Why Do You Doubt?

We wanted to point you toward a sermon of Charles Spurgeon’s. You can read the whole sermon here or the excerpt below. This is also the sermon Jeremy Walker be looking at on his podcast From the Heart of Spurgeon this Friday.

Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834—1892), the great 19th century Prince of Preachers, was often called “the last Puritan.” The spirit of Puritanism was certainly alive and well in his ministry.

One week after Spurgeon's home going in 1892, B. H. Carroll wrote this of Spurgeon:

“Yes, Spurgeon is dead. The tallest and broadest oak in the forest of time is fallen. The sweetest, most silvery and far-reaching voice that published the glad tidings since apostolic times is hushed . . . He fought a good fight. He kept the faith, and while we weep, he wears the triple crown of life and joy and glory, which God the righteous Judge has conferred upon him. In answer to the question: ‘How do you account for Spurgeon?' the answer is, ‘God’.”

 
 

In the sermon Mr. Fearing Comforted, Charles Spurgeon writes:

“Yes,” says one, “this is not the fear that troubles me; my only doubt is whether I am a child of God or not.” I finish, therefore, by going over the old ground. Soul, if thou wouldst know whether thou art a child of God, look not to thyself, but look to Christ. Ye who are here to-day, who desire to be saved, but yet fear you never can be, never look to yourselves for any ground of acceptance before God. Not self, but Jesus; not heart, but Christ; not man, but man’s Creator. O sinner! think not that thou art to bring anything to Christ to recommend thee. Come to him just as thou art. He wants no good works of thine—no good feelings either. Come, just as thou art. All that thou canst want to fit thee for heaven, he has bought for thee, and he will give thee; all these freely thou shalt have for the asking. Only come, and he will not cast thee away. But do you say, “Oh, I cannot believe that Christ is able to save such a sinner as I am.” I reply, “O thou of little faith, wherefore dost thou doubt?” He has already saved sinners as great as thou art; only try him, only try him.

“Venture on him, venture wholly;
Let no other trust intrude.”

Try him, try him; and if you find him false, then tell it everywhere that Christ was untrue. But that shall never be. Go to him; tell him you are a wretched undone soul, without his sovereign grace; ask him to have mercy on you. Tell him you are determined, if you do perish, that you will perish at the foot of his cross. Go and cling to him, as he hangs bleeding there; look him in the face, and say, “Jesus, I have no other refuge; if thou spurn me, I am lost; but I will never go from thee; I will clasp thee in life, and clasp thee in death, as the only rock of my soul’s salvation.” Depend upon it, you shall not be sent empty away; you must, you shall be accepted, if you will simply believe. Oh, may God enable you, by the divine influence of his Holy Spirit, to believe; and then, shall we not have to put the question, “O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt?” I pray God now apply these words to your comfort. They have been very simple, and very homely words; but nevertheless, they will suit simple, homely hearts. If God shall bless them, to him be the glory!


through the eyes of spurgeon