C.H. Spurgeon Quotes

By C.H. Spurgeon

FRIENDSHIP

The vanity of all friendship which is not found in true principle, was never more plainly expressed than in an honest, but heartless, sentence of one of Horace Walpole’s letters. “If one of my friends happens to die, I drive down to St. Jame’s Coffee-house, and bring home a new one.” The name of “friend” is desecrated in a worldling’s mouth—but there is a friend. FA85 A friend to everybody is often a friend to nobody. PT34 If we would always recollect that we live among men who are imperfect, we should not be in such a fever when we find out our friend’s failings. PT66 Anger against enemies must not make us forget our friends, for it is better to preserve a single citizen of Zion, than to kill a thousand enemies. TD70:4 One heart in two bodies is the realization of true brotherhood. TN123 The friendship of bare compliment is the fashion of this age, because this age is the age of deceit. 120.109 We are one in Christ; let us be friends with one another; but let us never be friends with one another’s error. If I be wrong, rebuke me sternly; I can bear it, and bear it cheerfully; and if ye be wrong, expect the like measure from me, and neither peace nor parley with your mistakes. 250.204 And first let us learn to set loose by our dearest friends that we have on earth. Let us love them—love them we may, love them we should—but let us always learn to love them as dying things. 349.10 There is one thing about the usefulness of which all men are agreed, namely, friendship; but most men are soon aware that counterfeits of friendship are common as autumn leaves. 899.613 Lip-love, proverbially, is a thing to be questioned; too often it is a counterfeit. Love which speaks can use hyperbolical expressions at its will, but when you have heard all you can hear of love’s speech, you are not sure that it is love; for all are not hunters that blow the horn, and all are not friends who cry up friendship. 1128.470 Men in going through the world make many acquaintances, but out of these they have few special objects of esteem, whom they call friends. If they think to have many friends, they are, probably, misusing the name. 2091.339 Any man can selfishly desire to have a Jonathan; but he is on the right tack who desires to find out a David to whom he can be a Jonathan. 2336.567 It is no friendship that flatters; it is small friendship that holds its tongue when it ought to speak; but it is true friendship that can speak a word at the right time, and, if need be, even speak so sharply as to cause a wound. 2627.289