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"...he being dead yet speaketh." |
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Charles Haddon
Spurgeon
The following biography was
originally published on the website of
wholesomewords.com: Charles Haddon Spurgeon: English
Baptist; called the “Prince of Preachers” was born at
Kelvedon, Essex June 19, 1834; died at Mentone, France,
January 31, 1892. His father and grandfather had been
Independent ministers. As a youth he was subject to
inner restlessness and conflict and dated his conversion
from December 6, 1850, at the chapel of the Primitive
Methodists in Colchester, on which occasion he was
deeply stirred and greatly relieved by a sermon preached
by a layman on Isaiah 45:22. However, the study of the
Scriptures brought further misgivings and he was not
content until he was immersed. This took place in the
Lark at Isleham May 3, 1851, and he then united with the
Baptist communion. In 1851 he became usher in a
school at Cambridge, and entered the lay preachers'
association in connection with the Baptist church
meeting in St. Andrews Street, Cambridge. Forced by
circumstance he preached unprepared his first sermon in
a cottage at Teversham near Cambridge, at the age of
sixteen. His gifts were recognized at once and his fame
spread. He preached in chapels, cottages, or in the open
air in as many as thirteen stations in the villages
surrounding Cambridge, and this after his school duties
for the day were past. In 1852 he became pastor of the
small Baptist church at Waterbeach, and in 1854, after
preaching, three months on probation, he was called to
the pastorate of the New Park Street Church, Southwark,
London. Only 100 persons attended his first service; but
before the end of the year the chapel had to be
enlarged, and he preached in Exeter Hall during the
alterations. When the enlarged chapel was opened it
proved at once too small, and a great tabernacle was
projected. Meanwhile, in 1856, Spurgeon preached at the
Surrey Gardens music-hall to congregations which
numbered 10,000 people; and at twenty-two he was the
most popular preacher of his day. In 1861 the
Metropolitan Tabernacle, seating 6,000, was opened and
there he ministered until his death, retaining his
popularity and power as a preacher to the end. Besides preaching, other
enterprises made their demand upon his energy. In 1855
he accepted his first student for the ministry; soon a
class assembled in his house every week for instruction
in theology, pastoral duties, and other practical
matters. This work was assigned mainly to a tutor. Out
of it grew the Pastors' College, located first in his
house; under the Tabernacle, 1861-74; and, after 1874,
in the New College buildings. The local mission work of
these students in the slums formed the nuclei of new
Sunday-schools and churches, a circle of which banded
around the central church. Its internal needs were
provided by a number of auxiliary associations. Spurgeon
was president of a society for the dissemination of
Bibles and tracts employing the service of ninety
colporteurs. The Stockwell Orphanage was incorporated in
1867 with an endowment of £20,000 given by Mrs.
Hillyard. It grew to a group of twelve houses and
accommodated 500 children. The figure of Spurgeon was a
composite one. Methodist by conversion, Baptist by
profession, he was fundamentally Calvinistic by descent
and is sometimes called "the last of the Puritans." He
was minded to carry his obduracy even to the extent of
disunion among the churches. In 1864 he invited a
controversy with the Evangelical party in the Church of
England by a powerful sermon, Baptismal Regeneration,
a doctrine which he opposed; 300,000 copies were sold,
and numerous pamphlets written in reply, the most
important was by a Baptist, B. W. Noel, Evangelical
Clergy Defended (1864), in which Spurgeon was
censured for introducing needless divisions among men of
like faith. He, however, ended by withdrawing from the
Evangelical Alliance. He also watched with misgivings
the growth among Baptists of what seemed to him
indifference to orthodoxy, deploring that not enough
stress was laid on Christ's divine nature. He opposed
what he called the "down-grade" movement of Biblical
criticism; and, not being able to win the Baptist Union
to his view, he withdrew in 1887, remaining independent
until the end of his life, although still a stanch
Baptist. Personally unambitious and
unselfish, industrious in his exacting parish service
and incessant Biblical study, human in sympathy and sane
on social questions, democratic in temperament, he was
ever zealous in the gospel of grace and redemption, and
fearless in denouncing evil and upholding what he deemed
true and right. As a preacher his early success was due
to the sensation of his youth, his spontaneous humor,
the fervor of his appeals to the conscience, but mostly
to his natural gift of oratory. With a clear sympathetic
voice and easy gesture, he knew how most effectively to
present his appeal for salvation, projected from a
shrewd comment on contemporary life and sustained upon
his characteristic expository treatment of Scripture
derived from the old Puritan divines. He was in later
life a great sufferer from gout, and frequently was
obliged to leave his pulpit. The results of Spurgeon's
literary labors had an enormous circulation. He
conducted The Sword and the Trowel, a monthly
church magazine; and published more than 1,900 sermons,
including, from 1855, a sermon every week, contained in
The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit, continued
after his death (49 vols., London, 1856-1904). Other
works were, The Saint and his Savior (London,
1857); Morning by Morning; or Daily Readings for the
Family or the Closet (1866); Evening by Evening
(1868); John Ploughman's Talk (1869); and John
Ploughman's Pictures (1880). Famous also is Our
Own Hymn Book, with paraphrases of Psalms (1866).
His most important work was The Treasury of David,
an exposition of the book of Psalms (7 vols.,
1870-1885). Shortly before his death he completed The
Gospel of the Kingdom, a popular exposition of
Matthew (1893). Many times it has been said that this was the
greatest preacher this side of the Apostle Paul. Even
when traveling he preached to 10,000 eager listeners a
week. Crowds thronged to hear him as they came to hear
John the Baptist by the River Jordan. The fire of God
was on him as on the Prophet Elijah facing assembled He preached in all the principal
cities of |