C. H. Spurgeon's sermon "Satan Considering the Saints" addresses the theological topic of spiritual warfare, specifically focusing on Satan’s role as an adversary in the lives of believers. Spurgeon constructs his argument by highlighting the malicious scrutiny that Satan places on Christians, emphasizing how he considers their weaknesses with the intent to lead them into temptation and despair. He draws on the narrative of Job (Job 1:8) and the imagery from Revelation 12 to illustrate that while Satan boasts of his power, it is ultimately God who holds sovereignty over him and permits trials for the purpose of refining and strengthening His people. The practical significance of this sermon is twofold: it reassures believers that their trials serve a divine purpose, contributing to their sanctification, and it calls them to vigilance against the devil’s schemes, reminding them of God's protective and sustaining grace.
“He has come to consider the faithful, and he can scarcely find any who are not enemies of his kingdom.”
“Satan must have thought a lot about Martin Luther, I could control most of the world, he says, if it were not for Luther.”
“You will never be tempted without express license from the throne where Jesus pleads.”
“If he takes much away, I will give him more. If he tempts Job to curse, I will fill him so full of love to me that he shall bless me.”
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