save
$5.00All of Grace (Charles Spurgeon)
$10.00$15.00
All of Grace is one of the most significant books written by one of the most influential authors on the most important subject—the gospel. Here is the Prince of Preachers clearly and precisely outlining the way of salvation. Salvation is not by works, but by grace alone—from start to finish, it’s all of grace. This book contains an urgent and powerful message that needs to be read, understood, and believed by all. This book is C. H. Spurgeon at his best.
Out of stock
All of Grace
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834-92) was England’s best-known preacher for most of the second half of the nineteenth century. After a childhood in Essex, when he owed much to Christian parents and grandparents, he was converted in 1850 at the age of fifteen. He was then assisting at a school in Cambridge, and it was in these Cambridge years that he came to Baptist principles and was called to the Baptist pastorate in the nearby village of Waterbeach. From there he moved to New Park Street, London in 1854 at the age of nineteen. Roughly speaking, Spurgeon’s public work can be divided up into four decades. Through the 1850s he was “The Youthful Prodigy” who seemed to have stepped full-grown into the pulpit. At the age of twenty, the largest halls in London were filled to hear him; at twenty-one, the newspapers spoke of him as “incomparably the most popular preacher of the day”; when he was twenty-three, 23,654 people heard him at a service in the Crystal Palace.
In the next decade, the 1860s, his work might best be described in terms of “The Advancement of Gospel Agencies.” The institutions which he founded, and for which he remained responsible, included a College to train pastors; a publications enterprise (with a weekly published sermon and a monthly magazine The Sword and the Trowel); an Orphanage; a Colportage Association to spread Christian literature; and above all the Metropolitan Tabernacle itself, opened for the church he served in 1861 and capable of holding about 6,000. The congregation which he pastored grew from 314 in 1854 to 5,311 in 1892. Onlookers often supposed that so many enterprises could never be maintained at the high level of usefulness with which they began, but they were, and the 1870s might well be described in terms of “Holding the Ground.” On every front, the work was being blessed. Then came the 1880s and by far the most difficult period in Spurgeon’s life. In this last decade, he was faced with increasing controversy and a title for his last years could well be his own words, “In Opposition to So Many.” By the time Spurgeon was fifty-seven, in 1891, his health was utterly broken. When he left Herne Hill station, London, on October 26, 1891, for the south of France, he said to the friends who came to say good-bye, “The fight is killing me.” He died at Menton three months later.
Binding | Paperback |
---|---|
Book Author | Charles Spurgeon |
Page Count | 116 |
Publisher | Free Grace Press |
Trim Size | 5.5 x 8.5 |
Customer Reviews
There are no reviews yet.
Be the first to review “All of Grace (Charles Spurgeon)”
You must be logged in to post a review.