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Reflections Podcasts
Rosemary Laxton • Meanwood Valley Baptist Church • Illustration • • 39 views • 5:42
Reflections Podcasts
Rosemary Laxton • Meanwood Valley Baptist Church • Illustration • • 57 views • 16:36
Reflections Podcasts
Rosemary Laxton • Meanwood Valley Baptist Church • Illustration • • 59 views • 11:08
Reflections Podcasts
Rosemary Laxton • Meanwood Valley Baptist Church • Illustration • • 35 views • 7:19
Reflections Podcasts
Rosemary Laxton • Meanwood Valley Baptist Church • Illustration • • 48 views • 7:12
Reflections Podcasts
Rosemary Laxton • Meanwood Valley Baptist Church • Illustration • • 33 views • 13:35
Reflections Podcasts
Rosemary Laxton • Meanwood Valley Baptist Church • Illustration • • 58 views • 15:55
Reflections Podcasts
Rosemary Laxton • Meanwood Valley Baptist Church • Illustration • • 59 views • 12:23
Reflections Podcasts
Rosemary Laxton • Meanwood Valley Baptist Church • Illustration • • 39 views • 9:45
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 12 views
The feather flies in the wind, but it has no inherent power to move. Consequently, when the gale is over it falls to the ground. Such is the religion of excitement. But the eagle has life within itself, and its wings bear it aloft and onward whether the breeze favors it or not—such is religion when sustained…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 17 views
If you have visited the picture galleries at Versailles, where you see the wars of France from the earliest ages set forth in glowing colors upon the canvas, you cannot but have been struck with the pictures and interested in the terrible scenes. Upstairs in the same palace there is a vast collection…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 11 views
When people rail at creeds as having no vitality, I suppose that I hear them say that there is no life in eggshells. Just so; there is no life in eggshells. “My dear sir, do not put yourself out to defend a mere shell.” Truly, I am no trifler, nor so litigious as to fight for a mere shell. But listen!…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 25 views
I was noticing, in the life of that man of God the Earl of Shaftesbury, that his first religious impressions were produced by a humble woman. The impressions that made him Shaftesbury—the man of God and the friend of man—were received in the nursery. Little Lord Ashley had a godly nurse who spoke to…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 15 views
Obedience has to be learned experimentally. If a man is to learn a trade thoroughly, he must be apprenticed to it. A soldier, sitting at home and reading books, will not learn the deadly art of war. He must go to the barracks, and the camp, and the field of battle if he is to win victories and become…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 86 views
When a young man comes to college he usually has much to unlearn. If his education has been neglected, a sort of instinctive ignorance covers his mind with briars and brambles. If he has gone to some faulty school where the teaching is flimsy, his tutor has first of all to fetch out of him what he has…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 7 views
Have you never noticed how men get their senses clear through affliction? I read in the life of good Dr. Brown that when he first preached he heard two women at the door talking to one another about his sermon. One of them said to the other, “Ah! It was very well, but it was almost all tinsel.” A short…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 50 views
I have heard of a naturalist who thought himself exceedingly wise with regard to the natural history of birds. Yet he had learned all he knew in his study, and had never so much as seen a bird either flying through the air or sitting upon its perch. He was a fool, although he thought himself exceedingly…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 24 views
Some of our teachers wanted us to learn the big doctrines first, and they did not like it because we could not at once see all the sublime truths of election and predestination. Certain of the old standards who are very orthodox expect all newborn babes to eat meat at once; as soon as ever a person is…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 5 views
Sociologists are always trying to discover the best way to give children a good start in life. One question they study is how soon do children need to start school. A new study has discovered that “watching Sesame Street is as beneficial for children’s academic progress as attending head start.” One…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 31 views
Mike Vegas ordered pizza and wings from a pizza company. He only had time to eat one slice of pizza before he left for work, so he put the rest of the order in the refrigerator to eat later. While he was at work that night, he kept getting message on his cell phone, but he didn’t pay any attention to…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 4 views
A 4-year-old pre-K student in Oklahoma was forced to use his right hand while making his letters. The teacher sent a note home to the parents advising them of the reason. “There are numerous instances of left-handedness being associated with wickedness,” read the astounded parents. —Jim L. Wilson and…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 7 views
Blair Walsh, kicker for the NFL’s Minnesota Vikings, missed a last-second field goal kick and kept the team from advancing in the 2016 NFL playoffs. After the game, many ridiculed Walsh for missing what many thought was an easy kick. A group of first graders at Northpoint Elementary school decide to…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 6 views
Some teachers believe they can teach anyone anything. But the truth is the student must have certain qualifications as well. For example, in Washington State police arrested the driver of a Buick for driving 109 mph on the interstate. The Buick had hit two other cars, then left the interstate and drove…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 7 views
A college in Massachusetts has changed all of the speed limit signs on campus to honor a retired mathematics professor. When he retired, Professor David Kelly asked that the speed limit be changed to 17 mph instead of 15 mph because he had spent his entire career fascinated by the number 17. Kelly had…