Sponsored
The Gospel of the Kingdom - by Charles Haddon Spurgeon Paperback
Pre-order
Sponsored
About this item
Highlights
- A Complete Exegetical Commentary on the Gospel According to Matthew"Charles H. Spurgeon had a rare insight into the Word of God and spiritual truth.
- Author(s): Charles Haddon Spurgeon
- 452 Pages
- Religion + Beliefs, Biblical Commentary
Description
Book Synopsis
A Complete Exegetical Commentary on the Gospel According to Matthew
"Charles H. Spurgeon had a rare insight into the Word of God and spiritual truth. He was a prophet of wonderfully clear vision. He saw beneath the letter to the spirit of divine truth. He was both an example and a proof that the days of anointed eyes and anointed tongue are not past, and that the unction from the Holy One (1 John 2:20), which confers both spiritual perception and effective utterance, was not confined to apostolic times.
"This commentary on the Gospel of Matthew is the latest and ripest of his life's labors. It will be found as a tree laden with rich fruit and evidencing a soil uniquely fertile and a culture that reveals a divine husbandman. We predict for this volume a larger sale than for any of Spurgeon's previous works, partly because it is his latest and has in a sense the aroma of his dying days, and partly because it is a simple, brief, and charming memorial of the most effective popular preacher of his age. Every page is, like his sermons, full of his Master and yet sparkling with his own unique individuality. They will be found to disclose many of the secrets of his power in discerning, expounding, and applying the gospel. The reader will find himself here keeping perpetual company with one whose soul followed hard after God, and who loved the paths where his Savior had trodden before him.
"May the inspiring Spirit, who guided the evangelist Matthew in the production of this narrative, become to all readers of this commentary the illuminating Spirit also; and through these pages may he who is dead still continue to speak!"
- Arthur T. Pierson. Metropolitan Tabernacle,London, February, 1893