Spurgeon Around the Wicket Gate is a work for those who know about Christ but do not know him as their own personal Savior.
C. H. Spurgeon Awakening GREAT NUMBERS OF PERSONS have no concern about eternal things. They care more about their cats and dogs than about their souls. It is a great mercy to be made to think about ourselves, and how we stand towards God and the eternal world. This is full often a sign that salvation is coming to us.
https://www.spurgeongems.org/chs_around-the-wicket-gate.pdf
More Works from Spurgeon Tags
- Spurgeon Charles Sermons from Exodus
- Spurgeon Charles Sermons from Deuteronomy
- Spurgeon Charles Sermons from 1 Samuel
- Spurgeon Bible and the Newspaper
- Spurgeon An All Around Ministry
- Spurgeon All of Grace
- Spurgeon A Catechism with Proofs
- Kleiser World’s Great Sermons Volume 08
- Keach, Benjamin – An Exposition of the Parables, Books 1-4
- Bunyan, J. Holy War
From Webtruth
If you are struggling to be saved, C.H. Spurgeon’s Around the Wicket Gate is for you.
Awakening
If we are sensible, we shall pray that our anxiety about our souls may never come to an end till we are really and truly saved. It would be an awful thing to go dreaming down to hell, and there to lift up our eyes with a great gulf fixed between us and heaven. It will be equally terrible to be aroused to escape from the wrath to come, and then to shake off the warning influence, and go back to our insensibility. I notice that those who overcome their convictions and continue in their sins are not so easily moved the next time: every awakening which is thrown away leaves the soul more drowsy than before, and less likely to be again stirred to holy feeling. Therefore our heart should be greatly troubled at the thought of getting rid of its trouble in any other than the right way.
Yet awakening is not a thing to rest in, or to desire to have lengthened out month after month. If I start up in a fright, and find my house on fire, I do not sit down at the edge of the bed, and say to myself, “I hope I am truly awakened! Indeed, I am deeply grateful that I am not left to sleep on!” No, I want to escape from threatened death, and so I hasten to the door or to the window, that I may get out, and may not perish where I am. Remember, awakening is not salvation. A man may know that he is lost, and yet he may never be saved. He may be made thoughtful, and yet he may die in his sins. If you find out that you are a bankrupt, the consideration of your debts will not pay them.
More Works from Sermons
- Spurgeon Charles Sermons from Genesis
- Spurgeon Charles Sermons from Ezra
- Spurgeon Charles Sermons from Exodus
- Spurgeon Charles Sermons from Deuteronomy
- Spurgeon Charles Sermons from Acts
- Spurgeon Charles Sermons from 2 Samuel
- Spurgeon Charles Sermons from 1 Samuel
- Spurgeon Around the Wicket Gate
- Smith Jeremiah: Being The Baird Lecture for 1922
- Piper, John Charles Spurgeon Preaching Through Adversity