Digital Logos Edition
Benefit from the incredible wisdom of Charles Spurgeon, passage by passage. Spurgeon’s writings on the Bible fill dozens of volumes; his thoughts on particular passages are scattered across numerous books and sermons. This volume collects his thoughts on 2 Timothy in a commentary format, with illustrations and applications culled from his sermons and writings.
Use Spurgeon’s application-oriented content in your sermons—it’s clearly labeled. Find great illustrations with this hand-edited and hand-curated Logos Bible Software edition, which tags illustrations with preaching themes to make them searchable in Logos’ Sermon Starter Guide. Take advantage of Charles Spurgeon’s in-depth research to better understand, apply, and illustrate the Bible.
The print edition of Spurgeon Commentary: 2 Timothy is included in a collected volume with 2 Thessalonians and Titus.
The Spurgeon Commentary: 2 Timothy makes Spurgeon’s content accessible—there’s no longer a need to comb through many volumes looking for one nugget of wisdom. Spurgeon’s writings are now curated in a format that is tied directly to the biblical text.
The commentary directs you to places where Spurgeon explicitly cites or alludes to a verse, using specialized, technology-based research to offer you the best of Spurgeon. It highlights illustration content: illustrations accompany the commentary and are tagged with preaching themes, so the preacher looking for an illustration relating to either a topic or a verse will be able to find one easily. It highlights application content: each section of Scripture includes at least one application from Spurgeon based on those verses. It saves time: reading Spurgeon for pleasure is wonderful, but preachers and teachers working under deadlines need ways to streamline their sermon preparation process. This commentary does all this by trimming the excess out of Spurgeon’s sermon archive and increasing functionality, usability, and readability. Outdated language has even been updated, making Spurgeon’s writing easier than ever to understand.
“When I read a text of Scripture, even if I do not know it to be a text of Scripture by memory, I perceive its divine origin at once by a mystic influence that it exerts over my heart. A sentence from the mouth of God will have more permanent power over a Christian man than the best composed of human statements. God’s Word is living and powerful, and has a power to enter the heart beyond that of any other word. The words of the Bible strike and stick. They enter and abide.” (Page 223)
“The word of God is not committed to God’s ministers to amuse men with its glitter, nor to charm them with the jewels in its hilt, but to conquer their souls for Jesus.” (Page 175)
“He who has been taught in Scripture, steeped in Scripture, saturated with Scripture, is conscious of its permeating influence and it gives him permanence of conviction. Like the crimson dye in cloth, the tint of Scripture is not to be got out of the soul when once fixed there. It is dyed ingrain; it enters into the very nature of the man. Bible truth influences his thoughts, words, and deeds: it is all pervading. He begins to eat, and drink, and sleep Holy Scripture. The man’s heart is fixed on God, fixed in the truth, fixed in holy living. He will stand fast, however evil the days. Though all the rest should apostatize, this man cannot. The divine Word through faith has bound him to the altar of the Lord, and in the truth he must and will both live and die, come what weathers there may.” (Page 225)
“This indifference to Scripture is the great curse of the church at this hour. We can be tolerant of divergent opinions so long as we perceive an honest intent to follow the Statute Book. But if it comes to this, that the Book itself is of small authority to you, then we have no need of further parley. We are in different camps, and the sooner we recognize this, the better for all parties concerned. If we are to have a church of God at all in the land, Scripture must be regarded as holy, and to be had in reverence. This Scripture was given by holy inspiration and is not the result of dim myths and dubious traditions; neither has it drifted down to us by the survival of the fittest as one of the best of human books.” (Page 224)
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David Anfinrud
10/21/2024