Daily Sermon Station
Listen to a new sermon every day to encourage, equip, and inspire your walk with God.
Episodes
274 episodes
Woman’s Memorial
In this sermon, Spurgeon tells the story of a woman who showed great love for Jesus by breaking a very expensive jar of perfume and pouring it on His head. Other people complained that she wasted money, but Jesus said her act would be remembere...
Man’s Ruin and God’s Remedy
Spurgeon presents the sinner's ruin under four heads — the sheer number and aggravation of sins, including the special guilt of those who have sinned against light and a praying mother's example; the legal sentence of condemnation already passe...
One Antidote for Many Ills
Spurgeon takes the repeated refrain of Psalm 80 — "Turn us again, O Lord, cause your face to shine, and we shall be saved" — as the church's one all-sufficient prayer for every ill, arguing that because all problems trace to one source (the wit...
Christ's Estimate of His People
Spurgeon takes Christ's words to his bride in Song of Solomon 4:10-11 as a genuine expression of how Jesus actually estimates his people — their love is to him better than wine (a luxury and a refreshment), their graces smell sweeter than all s...
The Savior's Many Crowns
Spurgeon organizes his meditation on "many crowns" into three categories: crowns of dominion — Christ reigns as King of Heaven commanding angels, King of Hell holding the chains of the damned, King of creation who spoke the universe into being,...
The Chaff Driven Away
Spurgeon begins by carefully defining the "ungodly" — not primarily the blasphemer or the open rebel, but the far larger class of respectable, church-attending people who live without a genuine eye to God, who have no love for him, no delight i...
Come and Welcome
Spurgeon builds the sermon around four elements of Revelation 22:17 — the water of life itself (God's free grace that pardons sin, overcomes the love of sin, satisfies the soul's deepest longings, and ends in eternal life), the breadth of the i...
Grieving the Holy Spirit
Spurgeon builds his case for not grieving the Holy Spirit on two foundations: first, the Spirit's love — surveyed through his early striving with us before conversion, his patient perseverance when we resisted him, his work in quickening and te...
The Blood of the Everlasting Covenant
Spurgeon works through the Everlasting Covenant systematically — identifying the contracting parties as the three persons of the Trinity (not God and man), the stipulations as the Father promising to give his elect to the Son and the Spirit pro...
A Divided Heart
Spurgeon takes the divided heart as a spiritual disease of the most dangerous kind — dangerous because it strikes a vital organ, because its victim is unconscious of how loathsome it is, because it is chronic and deep-seated, and above all beca...
Who Can Tell?
In this sermon, Spurgeon uses the story of Jonah and Nineveh to show how seriously people should take God’s warnings about sin and judgment. He describes how the Ninevites suddenly realized their guilt, the shortness of their time, and the terr...
Paul’s Desire To Depart
Spurgeon takes Paul's phrase "to depart and be with Christ" and unpacks it in three movements: first, what death actually is for the believer — not an arrest, not a plunge into darkness, but a quiet departure like a ship leaving harbor, the vis...
Christ Triumphant
Spurgeon takes Colossians 2:15 as an invitation to view the cross not through the eyes of worldly shame but through the eyes of faith — and describes the cross as Christ's actual battlefield, where he fought Satan, sin, and death in a cosmic wa...
Limiting God
Spurgeon exposes the sin of "limiting God" through two main forms — dictating to him and distrusting him — showing how believers dictate when they demand specific answers to prayer in their own chosen form, by their own chosen means, on their o...
Faith Illustrated
Spurgeon explains that the Christian’s greatest act is committing the soul entirely to Christ, just as Paul declared, “I know whom I have believed.” Spurgeon shows that saving faith involves three movements: renouncing all tr...
The Tabernacle of the Most High
Spurgeon opens by forcefully dismissing all superstitious reverence for physical church buildings — arguing that bricks, stained glass, and consecrated graveyards have no moral or spiritual quality, and that true holiness can only reside in con...
The Blind Beggar
Spurgeon takes blind Bartimaeus as a picture of every spiritually blind and spiritually poor sinner, tracing how his faith likely grew simply from hearing, over and over, the story of the man born blind whom Jesus healed — a single narrative lo...
The Meek and Lowly One
Spurgeon takes Christ's self-description — "I am meek and lowly in heart" — as a deliberate invitation designed to remove every fear that might keep a sinner away, spending the first half of the sermon illustrating Christ's meekness through a s...
How Saints May Help the Devil
Spurgeon warns that professing Christians often comfort sinners in their sin by their own inconsistencies, giving the ungodly excuses to remain rebellious against God. He shows how everyday faults—covetousness, worldliness,...
The Story of God's Mighty Acts
Spurgeon urges believers to remember and retell the great works God has done—from the Red Sea to Pentecost—so that past wonders might stir present expectation. He recounts how God overthrew Pharaoh, routed Sennacherib, and empowered early Chris...
Distinguishing Grace
Spurgeon uses the question "Who makes you to differ?" as a sword against pride, working through a series of contrasts — between the comfortable and the suffering among God's own people, between the converted and the callous hearer sitting in th...
The Call of Abraham
Spurgeon traces Abraham's call — what he left (family, homeland, settled comfort, known pastures), where he went (an unknown land with nothing but a promise), and how he went (immediately, cheerfully, without hesitation or conditions) — and hol...
An Earnest Invitation
Spurgeon unpacks the command "Kiss the Son" through four progressively deeper meanings — a kiss of reconciliation that ends the sinner's rebellion against God, a kiss of homage that acknowledges Christ as king, a kiss of worship that bows befor...
A Home Mission Sermon
Spurgeon argues that God keeps his people in this world for one reason — to do good to others and glorify him — and the ruling principle for that work is the text: do whatever your hand finds, meaning the work that is near and possible right no...
His Name—the Mighty God
Spurgeon opens with a sharp defense of Christ's full divinity, arguing that those who deny it have implicitly accused every Christian of idolatry, that Christ himself spoke and acted in ways that make him either truly God or a deceiver deservin...