New reset edition, just published,
2009!
An incisive, historical and theological
insight into the great 19th century
Baptist, with emphasis on the doctrines
that moulded his life and thought.
This book seeks to throw light on the
reasons which have given rise to the
superficial image of Spurgeon as a
genial Victorian pulpiteer, a kind of
grandfather of modern evangelicalism.
Even before his death in 1892
newspapers and church leaders disputed
over the features of his life which
entitled him to fame. Not his 'narrow
creed' but his 'genuine loving
character' was most worthy of
remembrance said one periodical,
echoing the general view. When Joseph
Parker contrasted the hard Calvinism
preached at Spurgeon's Tabernacle with
the praiseworthy Christianity
exemplified in his orphanage, The
Baptist protested that the man about
whom Parker wrote 'is not the Spurgeon
of history'. But the distortion
continued and Spurgeon forecast how the
position he held might fare in years to
come: 'I am quite willing to be eaten
by dogs for the next fifty years but
the more distant future shall vindicate
me'.
This book traces the main lines of
Spurgeon's spiritual thought in
connection with the three great
controversies in his ministry - the
first was his stand against the diluted
gospel fashionable in the London to
which the young preacher came in the
1850's; the second, the
famous 'Baptismal Regeneration' debate
of 1864; lastly, the lacerating Down-
Grade controversy of 1887-1891 when
Spurgeon sought to awaken Christians to
the danger of the Church 'being buried
beneath the boiling mud-showers of
modern heresy'.