Lectures to My Students by Charles Spurgeon - The Holy Spirit in Connection with Our Ministry
Listen now
Description
Spurgeon dives into the significant influence of the Holy Spirit in ministry, asserting that its consequence merits constant consideration. He highlights that the Holy Spirit's presence bases the certainty and hope in ministerial aims, indicating that without belief in the Holy Spirit, sustaining ministry is inconceivable due to the insufficiency of human effort for such a divine task. This reliance on the Holy Spirit surpasses doctrinal affirmation and becomes a thorough personal experience, known through regular encounters with the Spirit. Spurgeon assumes his audience experiences the Holy Spirit consciously, drawing a parallel between knowing the Holy Spirit and recognizing friends through personal interaction. This spiritual awareness elevates ministers from the mundane realm into the radiant sphere of the spirit world, where the Holy Spirit's operations are palpably felt. He maintains that this conscious experience of the Holy Spirit's force is deciding for anyone in the ministry, pointing out that without it, one would not have the right to minister in Christ's church. Spurgeon reiterates that the Holy Spirit's ongoing sanctifying work in various forms reaffirms their weighty knowledge of His presence and action, making ministry both feasible and meaningful. Moreover, Spurgeon debates that unbelievers often demand empirical proof to substantiate religious beliefs, akin to the "Gradgrind" philosophy, which prioritizes facts in every domain. Skeptics confront the validity of faith by insisting on observable phenomena. Spurgeon offsets by repeating that spiritual realities exist, though skeptics fail to perceive them due to spiritual blindness. He demands that skeptics respect believers' testimonies, disputing that their inability to perceive spiritual experiences does not render believers deluded or deceitful. For Spurgeon, the role of ministers is elementally tied to the Holy Spirit's presence and strength. Without the Holy Spirit, their office is devoid of true influence and only a title without heart. He underlines that ministers are successors of prophets divinely inspired to declare God's word and guide His people. Without the Holy Spirit, ministers are essentially frauds and should be rejected by society. Attempting to achieve the Christian mission without the Holy Spirit is doomed to fail, as the Spirit is important for carrying out Jesus' commission. This summary is made by Eleven Labs AI audio generated platform: elevenlabs.io/?from=partnerhall9106 Reformed Theologian GPT: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-XXwzX1gnv-reformed-theologian If you want to support this podcast's operational cost, you can do so here: venmo.com/u/edisonwu --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/edison-wu/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/edison-wu/support
More Episodes
Marshall examines small group ministries, analyzing concerning trends that may undermine the aspect of the gospel. He accentuates a testimonial from a small group member who felt God's presence through communal support, contradicting the intimate environment of small groups with the more formal...
Published 06/13/24
Published 06/13/24
The examination of Jehovah's Witnesses from a Reformed theological perspective uncovers profound doctrinal discrepancies that impact both belief and practice. Jehovah's Witnesses' reliance on the New World Translation, their rejection of the Trinity, unique Christology, and works-based...
Published 06/12/24