The Minister's Self-Watch (Chapel Library) (English Edition) [Kindle-editie]

"The Minister’s Self-Watch" is the first chapter in Charles Spurgeon’s Lectures to My Students. Spurgeon’s Lectures contains great wisdom and advice for preachers. He addressed the Lectures to students at the Pastor’s College, a college Spurgeon instituted because he recognized the need for training pastors for the Gospel ministry. In fact, he called the college his “first-born and best beloved.” He also said, “This is my life’s work, to which I believe God has called me and therefore I must do it. To preach the Gospel myself, and to train others to do it, is my life’s object and aim.” The Pastor’s College trained hundreds of men during Spurgeon’s lifetime.“The solemn work with which the Christian ministry concerns itself demands a man’s all, and that all at its best. To engage in it half-heartedly is an insult to God and man. Slumber must forsake our eyelids sooner than men shall be allowed to perish. Yet we, are all prone to sleep as do others...therefore have I sought to speak out my whole soul, in the hope that I might not create or foster dullness in others. May He in whose hand are the churches and their pastors bless these words...and if so I shall count it more than a full reward, and shall gratefully praise the Lord.” —from Spurgeon’s Introduction to Lectures to My StudentsCharles Haddon Spurgeon (1834-1892) was born in Kelvedon, Essex, England, June 19, 1834. Because his father and grandfather were pastors, Spurgeon was reared with the knowledge of the Gospel. Yet, he was not converted until a snowy January morning in 1850. In August of the same year, Spurgeon preached his first sermon to a small gathering of farmers. A year later, a village church called him as its pastor. In 1854, when he was nineteen, he was installed as shepherd over the flock of the New Park Street Chapel, Southwark, London, which later became the Metropolitan Tabernacle. Beginning in January 1855, Spurgeon’s sermons were published weekly, a practice which did not cease until 1916, twenty-four years after his death. During his pastorate in London, Spurgeon ministered to a congregation of nearly 6,000 people each Sunday, published his sermons weekly, and wrote a monthly magazine. He also founded a college for pastors, two orphanages, a home for the elderly, a colportage society, and several mission stations. History’s most widely read preacher (apart from those found in Scripture). Today, there is available more material written by Spurgeon than by any other Christian author, living or dead. The collected sermons of Spurgeon during his ministry fill 63 volumes. The sermons’ 20–25 million words are equivalent to the 27 volumes of the ninth edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica and stand as the largest set of books by a single author in the history of Christianity. Although pain wracked his body in his later years and opponents attacked his ministry, Spurgeon continued to preach the Gospel until his death in January 1892. The keys to Spurgeon’s success were a life of prayer and a simple yet profound faith in the grace and love of his Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

De auteur:Charles H. Spurgeon
Isbn 10:B00AB4C1M0
Uitgeverij:Chapel Library
Paperback boek:36
serie:Kindle-editie
gewicht The Minister's Self-Watch (Chapel Library) (English Edition) [Kindle-editie]:230 KB
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