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sermons
by Alexander Maclaren (1826 - 1910)
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Next
to Spurgeon's, this Scottish preacher's sermons have been
the most widely read of their time. He was a model
of expository preaching, and spent long hours in studying
the Bible in preparation for his sermons. The greatest compliment
he was ever given was from a listener, who said: "I
can hear him now; and the strange thing was, I never at
the time thought about its being Dr. Maclaren that we all
knew and liked; it just seemed like listening to a message
from God."
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sermons
by Robert Murray McCheyne (1813 - 1843)
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though McCheyne died while only twenty-nine years old, his
short seven year ministry had already begun to attract great
crowds. His sermons were most effective because his life was
consecrated to the Master. He wrote, "Pray for me, that
I may be made holier and wiser - less like myself, and more
like my Heavenly Master; that I may not regard my life, if
so be I may finish my course with joy. This day eleven years
ago, I lost my loved and loving brother, and began to seek
a Brother who cannot die."
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sermons
by C. H. MacKintosh (1820 - 1896)
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Charles
Henry Mackintosh known world wide as "C.H.M.,"
was born in 1820 in Country Wicklow, Ireland. He was spiritually
stirred when he was eighteen by letters from his sister
after her conversion. But his own peace was resolved by
the sentence, "It is Christ's work for us, not His
work in us, that gives us peace," in J.N. Darby's Operations
of the Spirit. After a time in business in Limerick, in
1844 he opened a school at Westport, undertaking the educational
work with enthusiasm. Fearing that the school was becoming
his primary interest, rather than Christ's work, he gave
it up in 1853, and thereafter concentrated on writing and
preaching. He was active in the Irish Revival of 1859-1869,
and for twenty-one years edited the magazine, Things New
and Old. It is his writing that has made "C.H.M."
so widely known for over a century, particularly his Notes
on the Pentateuch.It is an interesting spiritual commentary
on C.H. Mackintosh that his first tract, in 1843, was "The
Peace of God," whereas his last, shortly before his
death in 1896, was "The God of Peace." These works
were originally posted at http://members.tripod.com/witness_stand/chm/
with the statement by the publisher:"All of the writings
are in public domain."There is no e-mail address nor
name affixed to the typist's work. If
you are the contributor of this material, please notify
Pastor David and give your name - I will be happy and thankful
to credit you with the effort. Some editing of the
work - mainly spelling related - was done by Pastor David.
Otherwise the work is as it was presented.
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sermons
by F. B. Meyer (1847 - 1929)
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Charles
Spurgeon said of F.B. Meyer, "Meyer preaches as a
man who has seen God face to face". Born in a devout
Baptist home, he was heavily influenced by a Quaker grandmother
and by his good friend Dwight L. Moody. From an early
age Frederick felt that God was going to call him to the
ministry, and was even told by his Baptist pastor "Some
day you will stand at the end of the aisle and shake hands
with the people as I am doing now". Meyer preached
more than sixteen thousand sermons over his successful
sixty year ministry, yet he said "I am just God's
errand boy". His sermons are among the finest
examples of devotional preaching - yet these sermons were
most effective because they were a reflection of the life
that Meyer lived in Christ - holy, devoted, and saintly.
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sermons
by Dwight L. Moody (1837 - 1899)
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Though
he was considered "educationally handicapped",
Dwight L. Moody traveled more than a million miles, addressed
over one hundred million people, and everywhere he went
worked to establish evangelistic associations, conferences
- and Sunday Schools. Teamed with professional musician
Ira D. Sankey, the Moody Revival meetings were some of the
most successful - though they often met with resistance
from the local Clergy. Many ministers opposed Moody because
he was "uneducated", in their arrogance forgetting
that the Apostle Peter himself was "uneducated"
by their standards. Moody was living proof that "the
gifts and calling of God are without repentance" -
God only requires a willing heart to make a success.
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sermons
by G. Campbell Morgan (1863 - 1945)
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George
Campbell Morgan was living proof that, no matter what your
age, if God has called you to the Ministry He will give
you an outlet for that Ministry. Morgan was called
to his last pastorate at the young age of seventy-two years
old, and didn't retire until he was eighty. He pastored
Tabernacle Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
when he was sixty-six years old. Yet he was only fifteen
years old when he started preaching regularly. Morgan was
an expository Preacher who held the authority of Scripture
in highest regard. He said, "I read a text to my congregation.
This is the message. That is the one thing that is absolutely
and finally authoritative. My sermon has no authority in
it at all, except as an interpretation or an exposition
or an illustration of the truth which is in the text. The
text is everything. That is the point of authority".
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...
was South Africa's most eloquent 19th-century evangelist
and author of about 250 books and pamphlets.
Throughout his career he pastored many Reformed churches
and conducted crusades in many countries. He
was a preacher of holiness and stressed the Holy Spirit
and prayer for the nurture of Christians and the empowering
of the church. His sermons and other writings
have been consistently recognized, and their usefulness
and impact have continued to the present day, even
in the outdated English of the author's own day.
Other
writings can be found here. |
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| Strong
and conservative Bible preaching at its best. |
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sermons
by C. H. Spurgeon (my favorite preacher!)
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A
collection of Communion Sermons by Reverend
Spurgeon can be found here.
A
collection of his other writings can be found here
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page
design from "Interpol", courtesy of oswd.org
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