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Charles Spurgeon

Chance is a base heathenish idea!

2 Timothy 4:20; Psalm 119:71
Charles Spurgeon March, 22 2016 Audio
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you. Chance is a base, heathenish idea by Charles Spurgeon from The Sick Man Left Behind, 1880. But Trophimus have I left at Miletus sick, 2 Timothy 4, verse 20. From the fact that Paul left Trophimus at Miletus sick, we learn that it is the will of God that some holy men should be sick. Whatever the malady may have been which affected Trophimus, Paul could certainly have healed him, if God had permitted him. Paul had raised up Eutychus from death, and he had given the use of his limbs to the cripple at Lystra. Not so, however, had the Lord willed.

The good fruit-bearing vine must be pruned, and Trophimus must suffer. There were holy ends to be answered by his sickness, which could not be compassed by his health. Instantaneous restoration could have been given, but it was withheld under divine direction. This doctrine leads us away from the vain idea of chance. We are not wounded by arrows shot at a venture, but we smart by the determinate counsel of the God of heaven. An overruling hand is everywhere present, preventing or permitting affliction. No one shaft of disease is ever let fly by stealth from the bow of death.

It was a wise providence which selected Trophimus to be sick. We cannot always see the hand of God in Providence, but we may be always sure that it is there. If not a sparrow falls to the ground without our Father, then surely not a child of the divine family is laid low without his sacred will. Chance is a base, heathenish idea which cannot live in the presence of an everywhere-present, living and working God. Away with it from every Christian mind! It is alike dishonouring to the Lord and grievous to ourselves.

Also, we may not think a shade the less of Trophimus, because he is sick at Miletus. He is probably a far better man than any of us, and perhaps for that very reason he is more tried. There is gold in him which pays for putting into the crucible. He bears such rich fruit that he is worth pruning. He is a diamond of so pure that he will repay the lapidary's toil.

It was good for me to be afflicted so that I might learn your decrees. Psalm 119 verse 71 you
Charles Spurgeon
About Charles Spurgeon
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (19 June 1834 — 31 January 1892) was an English Particular Baptist preacher. His nickname is the "Prince of Preachers."
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