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Chapter 2 of 45

Preface

3 min read · Chapter 2 of 45

 

Preface

It is not always easy to select themes for sermons. Even those who are able to give all their time to reading and study are sometimes glad of a suggestion by which they are directed to a topic; how much more is this the case when a man is all the week engaged in commercial pursuits, and then has to preach twice on the Lord's day. These are called lay-brethren by those who believe in a special priesthood; I can only say that whatever they are called they are among the right honorables of the pulpit. Frequently have brethren assured me of the difficulty they have found in choosing a text when they could only get a brief interval to themselves, and that at a time when they were well-nigh worn out. On several occasions the question has been put to me, "Could you not help us with some outlines of discourses?" To which I have replied that there were many works of that kind in the market. The reply has been that they would like something plainer and less rhetorical. I felt encouraged by their request to try what could be done in the direction indicated.

I have prepared these frameworks, not to encourage indolence, but to help bewildered industry; and I hope that I have not written so much as to enable any man to preach without thought, nor so little as to leave a weary mind without help. My actual notes were a little too scanty to be understood by anyone but myself, and therefore I have filled them up. The front of an ordinary envelope has frequently sufficed to hold my memoranda; but now that I find it needful to write in a bolder hand, I use the half of a sheet of note paper. I sometimes wish that I had never used even this; for the memory loves to be trusted, and the more fully it is relied upon the more does it respond to our confidence. The preachers who can entirely dispense with notes must be few; but, if their preaching is up to the mark, they are happy men. Some go on crutches, and read almost all the sermon; this, as a rule, must be a lame business. The most of us need to carry a staff, even if we do not often lean upon it. The perfectly able man requires nothing of the kind. I am not one of these first-class brethren; "with my staff have I crossed this Jordan," and I hereby lend it to any who feel that they can pursue their journey by its aid.

Added to my sermon notes are certain pieces of my own, or extracts from the works of others, which are intended to brighten up the sermon. An anecdote or illustration throws a little color into a discourse and wins attention; but the ones for whom this book is mainly meant do not know where to find the anecdote or simile, and are as much in need of help in this direction as in the division of the subject. I had not proceeded far before I found that this additional work involved great toil, and it was a glad relief to me when I met with an invaluable assistant in Pastor W. H. J. Page, of Chelsea. I am glad to acknowledge his aid, most lovingly rendered: it has not made me give less of my own, but it has enabled me to fill up where nothing original presented itself to me. As we pour a little water down a pump to help it to draw up a stream from below, so may My Sermon Notes refresh many a jaded mind, and then set it working so as to develop its own resources. May the Holy Spirit use these outlines for the help of his busy servants. To him shall be all the praise, and to his Church the profit. What are we without him? What is impossible to us when he is with us? May those brethren who use this small selection of topics enjoy the Lord's presence in so doing.

C. H. Spurgeon Westwood, October, 1884

 

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