Daily Sermon Station
Listen to a new sermon every day to encourage, equip, and inspire your walk with God.
Episodes
225 episodes
Free Grace
Spurgeon takes God's blunt declaration — "Not for your sakes do I this" — and preaches it as a comprehensive statement that every act of God's saving work, from the eternal election before creation, through Christ's death, the Spirit's calling,...
Perfection in Faith
Spurgeon unlocks the text "He has perfected forever them that are sanctified" by reading it through the lens of the Old Testament tabernacle, arguing that "sanctified" means set apart and consecrated to God's service — just as the golden vessel...
Faith in Perfection
Spurgeon’s sermon centers on the promise from Psalm 138:8, “The Lord will perfect that which concerns me,” and he explains that this assurance belongs only to those who share David’s concern for eternal things, have truly tasted God’s me...
The Vanguard and Rear Guard of the Church
Spurgeon takes God's double promise — "The Lord will go before you, and the God of Israel will be your rear guard" — and applies it first to the whole church throughout history, showing how God has always led the way ahead of his people from th...
Love
Spurgeon addresses the concern that a gospel of free grace to the vilest sinners might produce moral indifference, and answers it by showing that God's love, when truly received, does not license sin but generates love in return — a love that i...
The Blood
Using the Passover command "When I see the blood, I will pass over you," Spurgeon argues that the blood of Christ is the one and only foundation of a sinner's safety — blood that is divinely appointed, spotless, shed by one who was fully God, a...
Compel Them to Come In
Spurgeon takes the parable's command — "Compel them to come in" — as his personal marching orders and spends the entire sermon in direct, urgent address to unconverted sinners, working through every class of person: the spiritually poor, the ma...
The Feast of the Lord
Charles Spurgeon’s teaches that, unlike Satan—who gives “the good wine first, and afterward that which is worse”—Christ always saves the best for last, making the Christian life sweeter as it goes. He explains that God’s earliest promises, like...
Satan's Banquet
Charles Spurgeon warns that the devil always serves “the good wine first, and afterward that which is worse,” meaning sin begins sweet but ends in misery. He describes four tables in Satan’s feasting hall: the profligate, who starts with...
Samson Conquered
Using Samson's tragic fall as his framework, Spurgeon argues that every genuine Christian is a consecrated person — set apart entirely for God — and that this total dedication is both the source of extraordinary strength and the very thing most...
The Evil and Its Remedy
Charles Spurgeon’s sermon teaches that people can only understand the gospel when they feel its truth—especially the weight of their own sin. He argues that sin is far more serious than most people admit, using examples like Adam’s sin...
The Christian's Heaviness and Rejoicing
Spurgeon opens by confessing his own experience of deep, unexplained sadness during a week of illness, and uses it to unlock what he believes is the true meaning of the text: the promise is not primarily for those who endure suffering heroicall...
Comfort Proclaimed
Spurgeon opens by unpacking the tenderness in God's twice-repeated command "Comfort my people," showing that God cares not only about his people's survival and salvation but also about their happiness — and he argues this command is addressed t...
God's Barriers Against Man's Sin
Spurgeon uses God's remarkable question — "Will you not tremble at my presence, who placed the sand as a boundary for the sea?" — to highlight a stunning contrast: the mighty ocean stays within its limits held back by nothing more than a strip ...
An Appeal To Sinners
Spurgeon takes the Pharisees' contemptuous accusation — "This man receives sinners" — and turns it into a glorious declaration, arguing that Christ receives sinners specifically and exclusively: not the self-righteous who don't think they need ...
Self-Examination
Spurgeon takes the apostle Paul's challenge to the fault-finding Corinthians — "Examine yourselves" — and applies it to every person present, explaining that the command involves more than a casual glance at oneself but a thorough, honest, cros...
Declension from First Love
Spurgeon opens by acknowledging that the church at Ephesus received remarkable praise from Christ for its works, labor, patience, and discernment — but then turns the spotlight on the one damning charge: they had left their first love — and he ...
Confession and Absolution
Spurgeon uses the parable of the Pharisee and the tax collector to argue that genuine, acceptable prayer before God looks exactly like the tax collector's prayer — not polished, boastful, or priest-mediated, but spontaneous, solitary, heartfelt...
His Name—Counselor
Spurgeon unpacks Christ's title "Counsellor" in three layers: first, Christ was present in the eternal council before creation, where the Trinity deliberated on the making of the world, the ordering of providence, and the plan of salvation — in...
His Name—Wonderful!
Spurgeon takes the single word "Wonderful" from Isaiah's prophecy about Christ and unfolds it across three timeframes: in the past, Christ's eternal existence before creation, his stunning incarnation as an infant while being the Almighty God, ...
The Fatherhood Of God
Spurgeon opens with the surprising claim that the Lord's Prayer was not designed as a universal formula for all people, but specifically for genuine believers — since calling God "Father" is meaningless or even presumptuous for someone who has ...
The New Heart
Spurgeon argues that the human heart is not merely damaged but utterly ruined — too proud, too rebellious, too thoroughly corrupted to be repaired — and that God's answer is not to fix the old heart but to replace it entirely with a new one, wh...
The Voice of the Blood of Christ
Spurgeon takes the striking phrase "the blood of sprinkling that speaks better things than that of Abel" and unpacks it in two directions: first showing how Christ's sacrifice surpasses Abel's offering because Christ was the actual Lamb rather ...
As Your Days, So Shall Your Strength Be
Using the promise "As your days, so shall your strength be," Spurgeon first walks his listeners through the many ways Christians discover their own weakness — in daily duties, in illness and suffering, in trying to grow spiritually, and especia...