Perhaps you know someone—perhaps you are someone—who has wished to be spiritually worse, that they might know when they are savingly better. It is not as rare a case as we might imagine, and Spurgeon shows his sensitivity as a pastor and his versatility as an evangelist in going after people who have a legitimately good reputation among men, but who are conscious of their unworthiness before God. He uses the example of the centurion with strong faith in Christ to assure such that they can and must come to Jesus Christ in order to be delivered from their sins. This is a lovely sermon, beautifully balanced in its sentiments and structure, full of good sense and earnest pleading. There is encouragement for all to trust in God, and not to imagine that our own merits earn anything or that our demerits forfeit mercy and grace—rather they fit us for it. There is particular encouragement for the reputable sinner. God will take all who come to him trusting in Christ.
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A String of Pearls (S948)
The Way (S942)
The Winnowing Fan (S940)
Martha and Mary (S927)
Nathanael and the Fig Tree (S921)
Work In Us and Work By Us (S914)
Overwhelming Obligations (S910)
The Upper Hand (S901) Rom 6:14
A Word With Those Who Wait for Signs and Wonders (S898)
Serving the Lord (S885)
A Well-Ordered Life (S878)
The Unwearied Runner (S876)
Tearful Sowing and Joyful Reaping (S867)
The Fulness of Jesus the Treasury of the Saints (S858)
Fire—The Want of the Times (S854)
Justification by Faith—Illustrated by Abram’s Righteousness (S844)
Sins of Omission (S838)
Grey Hairs (S830)
Christ the Glory of his People (S826)
The Pleiades and Orion (S818)
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