christ.
Unconditional Election
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon defends the doctrine of unconditional election from historic confessions and abundant Scripture, showing it to be true, absolute, eternal, and personal, then demonstrates that rightly understood it produces humility, boldness, and holiness in believers while offering genuine hope to every seeking sinner.
Sovereignty of God
5 sermonsParticular Redemption
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon defends particular redemption by measuring Christ's atonement five ways: the enormity of human guilt, the inflexibility of divine justice, the agonizing price Christ paid, the glorious deliverance believers experience, and the definite design of salvation for a chosen multitude.
The Exaltation of Christ
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon draws three consolations from Christ's exaltation: the fact of it brings joy through union with Christ, the reason reveals humiliation as the path to glory, and the person behind it — God the Father — assures suffering saints that the same hand will crown them.
Effectual Calling
Charles Spurgeon
Using the story of Zacchaeus, Spurgeon expounds eight characteristics of effectual calling — it is gracious, personal, hastening, humbling, affectionate, abiding, necessary, and fruitful — demonstrating that God's sovereign call overcomes every barrier of sin, pride, and resistance to bring His chosen ones irresistibly to salvation.
Unconditional Election
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon defends the doctrine of unconditional election from historic confessions and abundant Scripture, showing it to be true, absolute, eternal, and personal, then demonstrates that rightly understood it produces humility, boldness, and holiness in believers while offering genuine hope to every seeking sinner.
The Immutability of God
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon expounds Malachi 3:6 to show that God is unchanging in essence, attributes, plans, promises, and threatenings, then identifies the sons of Jacob as those who benefit from this immutability, concluding that their preservation from destruction rests entirely on God's changeless nature and sovereign love.
Conversion
4 sermonsCompel Them to Come In
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon urgently compels sinners to come to Christ using every means available — declaring the gospel, commanding as God's ambassador, sharing his own conversion, appealing to self-interest, entreating with visions of death and judgment, and finally offering tears and prayers for the unconverted.
Turn or Burn
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon expounds Psalm 7:12, defining true repentance as actual, entire, immediate, and hearty — a hatred of sin itself, not merely its punishment. He demonstrates from Scripture and conscience that God must punish sin, then directs sinners to Christ alone for saving grace.
Effectual Calling
Charles Spurgeon
Using the story of Zacchaeus, Spurgeon expounds eight characteristics of effectual calling — it is gracious, personal, hastening, humbling, affectionate, abiding, necessary, and fruitful — demonstrating that God's sovereign call overcomes every barrier of sin, pride, and resistance to bring His chosen ones irresistibly to salvation.
Heaven and Hell
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon contrasts heaven's glorious rest and fellowship with the horror of outer darkness, urging sinners that sovereign grace saves the most hopeless while mere religious heritage cannot, and calling all to simply look to Christ.
Election
4 sermonsParticular Redemption
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon defends particular redemption by measuring Christ's atonement five ways: the enormity of human guilt, the inflexibility of divine justice, the agonizing price Christ paid, the glorious deliverance believers experience, and the definite design of salvation for a chosen multitude.
Effectual Calling
Charles Spurgeon
Using the story of Zacchaeus, Spurgeon expounds eight characteristics of effectual calling — it is gracious, personal, hastening, humbling, affectionate, abiding, necessary, and fruitful — demonstrating that God's sovereign call overcomes every barrier of sin, pride, and resistance to bring His chosen ones irresistibly to salvation.
Unconditional Election
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon defends the doctrine of unconditional election from historic confessions and abundant Scripture, showing it to be true, absolute, eternal, and personal, then demonstrates that rightly understood it produces humility, boldness, and holiness in believers while offering genuine hope to every seeking sinner.
The Immutability of God
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon expounds Malachi 3:6 to show that God is unchanging in essence, attributes, plans, promises, and threatenings, then identifies the sons of Jacob as those who benefit from this immutability, concluding that their preservation from destruction rests entirely on God's changeless nature and sovereign love.
Repentance
4 sermonsCompel Them to Come In
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon urgently compels sinners to come to Christ using every means available — declaring the gospel, commanding as God's ambassador, sharing his own conversion, appealing to self-interest, entreating with visions of death and judgment, and finally offering tears and prayers for the unconverted.
Turn or Burn
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon expounds Psalm 7:12, defining true repentance as actual, entire, immediate, and hearty — a hatred of sin itself, not merely its punishment. He demonstrates from Scripture and conscience that God must punish sin, then directs sinners to Christ alone for saving grace.
Effectual Calling
Charles Spurgeon
Using the story of Zacchaeus, Spurgeon expounds eight characteristics of effectual calling — it is gracious, personal, hastening, humbling, affectionate, abiding, necessary, and fruitful — demonstrating that God's sovereign call overcomes every barrier of sin, pride, and resistance to bring His chosen ones irresistibly to salvation.
Heaven and Hell
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon contrasts heaven's glorious rest and fellowship with the horror of outer darkness, urging sinners that sovereign grace saves the most hopeless while mere religious heritage cannot, and calling all to simply look to Christ.
Gospel Invitation
3 sermonsCompel Them to Come In
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon urgently compels sinners to come to Christ using every means available — declaring the gospel, commanding as God's ambassador, sharing his own conversion, appealing to self-interest, entreating with visions of death and judgment, and finally offering tears and prayers for the unconverted.
Particular Redemption
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon defends particular redemption by measuring Christ's atonement five ways: the enormity of human guilt, the inflexibility of divine justice, the agonizing price Christ paid, the glorious deliverance believers experience, and the definite design of salvation for a chosen multitude.
Unconditional Election
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon defends the doctrine of unconditional election from historic confessions and abundant Scripture, showing it to be true, absolute, eternal, and personal, then demonstrates that rightly understood it produces humility, boldness, and holiness in believers while offering genuine hope to every seeking sinner.
Grace
3 sermonsCompel Them to Come In
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon urgently compels sinners to come to Christ using every means available — declaring the gospel, commanding as God's ambassador, sharing his own conversion, appealing to self-interest, entreating with visions of death and judgment, and finally offering tears and prayers for the unconverted.
Justification by Grace
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon expounds Romans 3:24, unfolding three great truths: Christ's complete and accepted ransom paid at Calvary, the forensic nature of justification whereby Christ and the sinner exchange places, and the stunning freeness of this gift — received not by works, ceremony, or moral improvement, but by faith alone in the finished work of Christ.
Effectual Calling
Charles Spurgeon
Using the story of Zacchaeus, Spurgeon expounds eight characteristics of effectual calling — it is gracious, personal, hastening, humbling, affectionate, abiding, necessary, and fruitful — demonstrating that God's sovereign call overcomes every barrier of sin, pride, and resistance to bring His chosen ones irresistibly to salvation.
Atonement
2 sermonsParticular Redemption
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon defends particular redemption by measuring Christ's atonement five ways: the enormity of human guilt, the inflexibility of divine justice, the agonizing price Christ paid, the glorious deliverance believers experience, and the definite design of salvation for a chosen multitude.
Justification by Grace
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon expounds Romans 3:24, unfolding three great truths: Christ's complete and accepted ransom paid at Calvary, the forensic nature of justification whereby Christ and the sinner exchange places, and the stunning freeness of this gift — received not by works, ceremony, or moral improvement, but by faith alone in the finished work of Christ.
Calvinism
2 sermonsParticular Redemption
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon defends particular redemption by measuring Christ's atonement five ways: the enormity of human guilt, the inflexibility of divine justice, the agonizing price Christ paid, the glorious deliverance believers experience, and the definite design of salvation for a chosen multitude.
Unconditional Election
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon defends the doctrine of unconditional election from historic confessions and abundant Scripture, showing it to be true, absolute, eternal, and personal, then demonstrates that rightly understood it produces humility, boldness, and holiness in believers while offering genuine hope to every seeking sinner.
Divine Justice
2 sermonsParticular Redemption
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon defends particular redemption by measuring Christ's atonement five ways: the enormity of human guilt, the inflexibility of divine justice, the agonizing price Christ paid, the glorious deliverance believers experience, and the definite design of salvation for a chosen multitude.
Turn or Burn
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon expounds Psalm 7:12, defining true repentance as actual, entire, immediate, and hearty — a hatred of sin itself, not merely its punishment. He demonstrates from Scripture and conscience that God must punish sin, then directs sinners to Christ alone for saving grace.
Evangelism
2 sermonsCompel Them to Come In
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon urgently compels sinners to come to Christ using every means available — declaring the gospel, commanding as God's ambassador, sharing his own conversion, appealing to self-interest, entreating with visions of death and judgment, and finally offering tears and prayers for the unconverted.
Heaven and Hell
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon contrasts heaven's glorious rest and fellowship with the horror of outer darkness, urging sinners that sovereign grace saves the most hopeless while mere religious heritage cannot, and calling all to simply look to Christ.
Hell
2 sermonsTurn or Burn
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon expounds Psalm 7:12, defining true repentance as actual, entire, immediate, and hearty — a hatred of sin itself, not merely its punishment. He demonstrates from Scripture and conscience that God must punish sin, then directs sinners to Christ alone for saving grace.
Heaven and Hell
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon contrasts heaven's glorious rest and fellowship with the horror of outer darkness, urging sinners that sovereign grace saves the most hopeless while mere religious heritage cannot, and calling all to simply look to Christ.
Humility
2 sermonsEffectual Calling
Charles Spurgeon
Using the story of Zacchaeus, Spurgeon expounds eight characteristics of effectual calling — it is gracious, personal, hastening, humbling, affectionate, abiding, necessary, and fruitful — demonstrating that God's sovereign call overcomes every barrier of sin, pride, and resistance to bring His chosen ones irresistibly to salvation.
Unconditional Election
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon defends the doctrine of unconditional election from historic confessions and abundant Scripture, showing it to be true, absolute, eternal, and personal, then demonstrates that rightly understood it produces humility, boldness, and holiness in believers while offering genuine hope to every seeking sinner.
Judgment
2 sermonsTurn or Burn
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon expounds Psalm 7:12, defining true repentance as actual, entire, immediate, and hearty — a hatred of sin itself, not merely its punishment. He demonstrates from Scripture and conscience that God must punish sin, then directs sinners to Christ alone for saving grace.
Heaven and Hell
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon contrasts heaven's glorious rest and fellowship with the horror of outer darkness, urging sinners that sovereign grace saves the most hopeless while mere religious heritage cannot, and calling all to simply look to Christ.
Perseverance
2 sermonsThe Exaltation of Christ
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon draws three consolations from Christ's exaltation: the fact of it brings joy through union with Christ, the reason reveals humiliation as the path to glory, and the person behind it — God the Father — assures suffering saints that the same hand will crown them.
Effectual Calling
Charles Spurgeon
Using the story of Zacchaeus, Spurgeon expounds eight characteristics of effectual calling — it is gracious, personal, hastening, humbling, affectionate, abiding, necessary, and fruitful — demonstrating that God's sovereign call overcomes every barrier of sin, pride, and resistance to bring His chosen ones irresistibly to salvation.
Redemption
2 sermonsParticular Redemption
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon defends particular redemption by measuring Christ's atonement five ways: the enormity of human guilt, the inflexibility of divine justice, the agonizing price Christ paid, the glorious deliverance believers experience, and the definite design of salvation for a chosen multitude.
Justification by Grace
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon expounds Romans 3:24, unfolding three great truths: Christ's complete and accepted ransom paid at Calvary, the forensic nature of justification whereby Christ and the sinner exchange places, and the stunning freeness of this gift — received not by works, ceremony, or moral improvement, but by faith alone in the finished work of Christ.
Sovereign Grace
2 sermonsTurn or Burn
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon expounds Psalm 7:12, defining true repentance as actual, entire, immediate, and hearty — a hatred of sin itself, not merely its punishment. He demonstrates from Scripture and conscience that God must punish sin, then directs sinners to Christ alone for saving grace.
Heaven and Hell
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon contrasts heaven's glorious rest and fellowship with the horror of outer darkness, urging sinners that sovereign grace saves the most hopeless while mere religious heritage cannot, and calling all to simply look to Christ.
Substitutionary Atonement
2 sermonsParticular Redemption
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon defends particular redemption by measuring Christ's atonement five ways: the enormity of human guilt, the inflexibility of divine justice, the agonizing price Christ paid, the glorious deliverance believers experience, and the definite design of salvation for a chosen multitude.
Justification by Grace
Charles Spurgeon
Spurgeon expounds Romans 3:24, unfolding three great truths: Christ's complete and accepted ransom paid at Calvary, the forensic nature of justification whereby Christ and the sinner exchange places, and the stunning freeness of this gift — received not by works, ceremony, or moral improvement, but by faith alone in the finished work of Christ.