British preacher, author, pastor and evangelist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charles Haddon (C.H.) Spurgeon (19 June 1834 – 31 January 1892)[1] was a English Baptist preacher. People still know him as the "Prince of Preachers".[2] In his lifetime, Spurgeon preached to about 10 million people.[3] Spurgeon would often preach 10 times a week at different places. His sermons have been translated into many languages. Today, there are more writings and books by Spurgeon than by any other Christian writer.[4]
Charles Haddon Spurgeon | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | January 31, 1892 57) | (aged
Resting place | West Norwood Cemetery, London |
Nationality | British |
Occupation(s) | Pastor, author |
Spouse | Susannah Spurgeon |
Children | Charles & Thomas Spurgeon (twins, b. 1856) |
Parent(s) | John and Eliza Spurgeon |
Spurgeon was the pastor of the Metropolitan Tabernacle in London for 38 years. Under the previous pastor, Dr John Rippon, it became the largest Baptist congregation in Great Britain.[5] He was part of several controversies with the Baptist Union of Great Britain, and later had to leave that denomination.[6] Throughout his life, Spurgeon suffered from depression and other mental illnesses. In 1857, he started a charity organisation called Spurgeon's which works all over the world.[7]
Charles Spurgeon was born on 19 June 1834, in Kelvedon, in the English county of Essex. He was the eldest child of Eliza Jarvis and John Spurgeon.[8] His mother Eliza was born in nearby Belchamp Otten on 3 May 1815.[8] She was about 19-years-old when Spurgeon was born.[8] His father John Spurgeon, born in Clare, Suffolk on 15 July 1810, was about 24-years-old.[8] There were 17 children in Spurgeon's family, but nine of them died when they were babies.[8]
When he was six, Spurgeon read The Pilgrim's Progress. He read that book over 100 times in his life.[4] Spurgeon was also very good at mathematics. As a young boy, he would read the Scriptures at family worship. He memorised many hymns as a child, and would use many of them in his sermons later in life.[9]
As an early teenager, he was very intelligent, but was also fearful and doubting. By the influence of his father and grandfather, Spurgeon was kept from most normal sins. As a child, he thought that he was a good person. But he later said that, "Day and night God's hand was heavy on me."[9] He read the whole Bible, but he thought that it was threatening him, rather than promising him good things. As he got older, these things weighed on his conscience.[9]
On 6 January 1850, when he was 15, a snow storm made him seek shelter in a Primitive Methodist chapel in Colchester.[10] While he was there, a worker there said to him, "Young man, you look very miserable."[11] Spurgeon knew this, and he believed now that only God could heal him. The worker, seeing his need, replied, "Young man, look to Jesus Christ! Look! Look! Look! You have nothin' to do but to look and live."[11]
Within moments, he was converted to Christianity,[10] or as he said: "God opened his heart to the Salvation message."[12] He later said that, "I thought I could dance all the way home." On 3 May 1850, he was baptised in the River Lark, at Isleham. Later that year, his family moved to Cambridge.
He preached his first sermon in the winter of 1850–51. At that time, he was made the pastor of the Waterbeach Baptist Chapel in Cambridgeshire.[13] His preaching was thought to be very good. In 1853, he authored his first written work: a Gospel tract.[14]
In April 1854, aged 19 and after he had preached for three months, Spurgeon became the pastor of the New Park Street Chapel in London.[13] At that time, it was the largest Baptist congregation in the city. Within months of Spurgeon being the pastor there, he became very famous. Even before he was 20, Spurgeon had preached over 600 times.[4] His sermons were published every week, and many people read them.[13][15] While he was at the New Park Street Chapel, Spurgeon became friends with James Hudson Taylor.[16] Taylor was the man who started the China Inland Mission.
The way Spurgeon preached was not new, but it was easy to understand. When he would read and teach the Bible in his messages, many people would think about what Jesus had said. Because the church congregation became too large for their building, they had to move to Exeter Hall, then to Surrey Music Hall, and later to the Metropolitan Tabernacle.[17] By the age of 22, he was a very popular preacher.[18] He would preach to more than 10,000 people at a time.[19] Even before the microphone was invented, he spoke to an audience of almost 24,000 at the Crystal Palace.[20]
On 8 January 1856, Spurgeon got married to Susannah Spurgeon.[21] By the age of 33, she had to stay home because of her disabilities.[4] They had twin sons, Charles and Thomas, born 20 September 1856.[21]
While he was preaching on 19 October 1856, there was a tragedy. A group of men yelled "Fire!"[22] This made many people panic and run for the exits. It was later found out that seven people died after being trampled to death.[22] Spurgeon was hurt emotionally by the actions of these men, and it had a large influence on his life. He had depression for many years. He later said that he cried for no reason, but still his ministry went on.
On 18 March 1861, the church moved to their newly built Metropolitan Tabernacle, at Elephant-and-Castle in London. The building could hold from five to six thousand people, and was like a modern-day "megachurch".[23] Spurgeon read many books, up to six a week.[4]
Spurgeon liked singing hymns and wrote several of them. He published a book of well-known hymns for use at his church. There was no pipe organ or other instruments in his church; the hymns were always sang unaccompanied. Spurgeon never called people to come forward after his sermons, which is a custom of many evangelical preachers, who like to talk to the people who have been moved in their faith by the preaching. Spurgeon would say that anyone could meet him on Monday to talk about Christ.[24] There was always someone at his door the next day. He preached there until his death 31 years later.
When the missionary David Livingstone died in 1873, a copy of Spurgeon's sermon, "Accidents, Not Punishments", was found among his belongings.[25] There was a comment at the top of the first page that read, "Very good, D.L." Livingstone carried the sermon with him when he travelled to Africa, but it was given back to Spurgeon. Spurgeon had given the message on Sunday, 8 September 1861, at the Metropolitan Tabernacle, in Newington, London. He had preached it because of two disasters that happened close to his house. On Sunday, 25 August 1861, there was a tragic accident between two trains in the Clayton Tunnel between London and Brighton. 23 people died from this crash and the crash also injured hundreds.[26] About two weeks later, on Monday, 2 September another train wreck in North London that made 15 more people die.
Spurgeon gave his last sermon at the Metropolitan Tabernacle on 7 June 1891. During his pastorate, 14,692 were baptised and joined the Tabernacle. Spurgeon's wife was often too sick to leave their home to hear him preach.
Near the end of his life, he had poor health with rheumatism, gout, and Bright's disease. He died in Menton, in France, on 31 January 1892. Spurgeon's wife and sons lived longer than him. His body is buried in a tomb in West Norwood Cemetery, in London.[27]
Around the end of Spurgeon's life, he was part of many conflicts in the Baptist Union of Great Britain (BUGB).[28] Spurgeon later left the Baptist Union.[6] Even after Spurgeon's death, there were such controversies there, such as the talk over whether or not the Baptist Union should be allowed to meet in the Metropolitan Tabernacle. Spurgeon's son, Thomas, who was the co-pastor of the Metropolitan Tabernacle with Archibald G. Brown, said that, "The Baptist Union almost killed my father." "Yes," replied someone at BUGB, "and your father almost killed the Baptist Union."[29]
A controversy with Baptists started in 1887 when Spurgeon wrote what was later called the "Downgrade Controversy." It got that name when Spurgeon used word "Downgrade" when talking about how other Baptists looked at the Bible.[30] Spurgeon meant that things such as Charles Darwin's theory of evolution were making the Baptist Union weak.
The "baptismal regeneration" controversy was started by a sermon in the Metropolitan Tabernacle on 5 June 1864.[28] That was when Spurgeon spoke to Anglican Christian leaders who supported infant baptism.[31] The sermon is 16 pages long, so it took around an hour for Spurgeon to preach it.[28] Over 350,000 copies of this sermon were sold.[32] However, Spurgeon did work with Anglicans, as well as people from other denominations all his life.
Stockwell Orphanage was an orphanage started by Spurgeon in London in 1867. It opened on 9 September 1869, and was originally for boys only. It began taking girls as well in 1879.[33] The children were fed, clothed and taught at the orphanage. The money to pay for this mainly came from donations.
The orphanage was open until London was bombed in the Second World War.[34] It later turned into Spurgeon's Child Care (and then into Spurgeon's). It is now mainly in England, but has international projects in Mexico, Africa and Eastern Europe.[7]
Spurgeon's College is a theological institute in London. Spurgeon started it in 1857. Spurgeon's College is a member of the Baptist Union.[35]
In 1906, William Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri paid £500 ($2500) for most of the Spurgeon library.[36] The Spurgeon library had around 5,100 books in it at the time. In 2006, the whole library was sold to the Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.[36] Some of Spurgeon's sermon notes are at Samford University in Birmingham, Alabama.[37]
His works have been translated into many languages. He also made many volumes of commentaries, sayings, and other types of literature.[38]
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