Charles spurgeon biography pdf Continue Charles Haddon Spurgeon, the most famous Baptist priest of Victorian England, was born on June 19, 1834 in Kelvedon, Essex, and spent his childhood and early teenage years in Stamborne, Colchester and Newmarket. In 1856 he married Suzanne Thompson; their only children, twin sons Thomas and Charles, were born on September 20, 1857. Spurgeon had no formal education outside the Newmarket Academy, where he studied from August 1849 to June 1850, but he was very well educated in Puritan theology, natural history, Latin and Victorian literature. His lack of higher education did not prevent his remarkable preaching career, which began in 1850, when he was only fifteen years old. A few months after converting to Christianity, he began preaching in Teheversham. The following year he took his first pastor, at a Baptist chapel in Waterbeach. The church quickly grew from less than a dozen parishioners to more than four hundred, and Spurgeon's reputation as a preacher caught the attention of New Park Street, London's largest Baptist church. He was invited to preach there in December 1853 and, after a short probationary period, he agreed to move to London and become the new pastor of the church. The Spurgeon assembly on New Park Street also grew rapidly, soon becoming too big for a 1,200-seat auditorium. On August 30, 1854, members agreed to expand the chapel; During the refurbishment, services were held at the 5,000-seat Exeter Hall, a community hall in Strand Street. The renovation of New Park Street was completed in May 1855, but the chapel was still too small, and in June a committee was formed to oversee the construction of the church's new home, the 5,000-seat Metropolitan Tabernacle. The Congregation moved again, meeting at Exeter Hall and the 8,000-seat Surrey Gardens Music Hall until the Tabernacle was dedicated on March 18, 1861. Spurgeon began publishing shortly after he began preaching. In January 1855, Passmore and Alabaster opened Penny Pulpit, publishing one sermon each week; The series lasted until 1917, a quarter of a century after Spurgeon's death. Each year these sermons were republished as a book, first as The New Park Street Pulpit (6 volumes, 1855-1860) and later as the Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit (57 volumes, 1861-1917). Spurgeon has published dozens of religious books in addition to his sermons; The most significant works include lectures for my students (1890), a collection of conversations given to students at his Pastoral College, and a 7-volume Treasury of David (c. 1869), a best-selling dedicated commentary about the Psalms. Spurgeon's work in London was not limited to preaching and preaching. He also served as president of The Pastoral College, which he founded in 1857; founded the Stockwell Children's Home, which opened to in 1867 and girls in 1879; and oversaw evangelical and and businesses such as houses, food and clothing distribution organizations for the poor and a book fund for needy ministers. Spurgeon's sermon was extremely popular and highly controversial. Some considered him the greatest speaker since Whitefield; others criticized him as theatrical, embarrassing and even blasphemous. Two of his most controversial works were his sermon Baptismal Regeneration and his article Down Grade. On June 5, 1864, he preached a sermon called The Epiphany Revival, objecting to the Anglican teachings on the sacramental power of infant baptism. More than 350,000 copies were sold, and the furore he provoked led to the withdrawal of Spurgeon from the Evangelical Alliance, an ecumenical association of dissenters and evangelical Anglicans. The debate about low valuation began in 1887, when Spurgeon published a series of articles in which he stated that evolutionary thinking and liberal theology threatened the church down. In this case, he was concerned not with Anglican teaching, but with what he saw as a doctrinal error, especially unitary ideas, within the Baptist Union. He discussed his problems in private letters to ministers such as Samuel Booth and Joseph Parker, as well as several articles published in The Sword and the Trowel, the monthly periodical of the Metropolitan Tabernacle. When these articles did not receive the answer that Spurgeon wanted - this question was not discussed at the Union meeting in Sheffield in 1887, and some members of his own congregation resigned or gave the light to it - he concluded that he had no choice but to leave the Union, which he did on 28 October. The disease forced Spurgeon to stay in the shadows for the last few years of his life. He delivered his final sermon at the Metropolitan Tabernacle on June 7, 1891. Died in France on 31 January 1892; On February 9, more than 60,000 people marched past his coffin in the Tabernacle. He was buried in Norwood Cemetery on February 11. Similar material Last modified 1998 Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834-92) was the most famous preacher of England 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 then helped at school in Cambridge, and it was during these Cambridge years that he came to Baptist principles and was called to a Baptist pastor 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 social work can be divided into four decades. In the 1850s he was a young prodigy who seemed to step full grown up in the pulpit. At the age of twenty the largest halls in London were to hear it; in twenty-one newspapers spoke of him as the incomparably most popular preacher of the day; The day he was twenty-three years old, 23,654 people heard him at the service at the Crystal Palace. In the next decade, in the 1860s, his work could best be described from the perspective of Promoting Evangelical Agencies. The institutions he founded, for which he remained responsible, included a college to train pastors; Enterprise editions (with a weekly sermon and monthly cassette sword and Trowel); Children's home; Association for the Distribution of Christian Literature; and above all the Metropolitan Tabernacle itself, open to the church to which he served in 1861 and capable of about 6,000 people. The congregation he pastor grew from 314 in 1854 to 5,311 in 1892. Viewers often assumed that so many businesses could never be kept at the high level of utility with which they started, but they were, and the 1870s could well be described in terms of holding land. On every front, work is blessed. Then came the 1880s and by far the most difficult period in Spurgeon's life. In the last decade he has faced growing controversy and the title in recent years may well be his own words: In opposition to so much. By the time Spurgeon was fifty-seven years old in 1891, his health was completely shattered. When he left Herne Hill station in London, southern France, on October 26, 1891, he told friends who had come to say goodbye: Fighting is killing me. He died in Menton three months later. Ian H. Murray in The Spergeon v. Hyper-Calvinism, Banner of Truth, 1995. See also Spurgeon's two-volume autobiography, Spurgeon: A New Biography of Arnold Dallimore and The Life and Work of Charles Haddon Sperdeon by G. Holden Pike, published by the Trust. British preacher, writer, pastor and evangelist Charles Haddon SpurgeonPortroyt Spurgeon Alexander Melville (1885)Born (1834-06-19)19 June 1834Kelvedon, Essex, EnglandIdd31 January 1892 -01-31) (aged 57)Menton, Alps-Maritimes, FranceNationalityBritishOccupationPastor, authorSpouse (s)Susannah Spurgeon (born Thompson) (January 15, 1832 - October 22, 1903)ChildrenCharles and Thomas Spurgeon (twins) (1856)Parent (s)John and Eliza SpurgeonSignature Charles Haddon - January 31, 1892) - English Baptist Preacher. Spurgeon remains highly influential among Christians of various faiths, among whom he is known as the Prince of Preachers. He was a strong figure in the reformed Baptist tradition, defending the London Baptist Confession of Faith in 1689 and speaking out against the liberal and pragmatic theological tendencies in the Church of his time. Spurgeon was pastor of the New Park Street Chapel Congregation (later the Metropolitan Tabernacle) in London for 38 years. He was part of several disputes with the Baptist Union of Great Britain, and he later left the denomination because of the doctrine In 1867, he founded a charity now called Spurgeon and works all over the world. He also founded Spurgeon College, which was named after him posthumously. Spurgeon is the author of many kinds of works, including sermons, autobiographies, commentaries, books about prayer, divine clocks, magazines, poetry, hymns and more. Many sermons were transcribed when he spoke and were translated into many languages during his lifetime. It is said that he produced powerful sermons of penetrating thought and accurate exposure. His oratory prowess is said to have kept his listeners fascinated by the Metropolitan Tabernacle, and many Christians keep his writings exceptionally high among devoted literature. Biography Early Life Part series onBaptists Von Christianity Protestantism Puritanism Anabaptism Priesthood Doctrine of all believers Individual Soul of Freedom Separation of Church and State Sola scriptura Congregationalism Mysteries Confessions Key figure John Smith Thomas Helwys Roger Williams John Clark John Bunyan Shubal Stearns Andrew Fuller Charles Sperd. N. Jackson James Robinson Graves William Bullane Johnson William Carey Luther Rice Martin Luther King Jr. Billy Graham Organization Baptist Colleges and University Baptist World Alliance Vte Born in Kelvedon, Essex, he moved to Colchester in 10 months.
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