The sermon "Flee from the Coming Wrath" by C. H. Spurgeon addresses the doctrine of divine wrath and the urgent call for repentance. Spurgeon emphasizes the impending judgment of God, as illustrated by John the Baptist's warning to the Pharisees and Sadducees in Matthew 3:7. He argues that regardless of religious status or outward righteousness, all are subject to God's wrath due to sin. Scriptural references such as Hebrews 6:18 are used to highlight the necessity of fleeing to Christ for refuge against this wrath. The practical significance of the sermon lies in its admonition to recognize the seriousness of sin and the need for immediate action in repentance and faith in Christ as the only means of escape.
“Flee from the coming wrath! My dear friends, first, let us think of the tremendous danger which overtakes all men and women who do not flee from the wrath of God.”
“It cannot be possible that he would think the same of the honest and the dishonest, of the moral and the immoral... the true God... must hate and abhor all sin.”
“You must flee from all such false hopes as that and get a better hope, even that of which my second text tonight speaks, we who have fled to take hold of the hope offered to us.”
“How does Christ deliver us from the coming wrath? He does it by putting himself in our place and putting us into his place.”
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