December 30 PM | BITTERNESS IN THE LATTER END | Spurgeon's Morning and Evening | Audio Devotional

1 year ago
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December 30 PM | BITTERNESS IN THE LATTER END | Spurgeon's Morning and Evening | Audio Devotional

Source:
Prince of Preachers
Phone: (864) 404-1542
Koelsch Broadcasting Productions
5 Scottswood Rd.
Greenville, SC 29615
https://www.sermonaudio.com/solo/pop/sermons/popme1230E/

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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834-92) was England's best-known preacher for most of the second half of the nineteenth century. In 1854, just four years after his conversion, Spurgeon, then only 20, became pastor of London's famed New Park Street Church (formerly pastored by the famous Baptist theologian John Gill). The congregation quickly outgrew their building, moved to Exeter Hall, then to Surrey Music Hall. In these venues Spurgeon frequently preached to audiences numbering more than 10,000—all in the days before electronic amplification. In 1861 the congregation moved permanently to the new Metropolitan Tabernacle.

********** Devotional Text **********

'Knowest thou not that it will be bitterness in the latter end?'
2 Samuel 2:26

If, O my reader! thou art merely a professor, and not a possessor of the faith that is in Christ Jesus, the following lines are a true sketch of thine end.

You are a respectable attendant at a place of worship; you go because others go, not because your heart is right with God. This is your beginning. I will suppose that for the next twenty or thirty years you will be spared to go on as you do now, professing religion by an outward attendance upon the means of grace, but having no heart in the matter. Tread softly, for I must show you the deathbed of such a one as yourself. Let us gaze upon him gently. A clammy sweat is on his brow, and he wakes up crying, 'O God, it is hard to die. Did you send for my minister?' 'Yes, he is coming.' The minister comes. 'Sir, I fear that I am dying!' 'Have you any hope?' 'I cannot say that I have. I fear to stand before my God; oh! pray for me.' The prayer is offered for him with sincere earnestness, and the way of salvation is for the ten-thousandth time put before him, but before he has grasped the rope, I see him sink. I may put my finger upon those cold eyelids, for they will never see anything here again. But where is the man, and where are the man's true eyes? It is written, 'In hell he lifted up his eyes, being in torment.' Ah! why did he not lift up his eyes before? Because he was so accustomed to hear the gospel that his soul slept under it. Alas! if you should lift up your eyes there, how bitter will be your wailings. Let the Saviour's own words reveal the woe: 'Father Abraham, send Lazarus, that he may dip the tip of his finger in water, and cool my tongue, for I am tormented in this flame.' There is a frightful meaning in those words. May you never have to spell it out by the red light of Jehovah's wrath!

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