Charles spurgeon biography summary rubric

  • C.
  • Writing, one question and answer come to me with special freshness.
  • In , in a lower-middle class cottage in rural England, Charles Spurgeon became the first of seventeen children born to John and Eliza Spurgeon.
  • Investigating Untold Stories From 19th Century New England Through Primary Sources

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  • charles spurgeon biography summary rubric
  • C. H. Spurgeon
    ()

    Ought I not to be very timid in speaking upon eccentric preachers when I am somewhat sarcastically requested by an anonymous letter writer to look at home? I do look at home, and I am glad that I have such a happy home to look at. Trembling has not seized upon me upon receiving my nameless friend's advice, for two reasons; first, because I am not horrified by being charged with eccentricity, and secondly, because I do not consider myself to be guilty of that virtue or vice, whichever it may be. Years ago I might have been convicted of a mild degree of the quality, but since so many have copied my style, and so considerable a number have borrowed my discourses, I submit that I am rather the orthodox example than the glaring exception. After having lived for a quarter of a century in this region, I am not now regarded in London as a phenomenon to be stared at, but as an old-fashioned kind of body, who is tolerated as an established part of the ecclesiastical life

    I REMEMBER the difficulty that I had, when inom was converted, and wished to join the Christian Church in Newmarket. inom called upon the minister four successive days before I could see him; each time there was some obstacle in the way of an interview; and as I could not see him, inom wrote and told him that inom would go down to the church-meeting, and föreslå myself as a member. He looked upon me as a strange character, but inom meant what I said, for inom felt that I could not be happy without fellowship with the people of God. I wanted to be wherever they were, and if anybody ridiculed them, I wished to be ridiculed with them, and if people had an ugly name for them, I wanted to be called bygd that ugly name, for I felt that, unless I suffered with Christ in His humiliation, inom could not expect to reign with Him in His glory.

    When I had been accepted as a member of the Congregational Church at Newmarket, inom was invited to the communion table, although inom had not been baptized. I refused, because it