C. H. Spurgeon’s sermon "Withholding the Truth!" addresses the pressing theological issue of the responsibility of Christian teachers and preachers to deliver the full counsel of God, emphasizing that withholding the truth results in spiritual harm. Spurgeon argues that, akin to those who hoard grain during a famine, ministers who fail to preach essential truths of Scripture and the full Gospel risk incurring divine and communal condemnation. He references Proverbs 11:26, illustrating that both God's judgment and public condemnation befall those who exploit the weak, heightened by mentioning the historical failures of the Roman Catholic Church in withholding biblical truth. The sermon concludes with an urgent call to action for all believers to share the Gospel liberally, asserting that the faithful dissemination of the bread of life brings heavenly blessings rather than the curse that accompanies neglect. The significance lies in the proper stewardship of truth in ministry, a core tenet of Reformed theology that values the authority of Scripture for life and salvation.
“I must strive to make my range of ministry as wide as the range of Scripture, and I must not hesitate to declare the whole counsel of God.”
“He who in times of scarcity hoards his grain in order to enrich himself is despised by the people, and he who sells it freely is loved by the people.”
“If the people will curse the man who keeps back the bread which merely sustains the body, what will be the scornful condemnation which will overwhelm the soul of him who deals deceitfully with the bread of eternal life?”
“To be a soul winner is the happiest thing in the world. And with every soul you bring to Jesus Christ, you seem to get a new heaven here on earth.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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