Charles Spurgeon

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Charles Haddon Spurgeon (19 June 1834<ref>William Young Fullerton, Charles Haddon Spurgeon, A Biography, Chapter 1.</ref> – 31 January 1892) was an English Particular Baptist preacher. Spurgeon remains highly influential among Christians of various denominations, to some of whom he is known as the "Prince of Preachers." He was a strong figure in the Baptist tradition, defending the 1689 London Baptist Confession of Faith, and opposing the liberal and pragmatic theological tendencies in the Church of his day.

Spurgeon was pastor of the congregation of the New Park Street Chapel (later the Metropolitan Tabernacle) in London for 38 years.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He was part of several controversies with the Baptist Union of Great Britain and later he left the denomination over doctrinal convictions.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name= "BUGB">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

While at the Metropolitan Tabernacle, he built an Almshouse and the Stockwell Orphanage. He encouraged his congregation to engage actively with the poor of Victorian London. He also founded Spurgeon's College, which was named after him posthumously.

Spurgeon authored sermons, an autobiography, commentaries, books on prayer, devotionals, magazines, poetry, and hymns.<ref>Template:Citation</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref> Many sermons were transcribed as he spoke and were translated into many languages during his lifetime. He is said to have produced powerful sermons of penetrating thought and precise exposition. His oratory skills are said to have held his listeners spellbound in the Metropolitan Tabernacle, and many Christians hold his writings in exceptionally high regard among devotional literature.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>

Biography

Early life

Template:Baptist Born in Kelvedon, Essex, he moved with his family to Colchester at 10 months old.<ref>Fullerton, W. Y. Charles Haddon Spurgeon: A Biography. The Tyndale Series of Great Biographies. P. 5. Chicago: Moody Press, 1966.</ref>

The missionary Richard Knill spent several days with Spurgeon while visiting his grandfather in 1844; he announced to him and his family that the child would one day preach the gospel to great multitudes.<ref>Christian History Institute website, ‘’Charles H. Spurgeon: Did you know?’’</ref>

Blue plaque reads 'Charles Haddon Spurgeon "The Prince of Peachers" Began his ministry here in 1851'
Plaque commemorating Charles Spurgeon

Spurgeon's conversion from nominal Congregationalism came on 6 January 1850, at age 15. On his way to a scheduled appointment, a snowstorm forced him to cut short his intended journey and to turn into a Primitive Methodist chapel in Artillery Street, Newtown, Colchester, where he believed God opened his heart to the salvation message.<ref>The Gospel Coalition</ref> The text that moved him was Isaiah 45:22 ("Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth, for I am God, and there is none else"). Later that year, on April 4, he was admitted to the church at Newmarket. His baptism followed on 3 May in the river Lark, at Isleham. Later that same year he moved to Cambridge, where he later became a Sunday school teacher. Spurgeon preached his first sermon in the winter of 1850–51 in a cottage at Teversham while filling in for a friend. From the beginning of Spurgeon's ministry, his style and ability were considered to be far above average. In the same year, he was installed as pastor of the small Baptist church at Waterbeach, Cambridgeshire, where he published his first literary work, a Gospel tract written in 1853.

New Park Street Chapel

File:CHSat23.jpg
Spurgeon at age 23.

In April 1854, after preaching three months on probation and just four years after his conversion, Spurgeon, then only 19 years old, was called to the pastorate of London's famed New Park Street Chapel in Southwark (formerly pastored by the Particular Baptists Benjamin Keach, and theologian John Gill). This was the largest Baptist congregation in London at the time, although it had dwindled in numbers for several years. Spurgeon found friends in London among his fellow pastors, such as William Garrett Lewis of Westballs Grove Church, an older man who along with Spurgeon went on to found the London Baptist Association.

File:Wiki staffs spurgeon.jpg
Staffordshire figurine, c. 1860

Within a few months of Spurgeon's arrival at Park Street, his ability as a preacher made him famous. The following year the first of his sermons in the "New Park Street Pulpit" was published. Spurgeon's sermons were published in printed form every week and had a high circulation. By the time of his death in 1892, he had preached nearly 3,600 sermons and published 49 volumes of commentaries, sayings, anecdotes, illustrations and devotions.

Immediately following his fame was criticism. The first attack in the press appeared in the Earthen Vessel in January 1855. His preaching, although not revolutionary in substance, was a plain-spoken and direct appeal to the people, using the Bible to provoke them to consider the teachings of Jesus Christ. Critical attacks from the media persisted throughout his life. The congregation quickly outgrew their building and moved to Exeter Hall, then to Surrey Music Hall. At 22, Spurgeon was the most popular preacher of the day.<ref>Template:DNB Cite</ref>

On 8 January 1856, Spurgeon married Susannah, daughter of Robert Thompson of Falcon Square, London, by whom he had twin sons, Charles and Thomas born on September 20, 1856. At the end of that year, tragedy struck on 19 October 1856, as Spurgeon was preaching at the Surrey Gardens Music Hall for the first time. Someone in the crowd yelled, "FIRE". The ensuing panic and stampede left several dead. Spurgeon was emotionally impacted by the event and it had a sobering influence on his life. For many years he spoke of being moved to tears for no reason known to himself.

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Spurgeon later in life.

Walter Thornbury later wrote in "Old and New London" (1898) describing a subsequent meeting at Surrey:

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a congregation consisting of 10,000 souls, streaming into the hall, mounting the galleries, humming, buzzing, and swarming – a mighty hive of bees – eager to secure at first the best places, and, at last, any place at all. After waiting for more than half an hour – for if you wish to have a seat you must be there at least that space of time in advance… Mr. Spurgeon ascended his tribune. To the hum, rush, and trampling of men, succeeded a low, concentrated thrill and murmur of devotion, which seemed to run at once, like an electric current, through the breast of everyone present, and by this magnetic chain the preacher held us fast bound for about two hours. It is not my purpose to give a summary of his discourse. It is enough to say of his voice, that its power and volume are sufficient to reach everyone in that vast assembly; of his language that it is neither high-flown nor homely; of his style, that it is at times familiar, at times declamatory, but always happy, and often eloquent; of his doctrine, that neither the 'Calvinist' nor the 'Baptist' appears in the forefront of the battle which is waged by Mr. Spurgeon with relentless animosity, and with Gospel weapons, against irreligion, cant, hypocrisy, pride, and those secret bosom-sins which so easily beset a man in daily life; and to sum up all in a word, it is enough to say, of the man himself, that he impresses you with a perfect conviction of his sincerity.<ref>Walter Thornbury, "Old and New London" (1898)</ref>{{#if:|

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Pastors College 1888

Spurgeon's work went on. A Pastors' College was founded in 1856 by Spurgeon and was renamed Spurgeon's College in 1923, when it moved to a new building in South Norwood Hill, London.<ref>George Thomas Kurian, Mark A. Lamport, Encyclopedia of Christian Education, Volume 3, Rowman & Littlefield, USA, 2015, p. 1205</ref> At the Fast Day, 7 October 1857, he preached to his largest crowd ever – 23,654 people – at The Crystal Palace in London. Spurgeon noted: <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

In 1857, a day or two before preaching at the Crystal Palace, I went to decide where the platform should be fixed; and, in order to test the acoustic properties of the building, cried in a loud voice, "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world." In one of the galleries, a workman, who knew nothing of what was being done, heard the words, and they came like a message from heaven to his soul. He was smitten with conviction on account of sin, put down his tools, went home, and there, after a season of spiritual struggling, found peace and life by beholding the Lamb of God. Years after, he told this story to one who visited him on his death-bed.{{#if:|

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Metropolitan Tabernacle

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Spurgeon preaching at the Surrey Music Hall circa 1858.

On 18 March 1861, the congregation moved permanently to the newly constructed purpose-built Metropolitan Tabernacle at Elephant and Castle, Southwark, seating 5,000 people with standing room for another 1,000. The Metropolitan Tabernacle was the largest church edifice of its day. Spurgeon continued to preach there several times per week until his death 31 years later. He never gave altar calls at the conclusion of his sermons, but he always extended the invitation that if anyone was moved to seek an interest in Christ by his preaching on a Sunday, they could meet with him at his vestry on Monday morning. Without fail, there was always someone at his door the next day.

He wrote his sermons out fully before he preached, but what he carried up to the pulpit was a note card with an outline sketch. Stenographers would take down the sermon as it was delivered and Spurgeon would then have the opportunity to make revisions to the transcripts the following day for immediate publication. His weekly sermons, which sold for a penny each, were widely circulated and still remain one of the all-time best-selling series of writings published in history.<ref>Spurgeon: Prince of Preachers, by Lewis A. Drummond, Kregel Publications, Grand Rapids, 1992, p.215</ref>

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Missionary preaching in China using the Wordless Book

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Besides sermons, Spurgeon also wrote several hymns and published a new collection of worship songs in 1866 called "Our Own Hymn Book".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It was mostly a compilation of Isaac Watts's Psalms and Hymns that had been originally selected by John Rippon, a Baptist predecessor to Spurgeon.<ref name=FC>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Singing in the congregation was exclusively a cappella under his pastorate. Thousands heard the preaching and were led in the singing without any amplification of sound that exists today. Hymns were a subject that he took seriously. While Spurgeon was still preaching at New Park Street, he entered the Rivulet controversy over a hymn book. He found its theology largely deistic. At the end of his review, he warned:

We shall soon have to handle truth, not with kid gloves, but with gauntlets, - the gauntlets of holy courage and integrity. Go on, ye warriors of the cross, for the King is at the head of you.

On 5 June 1864, Spurgeon challenged the Church of England when he preached against baptismal regeneration.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref> However, Spurgeon taught across denominational lines as well: for example, in 1877 he was the preacher at the opening of a new Free Church of Scotland church building in Dingwall. It was during this period at the new Tabernacle that Spurgeon found a friend in James Hudson Taylor, the founder of the inter-denominational China Inland Mission. Spurgeon supported the work of the mission financially and directed many missionary candidates to apply for service with Taylor. He also aided in the work of cross-cultural evangelism by promoting "The Wordless Book", a teaching tool that he described in a message given on 11 January 1866, regarding Psalm 51:7: "Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow." The book has been and is still used to teach people without reading skills and people of other cultures and languages – young and old – around the globe about the Gospel message.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>Template:Sfn

On the death of missionary David Livingstone in 1873, a discoloured and much-used copy of one of Spurgeon's printed sermons, on Luke 13 (the falling tower of Siloam)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref> was found among his few possessions much later, along with the handwritten comment at the top of the first page: "Very good, D.L." He had carried it with him throughout his travels in Africa. It was sent to Spurgeon and treasured by him.<ref>W. Y. Fullerton, Charles Haddon Spurgeon: A Biography Template:Webarchive, ch. 10</ref>

Metropolitan Tabernacle Societies and Institutions

In 1876, 22 years after becoming pastor, Spurgeon published "The Metropolitan Tabernacle: Its History and Work".<ref>The Metropolitan Tabernacle: Its History and Work. Available in Google Books</ref> His intention stated in the preface is to give a 'printed history of the Tabernacle'. The book has 15 chapters and of these 5 are given over to what he called 'Societies and Institutions'.

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Metropolitan Tabernacle Almshouse

The Five Chapters are:

xi. The Almshouses. Explaining how the New Park Street Chapel site was sold to allow the Tabernacle to build an Almshouse and school.

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Stockwell Orphanage 1876

xiii. The Stockwell Orphanage. This opened for 240 boys in 1867 (and later for girls in 1879). These orphanages continued in London until they were bombed in the Second World War. The inspiration for starting an orphanage came from a visit with George Müller and the financial support of Anne Field Hillyard.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref> The orphanage changed its name to Spurgeon's Child Care in 1937,<ref name="ReferenceA">Charity Commission for England and Wales. Charity Number 1081182-1</ref> and again in 2005 to Spurgeons.<ref name="ReferenceA"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Spurgeon was linked more with the Stockwell orphanage than any other Metropolitan Tabernacle endeavour. There are probably four reasons for this:

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1. It was a large set of buildings in London occupying Template:Convert. 2. There was an annual fundraiser at which Spurgeon chose to celebrate his birthday,<ref>The Standard 15/6/1883</ref> and often the laying of a foundation stone.<ref>The Bristol Mercury and Daily Post. 21/6/1883</ref> The event was called ‘one of the largest bazaars and fancy fairs ever held in South London’<ref>The Pall Mall Gazette. 4/1/1882</ref> – in one day 1,000 was raised<ref>Lloyd’s Weekly Newspaper 25/6/1882</ref> – a lot considering entry was sixpence.<ref>The Standard 14/6/90</ref> Spurgeon accepted money gifts for his birthday, which all went to the orphanage.<ref>Liverpool Mercury 23/6/1881</ref> 3. The Orphanage choir and bell ringers performed concerts to fundraise<ref>The Royal Cornwall Gazette. 6/6/84</ref> 4. It had such a large operating budget compared with other Tabernacle activities.{{#if:|

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xiv. The Colportage Association. Colporters were employed to take Bibles, good books and periodicals for sale, from house to house. They also were involved in visiting the sick and holding meetings.

xv. Other Institutions Connected with the Tabernacle. Here Spurgeon describes 21 other 'Institutions'. Two examples are: The Ordinance Poor Fund which distributed money amongst poor members of the church of about £800 annually, and the Ladies' Benevolent Society. This group made clothing for the poor and 'relieved' them, with an income of £105.

Eight years later at Spurgeon's fiftieth birthday celebration an updated list of 'Societies and Institutions' was read out.<ref>Mr Spurgeon's Jubilee. Charles Spurgeon</ref> With Spurgeon's strong encouragement and support the 24 groups listed in 'The Metropolitan Tabernacle: Its History and Work', had become 69. Before they are read out Spurgeon says: "I think everybody should know what the church has been moved to do, and I beg to say that there are other societies besides those which will be mentioned, but you will be tired before you get to the end of them." and finishes after the list by saying: "We have need to praise God that he enables the church to carry on all these institutions."

Spurgeon's encouragement for members of the Tabernacle to be involved in these ministries was very strong. Spurgeon's own regular contributions to them meant that he left his wife only 2,000 pounds, when he died, despite having earned millions from his published sermons and books.<ref>Nottingham Evening Post 31/3/1892</ref>

He encouraged others to give, with comments like these:

On the Green Walk Mission: "Here a good hall must be built. If some generous friend would build a place for this mission, the money would be well laid out",

On colporters: "Mr Charlesworth’s two Bible classes have generously agreed to support a brother with a Bible Carriage in the streets of London. Would not some other communities of young people do well to have their own man at work in the regions where they dwell? THINK OF IT",

On the almshouses: "WE GREATLY NEED AT LEAST £5000 TO ENDOW THE ALMHOUSES, AND PLACE THE INSTITUTION UPON A PROPER FOOTING. Already C. H. Spurgeon, Thomas Olney, and Thomas Greenwood have contributed £200 each towards the fund, and we earnestly trust that either by donations or legacies the rest of the £5000 will be forthcoming."<ref>Metropolitan Tabernacle: Its History and Work. Available in Google Books</ref>

Spurgeon had one infirmary built, at the Stockwell Orphanage. However, he also recognised that the poor had limited access to health care and so was also an enthusiastic supporter of the Metropolitan Hospital Sunday Fund. He left us this quote:<ref>The Hospital. 25/6/87. p. 215</ref>

File:The Stockwell Orphanage Infirmary.png
The Stockwell Orphanage Infirmary

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We must have more hospitals. I do not know whether we shall not be obliged to make the Government spend something in this direction. I don’t believe in the Government doing anything well. I generally feel sorry when anything has to be left to the Government. I don’t mean this Government in particular, but any Government which may be in office for the time being. It is six of one and half-a-dozen of the other. I have a very small opinion of the whole lot. There are some things which we should try ourselves to do as long as ever we can; but if we are driven up a corner, it may come to what I fear. Bones must be set, and the sick must be cared for; the poor must not be left to die, in order not to have to go to the Government for help. So let us all try to give what we can. It is your duty to give, not merely as Christians, but as men. I like the Hospital Sunday movement, for all Christian people can meet, as we are met here to-night, on one platform.{{#if:|

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Downgrade controversy

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Sword and Trowel original cover page

A controversy among the Baptists flared in 1887 with Spurgeon's first "Down-grade" article, published in The Sword & the Trowel.<ref name= "downgrade">Template:Cite book</ref> In the ensuing "Downgrade Controversy," the Metropolitan Tabernacle disaffiliated from the Baptist Union, effectuating Spurgeon's congregation as the world's largest self-standing church. Spurgeon framed the controversy in this way:

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The controversy took its name from Spurgeon's use of the term "Downgrade" to describe certain other Baptists' outlook toward the Bible (i.e., they had "downgraded" the Bible and the principle of sola scriptura).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Spurgeon alleged that an incremental creeping of the Graf-Wellhausen hypothesis, Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, and other concepts were weakening the Baptist Union.<ref name=dall>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name = sheehan>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name = "Nettles">Template:Cite book</ref> Spurgeon emphatically decried the doctrine that resulted:

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The standoff caused division amongst the Baptists and other non-conformists and is regarded by many as an important paradigm.Template:Efn<ref name=dall /><ref>Template:Citation</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref>

Opposition to slavery

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Photograph of Spurgeon c.1870

Spurgeon strongly opposed the owning of slaves.<ref name="slavery">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He lost support from the Southern Baptists, sales of his sermons dropped, and he received scores of threatening and insulting letters as a consequence.<ref name= ray>Template:Cite book</ref>

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In a letter<ref>Template:Cite news In column 5.</ref> to the Christian Watchman and Reflector<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> (Boston), Spurgeon declared:

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I do from my inmost soul detest slavery… and although I commune at the Lord's table with men of all creeds, yet with a slave-holder I have no fellowship of any sort or kind. Whenever [a slave-holder] has called upon me, I have considered it my duty to express my detestation of his wickedness, and I would as soon think of receiving a murderer into my church… as a man stealer.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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Restorationism

Like other Baptists of his time, despite opposing Dispensationalism,<ref name= dispen>Sermon on 'Jesus Christ Immutable', Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit, 1869, vol. 15, no. 848.</ref><ref name= Lewis>Template:Cite book</ref> Spurgeon anticipated the restoration of the Jews to inhabit the Promised Land.<ref name= restor>Template:Citation</ref>

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Final years and death

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Spurgeon's funeral cortege
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Tomb of Charles Spurgeon, West Norwood Cemetery, London

Spurgeon's wife was often too ill to leave home to hear him preach.

Spurgeon had a long history of poor health. He was already being reported as having gout when he was 33.<ref>Sheffield and Rotherham Independent. 15/6/1867</ref>

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It was true, he said, that he had had the gout, and a very horrible pain it was; but he had had the gout in his left leg, and he had preached standing on the other. He had not had the gout in his tongue, and he was not aware that people preached with their legs.{{#if:|

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By 1871, when he was 37 he was already being advised by his doctors to leave town for his health.<ref>The Bury and Norwich Post. 9/5/1871</ref>

His favourite place to go to rest was Menton in the South of France. He was often there in the winter months.<ref>Bristol Mercury and Daily Post. 22/2/1879</ref> He was there often enough to have visitors, with George Müller visiting in 1879<ref>Bristol Mercury and Daily Post. 3/4/1879</ref> and members of the Baptist Union in 1887, attempting to get him to rejoin the Union.<ref>Daily News. 14/12/1887</ref>

When he was on the improve in Menton he would preach in the local church,<ref>Glasgow Herald. 6/2/1880</ref> or write, such as in 1890 when he wrote a commentary on Matthew while ‘resting’.<ref>The Pall Mall Gazette. 1/2/1890</ref>

He became increasingly unwell and in May 1891 he was forced 'to rest'. In 1891 he went to rest in Menton and remained there for three months. During this period he wrote 180 pages of commentary.<ref name="The Times 11/2/1892">The Times 11/2/1892</ref> However, he did not recover and died at the age of 57, while still in Menton, from gout and congestion of the kidneys.<ref>Aberdeen Journal, and General Advertiser for the North. 12/2/1892</ref> From May 1891 until his death in January 1892, he received 10,000 letters of 'condolence, resolutions of sympathy, telegrams of enquiry'.<ref name="The Times 11/2/1892"/>

After Spurgeon's body was returned to England it lay in repose in the Metropolitan Tabernacle.<ref name="Western Mail 12/2/1892">Western Mail 12/2/1892</ref>

Two days prior to the funeral, four memorial services were held at the Metropolitan Tabernacle. The first service at 11 am was for those with current communion cards, the second at 3 pm was for ministers and student pastors, the third at 7 pm was for Christians who hadn't gotten in yet and the final service at 11 pm included the Stockwell Orphans. Police controlled the crowds waiting to get in during the day, and to help with order, at the end of services people left through a back door.<ref name="The Times 11/2/1892"/>

On the day of the funeral, eight hundred extra police were on duty along the route the cortège took,<ref>Western Mail 12/2/92</ref> from the Metropolitan Tabernacle, past the Stockwell Orphanage and to the Norwood Cemetery. Accounts vary about the number of carriages in the cortege. One account puts it as:<ref>Daily News. 12/2/92</ref>

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Sixty-five pair-horse broughams were provided by the undertakers for conveying the invited mourners and delegates to the cemetery, but there were altogether from two to three hundred private carriages and other vehicles joining in the procession, which it is estimated must have been nearly two miles in length{{#if:|

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Extra trains were put on to cater for the crowd, along with extra omnibuses and cabs.<ref>Glasgow Herald 12/2/1892</ref> Except for a few tobacco shops and taverns, the businesses along the funeral route were shut, with some houses displaying black and white material.<ref>The Guardian 12/2/1892</ref> An estimated total of 100,000 people either passed by Spurgeon as he lay in state or attended the funeral services.<ref name="Western Mail 12/2/1892"/> An unknown number lined the streets for the cortége. As the cortége passed the Stockwell Orphanage it stopped briefly while the children sang a verse of one of his favourite hymns “For ever with the Lord,” with the refrain “Nearer home.<ref>Daily Mail 12/2/1892</ref>”. Along the route, some flags were at half-mast.<ref>Daily Mail 12/9/1892</ref>

Spurgeon was survived by his wife and sons. His remains were buried at West Norwood Cemetery in London, where the tomb is still visited by admirers. His son Tom became the pastor of the Metropolitan Tabernacle after his father died.

Library

William Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri, purchased Spurgeon's 5,103-volume library collection for £500 ($2500) in 1906. The collection was purchased by Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref> in Kansas City, Missouri, in 2006 for $400,000 and can be seen on display at the Spurgeon Center on the campus of Midwestern Seminary.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> A special collection of Spurgeon's handwritten sermon notes and galley proofs from 1879 to 1891 resides at Samford University in Birmingham, Alabama.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>

Spurgeon's College in London also has a small number of notes and proofs. In July 2025, the college trustees announced the immediate closure of the college owing to financial constraints.<ref name="closure">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Spurgeon's personal Bible, with his handwritten notes, is on display in the library of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.

Works

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  • 2200 Quotations from the Writings of Charles H. Spurgeon
  • A Good Start: A Book for Young Men and Women
  • Able to the Uttermost
  • According to Promise
  • All of Grace : Template:ISBN
  • An All-Round Ministry
  • Around the Wicket Gate
  • Barbed Arrows for the Quiver
  • C.H. Spurgeon's Autobiography : Template:ISBN
  • Christ's Incarnation: "Good Tidings of Great Joy"
  • Come Ye Children
  • Commenting and Commentaries
  • Eccentric Preachers
  • Faith (1856, republished in 1903 as Faith: What It Is and What It Leads To)
  • Feathers For Arrows
  • Flashes of Thought: 1000 Choice Extr. From the Works of C.H. Spurgeon
  • Gleanings Among the Sheaves
  • God Promises You : Template:ISBN
  • Home Worship and the Use of the Bible in the Home
  • John Ploughman's Pictures
  • John Ploughman's Talk
  • Lectures to My Students : Template:ISBN
  • Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit

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  • Miracles and Parables of Our Lord
  • Morning and Evening : Template:ISBN
  • Only a Prayer Meeting
  • Our Own Hymn-book: A Collection of Psalms and Hymns for Public, Social, and Private Worship
  • Pictures from Pilgrim's Progress
  • Sermons in Candles
  • Sermons for Special Days and Occasions
  • Smooth Stones Taken from Ancient Brooks: Being a Collection of Sentences, Illustrations, and Quaint Sayings, from the Works of that Renowned Puritan : Template:ISBN
  • Soul Winner, The : Template:ISBN
  • Speeches ... at Home and Abroad
  • Spurgeon's Commentary on Great Chapters of the Bible
  • Spurgeon's Sermon Notes : Template:ISBN
  • Talks to Farmers
  • The Cheque Book of the Bank of Faith : Template:ISBN
  • The Dawn of Revival (Prayer Speedily Answered)
  • The Down Grade Controversy
  • The Greatest Fight in the World
  • The Interpreter, or Scripture for Family Worship
  • The New Park Street Pulpit
  • The Power of Prayer in a Believer's Life : Template:ISBN
  • The Preachers Power and the Conditions of Obtaining It
  • The Saint and His Saviour
  • The Salt Cellars
  • The Sword and The Trowel
  • The Treasury of David : Template:ISBN
  • The Two Wesleys: On John and Charles Wesley : Template:ISBN
  • The Wordless Book
  • Till He Come
  • We Endeavor: Helpful Words For Members of the Young People's Society of Christian Endeavor
  • Words of Cheer for Daily Life: One of the rarest works, printed in 1898 with only three copies printed, and barely referenced in history. One reference can be found in the-annual-American-catalogue 1898 "Cheer for Life" Rare work Referenced
  • Word and Spirit : Template:ISBN
  • Words of Advice to Seekers
  • Words of Counsel: For All Leaders, Teachers, and Evangelists
  • Words of Wisdom for Daily Life

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Spurgeon's works have been translated into many languages and Moon's and Braille type for the blind. He also wrote many volumes of commentaries and other types of literature.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Notes

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References

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Further reading

Source of info from Charles H. Spurgeon

Others

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