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Building Up One Another
Zach Broom • Illustration • • 62 views • 57:05
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 13 views
I have told you before of a strange picture that I saw at Brussels, in which the artist has represented the resurrection in a very remarkable fashion, showing the people as partly alive. There is one man with his head restored to life, but his arms remain as skeletons. There is another alive down to…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 23 views
Have you never noticed in the streets that if one person stands still and looks up, or is occupied with gazing into a shop window, others become curious and look also? I would enlist that faculty of curiosity which is within every man and prompt you to search with the angels as they pry into the underlying…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 9 views
Occasionally one meets with an illiterate working man who will say to those whose occupation is mental, “I work hard for my living,” insinuating that the mind worker does not work at all. Yet I ask any man who is engaged in a mental pursuit whether he does not know that mental work is quite as real work—and…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 8 views
Can a Christian greatly rejoice while he is in distress? Yes, most assuredly he can. Mariners tell us that there are some parts of the sea where there is a strong current upon the surface going one way, but that down in the depths there is a strong current running the other way. Two seas do not meet…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 7 views
When the children of Israel went through the Jordan, they were told that the Jordan would divide before them. But they were still more fully assured when the priests went forward with the ark, for as soon as the feet of the priests touched the margin of the river, the waters began to divide. As they…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 17 views
I have often felt, when I have been rambling in the Alps, that nature was too small to set forth God. The mirror is not large enough to reflect the face of the Eternal. You stand in the Alps and hear the avalanche like claps and peals of thunder resounding in the air. You gaze afar off and there it is,…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 8 views
One day, many years back, a thick darkness came over the United States. Now and then in London we have dreadfully dark days for which we can scarcely account, but this was quite a new experience for the New Englanders, and caused a terrible sensation. So exceedingly black was it that the barn door fowls…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 12 views
Suppose I am a sculptor. If it is not possible for me to attain to the perfection of Praxiteles or Phidias, yet I must come as near to them as I can. I shall not be a master of the sculptor’s art unless I seek to imitate those who have been the most proficient in it. Suppose also that, through the infirmity…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 65 views
Charles Borromeo, the famous bishop of Milan, ordered a painter who was about to draw a skeleton with a scythe over a sepulcher to substitute for it the golden key of Paradise. Truly this is a most fitting emblem for a believer’s tomb, for what is death but the key of heaven to the Christian? We notice…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 14 views
A student at the university, hoping to gain a prize, uses his best endeavors, burns the midnight oil, and strains all his faculties that he may reach the mark that will ensure his passing the examinations. Even thus the Christian with a lively hope devotes himself to obtaining the blessings that God…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 28 views
All that is of nature’s spinning must be unraveled. The natural building must come down, lath and plaster, roof and foundation, and we must have a house not made with hands. It was a great mercy for our city of London that the great fire cleared away all the old buildings that were the lair of the plague;…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 21 views
When I was seeking the Lord, I not only believed that I could not pray without divine help, but I felt in my very soul that I could not. Then I could not even feel aright, or mourn as I would, or groan as I would. I longed to long more after Christ. Alas! I could not even feel that I needed Him as I…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 16 views
John Bunyan speaks of the law as coming to sweep a chamber like a maid with a broom. When she began to sweep there was a great dust that almost choked people and got into their eyes. But then came the gospel with its drops of water and laid the dust, and then the broom might be used far better. Now it…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 14 views
You shall go into a wood when you please, but if you are very quiet you will not know whether there is a partridge or a pheasant or a rabbit in it. But when you begin to move about or make a noise, you very soon see the living creatures. They rise or they run. So when affliction comes into the soul and…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 101 views
Had Abraham stopped in Ur of the Chaldees with his friends and rested there and enjoyed himself, where would his faith have been? He had God’s command to leave his country to go to a land that he had never seen, to sojourn there with God as a stranger, dwelling in tents, and in his obedience to that…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 12 views
Of all the people whom I have ever met with who have told me that they were perfect, I can say that I was morally certain they were not. They had only to talk for about five minutes and they proved their own imperfection. But we shall be perfect one day. “The one who began a good work in you will finish…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 17 views
At present, it is with us as it is with the world during the winter. If you had not seen the miracle wrought again and again, you would not guess, when you look upon those black beds in the garden, or when you walk over that snowy and frosty covering, crisp and hard beneath your feet, that the earth…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 9 views
A researcher at the Oxford Library in Britain uncovered a fragment of lost wisdom from a 12th century French poem in the binding of another book. Tamara Atkins was researching the reuse of book during the 12th century when she found a fragment from a poem, entitled, “Siege d’Orange” The poem tells the…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 9 views
The Golden Globe Awards, pandemic style in 2021 had the nominees at home watching the show and being filmed simultaneously. The twitterverse went crazy when it appeared that Al Pacino was sleeping (or looking down so it appeared that his eyes were closed) during his category-- Best Actor in a Television…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 5 views
In Leaders Eat Last, Simon Sinek writes, “We would prefer that that air traffic controller check his e-mail or send his text messages during his breaks. I think we would all feel much better if access to the Internet and a personal cell phone were completely forbidden when an air traffic controller is…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 12 views
Some families pass down jewelry, watches, and riches of many kinds. A Michigan family has a unique heirloom that is handed down through the generations. It is a 141-year-old fruitcake. Fidelia Ford baked the cake in 1878. Her tradition was baking a fruit cake and letting it age for a year before serving…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 18 views
Remopita Pongi was abandoned 50 miles from home by his brother. The 29-year-old New Zealand man decided to just walk home. Checking Google Maps he found what appeared to be a simple shortcut: he could cut 15 miles off his trip if only he swam across a tidal estuary. A short swim seemed a small price…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 9 views
In 2018, Michael Buble received a star on the walk of fame in Los Angeles, California. There is always a huge party as people are honored for their contribution to the entertainment industry. https://people.com/music/michael-buble-walk-of-fame-ceremony/ Most of the stars on the “Walk of Fame” are worn…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 13 views
Acting on a tip, the FBI recovered a pair of ruby red slippers Judy Garland wore in the movie The Wizard of Oz. Thieves took them from a Minnesota museum thirteen years ago. They were insured for $1,000,000 but experts told the BBC they were probably worth twice that much. How could a pair of shoes be…