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Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 34 views
If your house were on fire, you would rejoice to hear that the fire engines were coming down the street. You would feel an absolute certainty that they were coming to you, because your house was in a blaze if no one’s else might be. If there were appointed today a commissioner for the relief of such…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 23 views
It is not possible that any sin should ever be forgiven to any man without shedding of blood. This has been known from the very first. As soon as man had sinned, God taught him that he needed a sacrifice. Adam and Eve, after they had sinned, tried to clothe themselves with fig leaves, but that was not…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 32 views
The Israelites were commanded on the Feast of the Passover to put away all leaven out of their houses, and to this day they are very scrupulous about the fulfillment of that command at the time of that great festival. The house is very carefully swept lest a crumb of common leavened bread should remain.…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 9 views
God could not accept any sacrifice that was touched with the golden tongs or that lay upon the brazen altar so long as those golden tongs and the brazen altar were imperfect. What was done to make them perfect? Why, they were sprinkled with blood; but they had to be sprinkled with blood ever so many…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 216 views
The service of God is the element in which alone we can fully live. If you had a fish here upon dry land, supposing it possible that it could exist, yet it would lead a very unhappy life. It would scarcely be a fish at all! You could not tell of what it was capable; it would be deprived of the opportunity…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 8 views
Who among us can tell all the perils of this mortal life? I remember reading a work in which there were collected together numerous instances of the simple means by which men have died, such as the swallowing of a fruit stone, or the sticking of a small bone in the throat, the breathing of some invisible…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 41 views
If I were asked to visit you tomorrow evening, I am sure you would make some preparations for my call—even for one so commonplace as myself. You would prepare, because you would welcome me. If you expected the Queen to call, how excited you would be! What preparation good housewives would make for a…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 21 views
I have told you before of the bricklayer who fell off a scaffold, and was taken up so injured that it was seen that he must soon die. A good clergyman, bending over him, said, “My dear man, you had better make your peace with God.” The poor fellow opened his eyes and said, “Make my peace with God, sir?…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 7 views
Christ has gone to heaven to put in an appearance on our behalf. As in a court of law, when a man appears by his attorney, or legal representative, he is in the court, even though he may be miles away. So are we, today, in possession of our eternal inheritance through Him, who has put in an appearance…
Spurgeon Commentary
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 12 views
If you go to the top of some mountains such as Snowdon or the Rigi, you will find it all solid and firm enough. But there are some people who want to get a little higher than the mountain, so the people there build a rickety old stage and charge you fourpence or sixpence to go to the top of it. When…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 46 views
One thing that is on every calendar is the time of our death. Many news outlets prepare obituaries of famous people ahead of their deaths so they will be prepared to go to print early when they do die. A French public radio station mistakenly published some of those obituaries, including Queen Elizabeth…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 5 views
Judy Cashner received a letter from her bank recently. It was addressed to her estate saying, “We are sorry for your loss and understand this is a difficult time for you.” When she checked into it she was told by Wells Fargo that she had died. The bank couldn’t tell her how they decided that she had…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 5 views
Ambrosia is a Silicon Valley startup. Their business is selling transfusions of blood plasma from young donors to wealthy, aging customers hoping to reinvigorate themselves. The transfusions cost $8,000 per liter. The FDA has sent out a warning that the blood from young people has “no proven clinical…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 15 views
El Capitan is a legendary mountain in Yosemite National Park. It boasts a 3,000 foot vertical granite wall that attracts elite climbers from around the world. It was first climbed in 1958, and it took 46 days of climbing spread over 16 months. Today the average climber takes several days to complete…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 50 views
When a person dies there are laws covering how their property is passed on to relatives. The growing use of social media has made some issues of inheritance more confusing. Companies like Google and Facebook contend laws approved decades ago that prevent them from releasing electronic memories unless…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 17 views
While human life expectancy has increased significantly since the nineteenth century, a new study by researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, indicates that there is a limit to human lifespan. “Our results strongly suggest that the maximum lifespan of humans is fixed and subject to natural…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 16 views
A death simulator called Xinglai is open in China. When you “die,” you lay down on a conveyer belt through a dark tunnel that simulates cremation and then being “reborn” out the other side through a latex womb. The experience “gives you the chance to calm down, give in to some deeper thoughts, and think…
Charles Spurgeon • Logos Sermons • Illustration • • 12 views
When Pompey was killed, Julius Caesar obtained possession of a large box that contained a vast amount of correspondence that had been carried on with Pompey. There is no doubt whatever that in that box there were many letters from certain of Caesar’s followers making overtures to Pompey, and if Caesar…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 13 views
A German undertaker received the shock of his life when a coffin lid at his funeral parlor slid open and the supposedly dead woman inside asked, “Where am I?” The man passed out in shock. The 92-year-old woman had been pronounced dead just hours earlier after staff at her retirement home found her unresponsive,…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 8 views
Cancer is on the verge of overtaking heart disease as the No. 1 cause of death. Heart disease and cancer are primarily diseases of aging. As we continue to make progress on treating heart disease the reason for death has shifted. Fewer people succumbing to heart disease means more people living long…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 5 views
Scientists are starting to unlock the secrets of aging and believe we are on the threshold of greatly lengthened life spans. They are holding out the possibility of 150 years. Some scientists just refuse to accept that death is beyond human control. “It’s such a profoundly sad, lonely feeling that I…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 40 views
The oldest man in modern history died on June 12, 2013. At 116 years old he was the last person living who witnessed the 19th century. Jiroemon Kimura was born on April 19, 1897 and died of natural causes. Some people don’t receive many years, others do. Some even get a 116, but in the end there is death.…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 7 views
Psychiatrist Mark Epstein writing an opinion piece for the Sunday Review of The New York Times reminds us, “Trauma is not just the result of major disasters.” Trauma is a part of ordinary life. “One way or another, death (and its cousins: old age, illness, accidents, separation, and loss) hangs over…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 5 views
We have known for years that it was important for our health to get at least six hours of sleep per night. Now a new study indicates that getting more than nine hours is likewise unhealthy. That much sleep has been linked to an increased risk of heart disease, cognitive problems, and premature death.…
Jim L. Wilson • Illustration • • 7 views
David Kime was a WWII veteran. After his funeral at age 88, his funeral cortege slowly passed through the drive-thru lane at Kime’s favorite Burger King. Each of the 39 mourners had a burger and a 40th burger was placed on Kime’s casket and buried with him. When I reach the final judgment I hope my life…