Charles Haddon Spurgeon, Victorian England's best-known Baptist minister, was
born on June 19, 1834 in Kelvedon, Essex and spent his childhood and early
teenage years in Stambourne, Colchester, and Newmarket. In 1856 he married
Susannah Thompson; their only children, twin sons Thomas and Charles, were born
on September 20, 1857.
Spurgeon had no formal education beyond Newmarket Academy, which he
attended from August 1849 to June 1850, but he was very well-read in Puritan theology,
natural history, and Latin and Victorian literature. His lack of a college
degree was no hindrance to his remarkable preaching career, which began in
1850, when he was only fifteen years old. A few months after his conversion to
Christianity, he began preaching at Teversham. The next year, he accepted his
first pastorate, at the Baptist Chapel in Waterbeach. The church quickly grew
from fewer than a dozen congregants to more than four hundred, and Spurgeon's
reputation as a preacher caught the attention of New Park Street, London's
largest Baptist church. He was invited to preach there in December 1853 and,
following a brief probationary period, he agreed to move to London and become
the church's new pastor.
Spurgeon's New Park Street congregation grew rapidly as well, soon
becoming too large for the 1200-seat auditorium. On August 30, 1854, the
membership agreed to enlarge the chapel; during the remodeling, services were
held at the 5,000-seat Exeter
Hall, a public auditorium in Strand Street. The renovations to New Park
Street were complete in May 1855, but the chapel was still too small, and in
June a committee was formed to oversee the construction of the church's new
home, the 5,000-seat Metropolitan Tabernacle. The congregation moved once
again, meeting in Exeter Hall and the 8,000-seat Surrey
Gardens Music Hall until the Tabernacle was dedicated on March 18, 1861.
Spurgeon began publishing shortly after he started preaching. In January
1855, Passmore and Alabaster inaugurated the "Penny Pulpit,"
publishing one sermon every week; the series continued until 1917, a
quarter-century after Spurgeon's death. Every year these sermons were reissued
in book form, first as The New Park Street Pulpit (6 volumes, 1855-1860) and
later as The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit (57 volumes, 1861-1917). Spurgeon
published scores of religious books in addition to his sermons; the most
significant works include Lectures to My Students (1890), a collection of talks
delivered to the students of his Pastors' College, and the 7-volume Treasury of
David (c. 1869), a best-selling devotional commentary on the Psalms.
Spurgeon's work in London was not limited to preaching and
sermon-publishing. He also served as president of the Pastors' College, which
he founded in 1857; established the Stockwell Orphanage, which opened for boys
in 1867 and girls in 1879; and oversaw evangelistic and charitable enterprises
such as almshouses, organizations for distributing food and clothing to the
poor, and a book fund for needy ministers.
Spurgeon's preaching was both enormously popular and highly
controversial. Some regarded him as the greatest orator since Whitefield;
others criticized him as theatrical, awkward, and even sacrilegious. Two of his
most controversial works were his "Baptismal Regeneration" sermon and
his "Down Grade" articles. On June 5, 1864, he preached a sermon
entitled "Baptismal Regeneration," objecting to Anglican teachings on
the sacramental power of infant baptism. Over 350,000 copies were sold, and the
furor it provoked led to Spurgeon's withdrawal from the Evangelical Alliance,
an ecumenical association of Dissenters and Evangelical
Anglicans.
The "Down Grade" controversy began in 1887, when Spurgeon
published a series of articles declaring that evolutionary thinking and liberal
theology threatened to "Down Grade" the church. In this case, he was
concerned not with Anglican teaching, but with what he believed to be doctrinal
error, particularly Unitarian ideas, within
the Baptist Union. He discussed his concerns in private letters to ministers
such as Samuel Booth and Joseph Parker and in several articles published in The
Sword and the Trowel, the Metropolitan Tabernacle's monthly periodical. When
these articles did not receive the response Spurgeon wanted--the matter was not
discussed at the Union's 1887 meeting in Sheffield and some members of his own
congregation dismissed or made light of it--he concluded that he had no choice
but to resign from the Union, which he did on October 28.
Illness forced Spurgeon to keep a low profile during the last few years
of his life. He preached his final sermon at the Metropolitan Tabernacle on
June 7, 1891. He died in France on January 31, 1892; on February 9, over 60,000
people filed past his casket in the Tabernacle. He was buried at Norwood
Cemetery on February 11.
With affection,
Ruben
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