Spurgeon often addresses the kind of Christian despondency that breeds a shameful passivity. He opens this sermon with a lengthy introduction bemoaning the low expectations of God’s people—people who yearn for a lively past and have vague hopes for a brighter future, but have given up all present hopes: “Not here, not now, not us!” This is the attitude that calls inaction, patience, and labels unbelief as realism. To counteract this ugly spirit, Spurgeon presses upon us the signs of harvest (and yes, we might long for more of those in our day!); he points out the wants or needs of harvest, the way in which we should engage in a day when there is work to be done; he warns us of the fears of harvest, reminding all his hearers, both converted and otherwise, that time passes and the work undone might be left undone forever. I can imagine the same despondent Christians today saying that Spurgeon’s circumstances allow him to hope in a way that we cannot; in fact, though we may face particular challenges, the very scope of the work ought to rouse our spirits for labour.
Love thy Neighbour (S 145)
Christ Lifted Up (S 139)
Salvation of the Lord (S 131)
Christ about His Father's Business (S 122)
Secret Sins (Sermon 116)
A Mighty Savior (Sermon 111)
Christ in the Covenants (Sermon 103)
Making Light of Christ (Sermon 98)
The Benefits and Dangers of Reading Old Books (Special episode with John Snyder)
God in the Covenants (Sermon 93)
Omniscience (Sermon 85)
The Character of Christ's People (Sermon 78)
The Resurrection of the Dead (Sermon 66-67)
The Enchanted Ground (Sermon 64)
Christ Our Passover (Sermon 54)
The Holy Ghost: The Great Teacher (Sermon 50)
Election (Sermon 41-42)
Preach the Gospel (Sermon 34)
Lively Reading: Preach the Gospel (Sermon 34)
Forgiveness (Sermon 24)
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