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Charles Spurgeon

Spurgeon's Morning and Evening - Aug 20 AM

2 Samuel 23:1
Charles Spurgeon August, 20 1999 Audio
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The Sweet Psalmist of Israel, 2 Samuel 23, verse 1. Among all the saints whose lives are recorded and wholly writ, David possesses an experience of the most striking, varied, and instructive character.

In his history, we meet with trials and temptations not to be discovered as a whole in other saints of ancient times, and hence he is all the more suggestive a type of our Lord. David knew the trials of all ranks and conditions of men. Kings have their troubles, and David wore a crown. The peasant has his cares, and David handled a shepherd's crook. The wanderer has many hardships, and David abode in the caves of En Gedi. The captain has his difficulties, and David found the sons of Zeruiah too hard for him.

The psalmist was also tried in his friends. His counselor Ahithophel forsook him. He that eateth bread with me hath lifted up his heel against me. His worst foes were they of his own household. His children were his greatest affliction.

The temptations of poverty and wealth, of honor and reproach, of health and weakness, all tried their power upon him. He had temptations from without to disturb his peace and from within to mar his joy. David no sooner escaped from one trial than he fell into another, no sooner emerged from one season of despondency and alarm than he was again brought into the lowest depths and all God's waves and billows rolled over him.

It is probably from this course that David's Psalms are so universally the delight of experienced Christians. Whatever our frame of mind, whether ecstasy or depression, David has exactly described our emotions. He was an able master of the human heart because he had been tutored in the best of all schools, the school of heartfelt personal experience.

As we are instructed in the same school, as we grow matured in grace and in years, we increasingly appreciate David's Psalms and find them to be green pastures.

My soul, let David's experience cheer and counsel thee this day.
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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