This is the kind of sermon over which people sneer at Spurgeon, and yet I think they may be doing him a disservice. Even the introduction reveals that he believes that there is more than one way to handle his text, and he makes clear that he has chosen to take it in an illustrative sense, as suggesting the challenges of God’s people about the worship of God on the Lord’s day to keep their hearts fixed on their holy business. We might still allow ourselves a smile as regards his exegesis, strictly speaking, but must we not acknowledge the sense and force of the extended simile, and its appropriateness as an illustration for the spiritual battle over undistracted worship? Taking it on its own terms, there is much here to do us much good.
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Rightly Dividing the Word of Truth (S1217)
A Grateful Summary of Twenty Volumes (S1209)
The Reception of Sinners (S1204)
The Claims of God (S1197)
Hindrances to Prayer (S1192)
A Singular Title and a Special Favour (S1182)
Fearful of Coming Short (S1177)
The Lord Chiding his People (S1171)
Without Money and Without Price (S1161)
Daniel Facing the Lion’s Den (S1154)
The Parent’s and Pastor’s Joy (S1148)
The Minister’s Plea (S1139)
Clearing the Road to Heaven (S1131)
God Beseeching Sinners by His Ministers (S1124)
Christ Asleep in the Vessel (S1121)
Onward! (S1114)
A Call to Worship (S1107)
Good Cause for Great Zeal (S1097)
Always, and for All Things (S1094)
Jesus, the King of Truth (S1086)
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