Click here to go to the Mimico-by-the-Lake.com home page. To build your business in Mimico-by-the-Lake, Mimico, Mimico Village, Etobicoke, Mississauga, New Toronto, Longbranch Village, Long Branch, Markham, Scarborough, North York, Markham, Willowdale, Rexdale, Islington, Thornhill, Richmond Hill, Downsview, Forest Hill, Rosedale, King City,on the Toronto lakeshore, downtown Toronto, northern Toronto, metro Toronto, Southwest Ontario, or with residents and businesses on the Lakeshore with Mimico-by-the-Lake.Com's proven pulling powe, and for a listing for your buisness or to advertise on Mimico-by-the-Lake.Com, call JKW Media Consulting at 416-521 9634 or 416-253 1345

colorbar divider

Home : Mimico History : Retail Stores and Merchants : Fast Food Outlets : Banks : Postal Outlet : Library : Travel Agents : Bars and Restaurants : Medical and Dental : Professional Services : Community and Service Organizations : Churches : Schools : Motels : Condominims and Townhouses : Apartment Buildings : Cleaning and Maid Services : Funeral Homes : Dry Cleaners and Laundromats : Gas Stations and Auto Repair : Driving Schools : Daycare Services : Sailing and Powerboating : Sail Makers and Boat Sales : Mimico-by-the-Lake B.I.A. : Bus and Streetcar Services : Parks and Recreation : Community Events : Community News : Search for Bestselling Products : Save with these fine Internet Stores and Companies : Advertise on this site : Top 30 pages on this site : Site Map

colorbar divider

Creat Christian sermons and writings, from Mimico-by-the-Lake.Com, serving homes, apartment buildings, condo buildings, townhouses, businesses, companies, residents, retail stores, office buildings, and churches in Mimico-by-the-Lake, Mimico, Mimico Village, Etobicoke, and Mississauga, and from TorontoChristianBooks.Com, the home page of Toronto Christian Book Centre, your single source for Christian books, Christian music, Christian videos, and Christian DVDs.

colorbar divider

'Charles Haddon Spurgeon'

By W. Y. Fullerton

Chapter 18

'Two Importunate Questions'

In review of Spurgeon's influential life two questions arise and insist on an answer. First, What was the secret of Mr. Spurgeon's success? Second, Things being as they were, why did he not found a new denomination?

Let us take the second question first. If Spurgeon has not left behind him a body of Spurgeonites, it is not because the idea never occurred to him, nor because he lacked the opportunity of founding a sect; not because occasion did not arise when such a coterie seemed inevitable, nor that he was without prompting to establish it. In view of the peculiar position he occupied in relation to the ecclesiastical organisation of his day, and the extent of his following, it is surprising that he resisted the pressure, both from within and from without, toward the embodiment of his spirit in a church order all his own.

Considering that 1226 students had been trained in the college up to the outbreak of World War I, and that many of these were pioneers, often organising churches in new districts, it would have been comparatively easy to have formed them into a distinct regiment in the church of Christ, especially as at the beginning Spurgeon's men were looked upon with some coldness, not to say suspicion, even among the Baptists to whom they were attached.

That some thought of organising his men into a body was in his mind, even in the early years, is evident by a reference in a letter to his first student, written probably in 1866: "I hope to see all our churches in one host. The time approaches for the formation of a distinct body or confederation. We will fill the nation with the Gospel, and then send our armies out the world over. Big words, but written in faith in a great God."[1]

When Spurgeon in later years withdrew from the Baptist Union, it seemed almost inevitable that he would attempt to realise his early dream. The thought and hope of many people at the time were voiced in the following paragraph:

"Dr. Dale may be more intellectual, Dr. Maclaren more eloquent, and Dr. Parker more eccentric, but, for a variety of reasons, Mr. Spurgeon's personality looms bigger on the horizon than any of his contemporaries. Now that he has ceased to belong to the Baptist Union, he will feel that it is more than ever his duty to use plain words about solemn truths. His secession is condemned by those who differ from him, but has he lost a single member of his congregation? Spurgeon may not endeavor to bring into existence a new sect: he cannot help his followers calling themselves by his name. Spurgeonism will have no infancy and no childhood, it starts in the vigor of manhood; and bearing in mind its origin, it would not be rash to predict that it will supplant the creed it repudiates, for there is no room in the constitution of Nonconformist organization for Catholic theologians."[2]
On June 1, 1868, at the Stockwell Orphanage, where there was so great a gathering that a ton of bread was cut up for the visitors, Mr. Spurgeon said:
"I have often been suspected of sinister designs. A little time ago I was talking to a brother who himself told me the reasons why he used to dislike me. He said he was afraid, for one reason, that I was going to start a new denomination. "Well," I said, "I could have done it had I liked, could I not?" "Undoubtedly," was the answer, "and many would have followed you." "But I did not do it." The thought of doing such a thing might have been pleasing to human flesh, but I consider that there are sects enough without making another."[3]
There can be no doubt that if after his "down-grade" protest he had had inclination and vigour enough to come out into the open and call people to his own standard, there would have been a large response, not only from the Baptists but from all evangelical denominations, including Anglicans, and many of those called Brethren would probably have joined too. He must have been strongly tempted to make the venture. But he maintained his charity and sanity on the subject.

Here are some words of his, uttered in the very thick of conflict:

"Why not found a new denomination? It is a question for which I have no liking. There are denominacions enough, in my opinion, and if there is a new denomination formed, the thieves and robbers who have entered other gardens walled around would climb into it also, and nothing would be gained. Besides, the expedient is not needed among churches which are each self-governing and self-determining; such churches can find their own affinities without difficulty, and can keep their own coasts clear of invaders. Oh, that the day would come when, in a larger communion than any sect can offer, all those who are one in Christ may be able to blend in perfect unity! This can only be by way of growing spiritual life, clearer light upon the more eternal truth, and a closer cleaving to Him who is the Head, even jesus Christ."[4]
All the time, even when he withdrew from some of his brethren, his heart was crying out for fellowship with all the saints. He never was a sectarian, scarcely even a denominationalist. The great increase in the body of Baptists during his lifetime was due chiefly to his influence, but always his sympathies reached far beyond that church. It was a singular irony that he who loved all who loved Christ in sincerity should find himself at last isolated from those who were nearest to him. That was the iron that entered into his soul.

"There is no word," he wrote long before, "so hateful to our heart as Spurgeonism: no thought further from our soul than attempting to form a new sect. We preach no new Gospel, desire no new objects. We love the truth better than any sect, and are in open unison with the great body of Baptists because not able to endure isolation. 'Let my name perish, but let Christ's name endure for ever,' said George Whitefield, and so has Charles Spurgeon said a hundred times."[5] The way was open for him to follow John Wesley, and he had the opportunity and ability to take it, but he deliberately chose the way of George Whitefield, his hero from earliest days; and though Whitefield's name is not borne by any Church, his influence, especially among the Calvinistic Methodists of Wales and among the Presbyterians of America, is probably as lasting as Wesley's; Spurgeon's influence, too, not only among the Baptists, but in the evangelical ranks of all the churches, will endure forever. He greatens with the years.

What, then, was the secret of his success? I have asked the question of many, and the most remarkable answer was given by Sir William Robertson Nicoll. He must often have asked it of himself, for without an instant's hesitation he answered: "The Holy Ghost." That is inclusive and all-sufficient. Spurgeon was not alone. "The Lord was with Joseph, and he was a prosperous man," we read, or, as Tyndale puts it, "he was a luckie fellow." That, too, is the explanation of Spurgeon's achievements. And if he was the fit and chosen instrument for God, we must believe that he was raised up at the right moment and trained in the best way for the work he had to do; that God, who was with him from his infancy, chose also his heredity, and endowed him with the powers and grace that fitted him for his task.

Spurgeon himself ascribed his success not so much to his preaching of the Gospel as to the Gospel he had to preach. To him it was the truth that prevailed, but, then, others preached the same truth without the same success, so there must be added reasons for the result in Spurgeon's case. Often he said that the reason of the blessing was "My people pray for me," but, then, other churches pray for their pastors too.

The silvery voice has again and again been credited with the drawing power of the preacher. It suited him perfectly, it was a trumpet, clear, startling, arresting--not a violin. But opinion was not unanimous even on this subject. "In point of compass and richness, the voice of Mr. Spurgeon is not to be mentioned," says an early writer, "in comparison with that of Mr. James of Birmingham, or with that of Dr. Raffles; and to compare his power in this way with that of the late agitator, O'Connell, would indeed be to compare small things with great. It is a comparatively level voice. So that, while Mr. Spurgeon has made the pulpit more attractive than any living man, he has done so by means of a voice which can scarcely be called oratorical."[6]

Another early critic who set himself to fathom the problem said:

"If I cannot discover the secret of your popularity in what you preach, can I find it in any peculiarity in your mode of preaching? Here is, in my judgment, the explanation of the secret. You have strong faith, and, as a result, intense earnestness. In this lies, as in the hair of Samson, the secret of your power."[7]
Years afterward another observer stumbled on the same explanation: "Mr. Spurgeon's most striking characteristic was in his extraordinary earnestness. It is not for nothing nowadays that one meets a man so desperately in earnest as he is."[8]

Still another wrote: "One who is as great a teacher with his pen as Mr. Spurgeon is with his tongue has told us 'that there is no substitute for thoroughgoing, ardent, and sincere earnestness.' Spurgeon's earnestness was indeed Zeal, and there were many in those early days who called him Zealot, and questioned the sincerity of such apparently consuming ardour."

"Were we asked to give in half a dozen words the secret of Mr. Spurgeon's commanding influence over the hearts of men," says another, "we should attribute it first to his courage and earnestness, and secondly to his practical common sense."[9]

The leading English newspaper said:

"Mr. Spurgeon's art was to put old truths into a new dress, or to present them in a new form, in which they were more likely to come home to the apprehension and to the hearts of his hearers. In all this his want of learning was in one way a distinct advantage to him. His range of view was narrowed by it, but his standing ground was more secure."[10]
With equal confidence another verdict is given:
"Undoubtedly the great secret of Mr. Spurgeon's success has been his utter indifference to popularity, combined with manly sincerity, and the genius for commanding an audience."[11]
An interviewer has added another quality to the list:
"He might be a great orator--one could almost detect that by the music in his voice and the play of his mouth, even if we had not known it before--but I judged that it was his inestimable quality of good-fellowship, as well as his greatness as a preacher and philanthropist, that had won him such wide-spread affection and regard."[12]
"What was the secret of this great man's success in life?" asks 'The Speaker', and gave the following answer:
"Unquestionably the foundation of Mr. Spurgeon's success was his wonderful gift as a preacher. Some are inclined to belittle his oratorical powers. It can only be because they have not themselves been "under the wand of the magician"--of its own kind there was nothing to equal it in the pulpit of any church in the land.

But other churches have had preachers of an eloquence hardly inferior to that of Mr. Spurgeon. How comes it that they never won the hearts of the people of Great Britain as he did? Canon Liddon's name occurs so naturally when we speak of pulpit eloquence; Bishop Alexander, Archbishop Magee, and many others might fairly have competed, so far as mere gifts of speech were concerned, with the pastor of the tabernacle.

Yet not one of them held his place in English life, or anything approaching to it. We mean no disrespect to these eminent men when we say that Mr. Spurgeon's triumph, his unrivaled success in holding the hearts of so large a body of his fellow countrymen, was distinctly a triumph of character. The British public had arrived at the conviction that he was absolutely sincere, simple, unpretending and straightforward.

In this triumph of personal character, and in one other feature of his life's work we may read the secret of his astonishing success. That other feature was the stern fidelity he showed, from first to last, to the Puritan creed of his forefathers. Never for a moment did he waver in the conviction that the truth he learned as a boy was everything. Is it wonderfu1 that when the old Puritanism was preached, not merely with eloquence, but with such genuine fervor of conviction, the preacher should have rallied round himself thousands, and scores of thousands, who found him the very champion and leader for whom they had long been hoping and praying? Narrow-minded, bigoted, crude, ignorant, all these terms of reproach were flung in turn at Mr. Spurgeon, and they hurt him no more than did the passing breeze.

Nor can those who knew him, and who knew his preaching, forget that, despite the stern fidelity which he showed to a creed that was no longer that of the world, he had a heart filled with love for his fellow-creatures, with compassion for the sinner, with the burning desire that when the end of all things had come, and the Great Account was closed, no human soul which had found itself moved by the Divine Spirit might fail of salvation. And with it all he was no priest. Never once were the sympathies of a priest-hating people rulled by the slightest assumption of spiritual authority on the part of their teacher."[13]

In all these estimates it is taken for granted that there was a secret to be discovered in Spurgeon's life. The thing was so inexplicable along ordinary lines, so different from that of ordinary people, and yet the product was so simple and inevitable that it is natural to ask if there was not behind it something occult and unusual.

I asked his son the secret, and he was inclined to ascribe it to the fact that he was always working, never off duty, putting all his powers under tribute to one end. That indeed is true. Here, for instance, is the record of a day as related by Mr. Spurgeon:

"Leaving home early in the morning, I went to the chapel, and sat there all day long, seeing those who had been brought to Christ by the preaching of the Word. Their stories were so interesting to me that the hours flew by without my noticing how fast they were going. I may have seen some thirty or more persons during the day, one after the other, and I was so delighted with the tales of mercy they had to tell me, and the wonders of grace God had wrought in them, that I did not know anything about how the time passed. At seven o'clock we had our prayer meeting. I went in and prayed with the brethren. After that came the church meeting. A little before ten I felt faint and I began to think at what hour I had my dinner, and I then for the first time remembered that I had not had any! I never thought of it. I never even felt hungry, because God had made me so glad."[14]
His friend, W. P. Lockhart of Liverpool, tells how he introduced him on one occasion to Mr. Alexander Balfour of the city. Mr. Balfour, sitting down beside him, said with that intensity of manner which always characterised him, "Mr. Spurgeon, I want to know how you get through the work you do. Tell me how you manage it."

Mr. Spurgeon, looking up with a smile, said: "I suppose you think that a man who works twelve hours a day can get through a good deal of work?"

"Yes," said Mr. Balfour.

"Well," said Spurgeon, "I work eighteen!"

"We can no more tell why Mr. Spurgeon was a great preacher than why Turner was so great a painter, Napoleon so great a general, or Pitt so great a statesman."[15]

"If you come to analyze the success of most men you cannot do it, for success defies analysis. It depends, primarily, of course, on a man's integrity and ability, but it is the little touches - what M. Thiers called the negligences - which make a picture complete."[16]

A sporting paper praised Mr. Spurgeon's voice, but added:
"Of course it is not enough to have a fine organ to discourse excellent music. You must have the music too, and this was supplied in Spurgeon's case by his bluff common sense, his humor, and his fluency of speech, combined with a faith that was almost childlike in its simplicity and freedom from guile. In Spurgeon's case one of the first circumstances prepossessing the auditor in his favor was that he had no Sunday voice."[17]
There is considerable divergence in these estimates of the man. On the human side the reasons assigned for his greatness are his voice, his faith, his earnestness, his courage, the novelty of his presentation, his indifference to popularity, his sincerity, his good fellowship, his character, his fidelity to Puritan doctrine, combined with love to the people and the absence of priestism, his powers of work and devotion to the task in hand, his common sense, his fluency of speech, his freedom from guile.

Which of them is right? None. Nor if we single out other qualities not named in the list shall we be any nearer the solution. It was not the possession of one outstanding characteristic which worked the miracle but the combination of all--and one other thing beside.

How often some brilliant endowment in a man is neutralised or weakened by the absence of some balancing characteristic. And how frequently a man of mediocre talents who holds them in poise succeeds where the man of outstanding genius fails. Once in a century there is given to us the balanced man of genius, the brilliant man who is a whole man, and then the world wonders. We may say it is this or that which accounts for his career. As a fact it is this, and that, and a dozen other things in combination, in proper proportion, in living unity, that create the wonderful result.

One newspaper wrote:

"We shall not again see the singular combination of qualities that made Mr. Spurgeon such a pioneer. His distinguishing traits were leonine courage, perfect sincerity, thorough conviction, and a manly determination to do the work that he specially felt himself called to."[18]
I quote again Mr. Spurgeon's friend, W. P. Lockhart, a man of lesser gifts but similar character:
"It was not his voice nor his fertility of illustration, the richness of his Bible knowledge nor the abundance of his Puritanic lore, his seerlike faculty nor his power to express in lusty Saxon exactly what was passing before his mind's eye, his mother wit (used as a servant, and never allowed to become a master), his lion-hearted boldness, nor his tearful tenderness. Not one of these, nor all of them put together, made him what he was."
"Nor all of them put together!" His neighbour, Dr. W. Wright of the Bible Society, says:
"Mr. Spurgeon had a marvelous combination of gifts which contributed to his greatness, a voice that you heard with pleasure and could not help hearing, a mind that absorbed all knowledge; whether from books or nature, that came within his range, an eye that took a wide angle and saw everything within view, a memory that he treated with confidence which never disappointed him, a great, large heart on fire with the love of God and the love of souls. And then he showed a practical common sense in doing things both sacred and secular, and a singleness of aim, joined with transparent honesty, that ensured the confidence of all who knew him. You could not help loving him if you came within his spell. But the chief secret of Mr. Spurgeon's power was his faith in the living God and in the power of His Gospel. He had as real a belief in the Gospel as a merchant has in his money."[19]
But he might have had all these and yet missed the mark.
"It is possible, say the men of science, to produce separately by chemical means every constituent of a glass of vintage port. The one thing science cannot do is to mix them so as to make a glass of port. Put them together and only a nauseous mess results. Some gifted human beings are as mysteriously deficient. There is a type of man who possesses most of the qualities of greatness, but lacks the one quality of all--the mysterious force that fuses them into a living whole. The Italian Eclectic school of painting illustrated this imperfect synthesis. It aimed at perfection by the apparently rational plan of combining all possible perfections. It strove at once for the fire of Michel Angelo, for the design of the Roman school, for the glowing color of Lombardy, the action and light and shade of the Venetians, for Correggio's grace and the symmetry of Raphael. It failed. The Caracci were, no doubt, great painters, but leagues behind the greatest."[20]
The great man is not an aggregation of qualities, however luminous or beautiful. He is, as we have seen, a living unity, and his great qualities are but the expression of something greater within.
"His life was gentle, and the elements
so mixed in him, that nature might stand up
And say to all the world, This was a man."
It is the living mixture that produces the result, and when, as in Spurgeon's case, there is added to the great gifts of nature the power of the Spirit of God dwelling within the man as in a holy temple, who can be surprised at the result, at once so natural, so singular, and so creative? It has been well said that "Spurgeon was born with the key to the heart of humanity in his hand."[21]

NOTES:

1. G. Holden Pike, Life and Work of C. H. Spurgeon, Vol. II, p. 363.
2. Figaro, Nov. 7, 1887.
3. Samuel Smiles, George Moore: Merchant and Philanthropist, p. 450.
4. Sword and Trowel, 1887, p. 560.
5. Christian Commonwealth, Feb. 4, 1892.
6. Review of the Churches, Vol. I, p. 349.
7. Pike, Life and Work of C. H. Spurgeon, Vol. II, p. 206.
8. Pictorial World, Feb. 6, 1892.
9. Daily Telegraph, Feb. 1, 1892.
10. The Times, Feb. 1, 1892.
11. Daily Chronicle, Jan. 1, 1879.
12. Christian World, Feb. 4, 1892.
13. The Speaker, Feb. 6, 1892.
14. Autobiography Vol. II, p.137.
15. Baptist, Feb. 11, 1892.
16. Daily News, Feb. 2, 1892.
17. Referee, Feb. 7, 1892.
18. Reynolds' Sunday Newspaper, Feb. 7, 1892.
19. British Weekly, Feb. 4, 1892
20. E. T. Raymond, All and Sundry, p. 27.
21. British Standard, March 4, 1864.

Return to 'Charles Haddon Spurgeon' biography Chapter Index

colorbar divider

We also warmly recommend these superb writings, "Holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord." by John Charles Ryle, "Bible Reading" by John Charles Ryle, and "A Call To Prayer" by John Charles Ryle, to our readers.

You'll also find a selection of J.C. Ryle's books further down on this page. They make for some of the most profitable, edifying, encouraging and uplifting Christian books available, and are classics which have stood the test of time!

If you appreciate the writings of the godly Bishop Ryle, you'll certainly delight in those of the great Charles Haddon Spurgeon, whose sermons were flashed around the world by telegraph and reprinted in full the following day in newspapers from New York City to Sydney, Australia! We particularly recommend "All of Grace", "Justification by Faith", "The Outpouring Of The Holy Spirit", and "A Revival Sermon".

And how could we adequately describe the preaching of the incomparable Dr. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, whose pulpit ministry in Britain had an effect felt around the world! We warmly recommend his sermons, "The Parable of the Prodigal Son", "God and Mammon", "The Light of the World", "The Salt of the Earth", "Jesus on Prayer". "The Call to Battle", and "A Living Hope of the Hereafter".

And for a moving witness to steadfast Christian faith under persecution, see "The Scottish Covenanters".

Click here for more Classic Christian Sermons and Writings

colorbar divider

Daily Devotionals

Begin and end your day with a devotional
from the classic 'Morning And Evening', by C.H. Spurgeon

Click here for 'Daily Light On The Daily Path'
- classic devotionals in the very words of Scripture.

A Worshipful Beginning And End To Every Day:
Morning Service, Evening Service And Compline
from the traditional Book of Common Prayer

Read the Gospel of John for yourself on-line
- the evidence of an eye-witness!

colorbar divider

Bestselling Christian Books by, and on, Charles Hadden Spurgeon ['C.H. Spurgeon'] from Toronto Christian Book Centre, your single source for  Christian Bibles, Christian books, Christian music, Christian videos, Christian children's books, Christian computer software, and Christian DVDs, serving global customers online from Toronto, Ontario, Canada

colorbar divider

We have provided in the box below a live, continually-updated listing of the current bestselling books on this topic at Amazon.com. Please click on any of these titles to read extracts from, or reviews of, these books. You can also place an order for any of themt at the same time with Amazon.Com, if you wish, and enjoy speedy delivery plus the low Amazon.Com price!

Current daily devotional bestsellers:

For additional Christian book, Bible, music, video and children's book
bestsellers, please go further down this page.

Amazon.com also recommends and has available these bestsellers on, and by, Charles Haddon Spurgeon:

colorbar divider

Bestselling Christian Books by John Charles Ryle ['Bishop J.C. Ryle'] plus 'Shall We Know One Another and Other Papers' by John Charles Ryle, 'Holiness Its Nature, Hindrances, Difficulties, and Roots' by J C Ryle, 'Old Paths' by John Charles Ryle, 'Knots Untied' by John Charles Ryle, 'Practical Religion' by John Charles Ryle, 'A Call To Prayer' by J C Ryle, 'Thoughts for Young Men' by John Charles Ryle, 'How Readest Thou' by J C Ryle,.'The Christian Leaders of the Last Century' by John Charles Ryle, 'Faithfulness and Holiness The Witness of J. C. Ryle An Appreciation'  by Dr J I Packer, 'The Christian Race and Other Sermons Vol 3' by John Charles Ryle, 'Shall We Know One Another and Other Papers' by John Charles Ryle

colorbar divider

We warmly recommend the following books by J. C. Ryle:

Holiness: Its Nature, Hindrances, Difficulties, and Roots by J. C. Ryle"Holiness: Its Nature, Hindrances, Difficulties, and Roots" - J. C. Ryle

Old Paths by John Charles Ryle"Old Paths" - John Charles Ryle

Knots Untied - John Charles Ryle"Knots Untied" - John Charles Ryle

Practical Religion by John Charles Ryle"Practical Religion" - John Charles Ryle

A Call To Prayer - John Charles Ryle"A Call To Prayer" - John Charles Ryle

Thoughts for Young Men by John Charles Ryle"Thoughts for Young Men" - John Charles Ryle

How Readest Thou? by J. C. Ryle"How Readest Thou?" - John Charles Ryle

The Christian Leaders of the Last Century
by John Charles Ryle"The Christian Leaders of the Last Century" - John Charles Ryle

Faithfulness and Holiness: The Witness of J. C. Ryle: An Appreciation
 by Dr. J. I. Packer"Faithfulness and Holiness: The Witness of J. C. Ryle: An Appreciation" - Dr. J. I. Packer

The Christian Race and Other Sermons Vol.3 by John Charles Ryle"The Christian Race and Other Sermons Vol.3" - John Charles Ryle

Shall We Know One Another and Other Papers by John Charles Ryle"Shall We Know One Another and Other Papers" -John Charles Ryle

colorbar divider

We have provided in the box below a live, continually-updated listing of the current bestselling books on Sanctification at Amazon.com. Please click on any of these titles to read extracts from, or reviews of, these books. You can also place an order for any of themt at the same time with Amazon.Com, if you wish, and enjoy speedy delivery plus the low Amazon.Com price!

Current bestsellers on Sanctification:

Amazon.com also recommends and has available these bestsellers on Holiness:
[click on 'refresh' if you don't see books in the Amazon.com box below]

For additional Christian book, Bible, music, video and children's book
bestsellers, please go further down this page.

Amazon.com also has available these bestsellers on, and by, Charles Haddon Spurgeon:
[click on 'refresh' if you don't see books in the Amazon.com box below]

We also recommend:

Current Bestselling Christian Books

Current Bestselling Christian DVDs

Current Bestselling Christian Music

Current Bestselling Christian Software

Select from these superb Electronic Bibles!

Click here for a full range of C.H. Spurgeon titles!

Click here for all of Charles Haddon Spurgeon's current bestsellers!

Current Bestselling Christian Books By Subject

See our 'Bestselling Christian Books, Updated Hourly' page

See our 'Bestselling Christian Music, Updated Hourly' page

See our 'Bestselling Christian DVDs, Updated Hourly' page

Search for Bestsellers in Every Product Category

Christian Hymns, Psalms, and Gregorian Chant

Click here for an Index of your Favourite Christian Hymns and Psalms

You'll enjoy these classic Christian Hymns and Psalms recordings, too:

Click here for more Hymns, Psalms and Benedictine Chant recordings

colorbar divider

Click on the covers below to review or order these bestsellers on the Passion of Christ:

Click here to review or to order 'The Passion of Christ' (movie soundtrack), by John Debney Click here to review or to order 'The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ', by Anne Catherine Emmerich Click here to review or to order 'The Passion: Photography from the Movie the Passion of the Christ', by Mel Gibson Click here to review or to order 'The Life and Passion of Jesus Christ / From the Manger to the Cross' DVD Click here to review or to order 'The Topical Bible Series The Passion - The Last Days of Christ' VHS Click here to review or to order 'Jesus of Nazareth'
DVD

colorbar divider

Click on the banner below for video and DVD bestsellers on the Life of Christ:

Click here for VHS and DVD Bestsellers on the Life and Passion of Jesus Christ, from your single source for Christian books, Christian music, Christian videos, and Christian DVDs.

Amazon.com also has these bestsellers on the Life and Passion of Jesus:
[click on 'refresh' if you don't see video titles in the Amazon.com box below]

Can't find the title you want on our site? If you'd like to easily and quickly search for the availability of particular titles yourself, please click on the Amazon.com button below and type the title and/or author's name in the search box on the Amazon.com home page.

In Association with Amazon.com

colorbar divider

Interested in finding specific Christian book, music or video titles?
Search for them here by title, keyword, author, or artist...

Search by keywords:
In Association with Amazon.com

colorbar divider

Take advantage of Amazon.com's remarkable discounts to build your own
Christian book, music, video, DVD, Biblical reference and commentary library!

Save even more by applying for an Amazon.com Platinum VisaŽ Card!
Click on the banner below for more information.

For additional related titles recommended by, and available from, Amazon.com, check the 'bestseller' boxes below.

colorbar divider

Amazon.com also recommends and has available these fine Christian books...

Amazon.com also recommends and has available these superb Christian Bibles...

Amazon.com also has available these excellent Christian Bibles, too...

Amazon.com also recommends and has available this bestselling Christian music...

Amazon.com also recommends and has available these popular Christian videos...

Amazon.com also has available these popular Christian children's books...

Current bestselling Children's Bibles and Bible Story Books...

Current bestsellers for the Christian Woman and on Christian Womanhood...

Amazon.com also recommends and has available these bestsellers for Christian Women:

Recommended As Additional Reading:
[click on the book covers below]

Click here to review or to order 'All the Women of the Bible' by Edith Deen Click here to review or to order 'All the Women of the Bible' by Herbert Lockyer Click here to review or to order 'Old Testament Women' by Elaine Ward Click here to review or to order 'Having a Mary Heart in a Martha World: Finding Intimacy With God in the Busyness of Life (Revised Edition with New Bible Study)' by Joanna Weaver Click here to review or to order 'Women of the Bible' by Ann Spangler Click here to review or to order 'The Story of Ruth: Twelve Moments in Every Woman's Life' by Joan D. Chittister

Click here to review or to order 'Bad Girls of the Bible and What We Can Learn from Them' by Liz Curtis Higgs Click here to review or to order 'Really Bad Girls of the Bible: More Lessons from Less-Than-Perfect Women' by Liz Curtis Higgs Click here to review or to order 'The Remarkable Women of the Bible Growth: And Their Message for Your Life Today' by Elizabeth George Click here to review or to order 'Kindred Sisters: New Testament Women Speak to Us Today: A Book for Meditation and Reflection' by Dandi Daley MacKall Click here to review or to order 'Soul Sisters: Women in Scripture Speak to Women Today' by Edwina Gateley Click here to review or to order 'Every Woman In The Bible Everything In The Bible Series' by Larry Richards

Click here to review or to order 'Beautiful in God's Eyes' by Elizabeth George Click here to review or to order 'A Woman After God's Own Heart' by Elizabeth George Click here to review or to order 'A Young Woman After God's Own Heart: A Teen's Guide to Friends, Faith, Family, and the Future' by Elizabeth George Click here to review or to order 'Loving God With All Your Mind' by Elizabeth George Click here to review or to order 'A Woman's High Calling' by Elizabeth George Click here to review or to order 'Life Management for Busy Women: Living Out God's Plan With Passion and Purpose' by Elizabeth George

Click here to review or to order 'God's Wisdom for a Woman's Life: Timeless Principles for Your Every Need' by Elizabeth George Click here to review or to order 'Powerful Promises for Every Woman: 12 Life-Changing Truths from Psalms 23' by Elizabeth George Click here to review or to order 'A Woman's Walk With God' by Elizabeth George Click here to review or to order 'A Wife After God's Own Heart' by Elizabeth George Click here to review or to order 'Women Who Loved God' by Elizabeth George Click here to review or to order 'Encouraging Words for a Woman After God's Own Heart' by Elizabeth George

Click here to review or to order 'Disciplines Of The Beautiful Woman' by Anne Ortlund Click here to review or to order 'The Gentle Ways Of The Beatiful Woman' by Anne Ortlund Click here to review or to order 'Fix Your Eyes on Jesus' by Anne Ortlund Click here to review or to order 'Fearlessly Feminine' by Jani Ortlund Click here to review or to order 'Building A Great Marriage' by Elizabeth A Ortlund Click here to review or to order 'I Want to See You, Lord' by Anne Ortlund

Click here to review or to order 'Children Are Wet Cement' by Anne Ortlund Click here to review or to order 'After Every Wedding Comes a Marriage' by Florence Littauer Click here to review or to order 'How to Get Along With Difficult People' by Florence Littauer Click here to review or to order 'Getting Along With Almost Anybody: The Complete Personality Book' by Florence Littauer Click here to review or to order 'Daughters of Eve: Women of the Bible Speak to Women of Today' by Virginia Stem Owens Click here to review or to order 'You Can Be the Wife of a Happy Husband' by Darien B. Cooper

Click here to review or to order 'How to Be the Happy Wife of an Unsaved Husband' by Linda Davis Click here to review or to order 'Beloved Unbeliever' by Jo Berry Click here to review or to order 'When He Doesn't Believe: Help and Encouragement for Women Who Feel Alone in Their Faith' by Nancy Kennedy Click here to review or to order 'When a Believer Marries a Nonbeliever: How to Grow Together in Love, Faith, and Joy' by Bebe Nicholson Click here to review or to order 'Surviving a Spiritual Mismatch in Marriage' by Lee Strobel Click here to review or to order 'The Power of a Praying Wife' by Stormie Omartian

Click here to review or to order 'The Excellent Wife: A Biblical Perspective' by Martha Peace Click here to review or to order 'What Makes a Man Feel Loved' by Bob Barnes Click here to review or to order 'Fascinating Womanhood' by Helen Andelin Click here to review or to order 'Me? Obey Him?: The Obedient Wife and God's Way of Happiness and Blessing in the Home' by Elizabeth Rice Handford Click here to review or to order 'Liberated Through Submission' by Bunny Wilson Click here to review or to order 'Finding the Hero in Your Husband: Surrendering the Way God Intended' by Julianna Slattery

Click here to review or to order 'Becoming a Woman of Passion: Discover the Joyous Woman God Created You to Be' by Carole Gift Page Click here to review or to order 'Healing for Damaged Emotions' by David A. Seamands Click here to review or to order 'Healing Your Heart Of Painful Emotions' by David Seamands Click here to review or to order 'Boundaries' by Henry Cloud Click here to review or to order 'Becoming the Woman I Want to Be' by Donna Partow Click here to review or to order 'Becoming a Woman of Influence: Making a Lasting Impact on Others' by Carol Kent

Click here to review or to order 'Woman of Influence: Ten Traits of Those Who Want to Make a Difference' by Pam Farrel Click here to review or to order 'More Than Rubies: Becoming a Woman of Godly Influence' by Debra White Smith Click here to review or to order 'Measure of a Woman' by Gene A. Getz Click here to review or to order 'Intimate Faith: A Woman's Guide to the Spiritual Disciplines' by Jan Winebrenner Click here to review or to order 'A Woman's Search for Worth' by Deborah Newman Click here to review or to order 'The Power of a Praying Woman' by Stormie Omartian

Click here to review or to order 'Holy Listening: The Art of Spiritual Direction' by Margaret Guenther Click here to review or to order 'The Friendships of Women' by Dee Brestin Click here to review or to order 'Treasured Friends: Finding and Keeping True Friendships' by Ann Hibbard Click here to review or to order 'Friendship Factor: How to Get Closer to the People You Care For' by Alan Loy McGinnis Click here to review or to order 'Bringing Out the Best in People: How to Enjoy Helping Others Excel' by Alan Loy McGinnis Click here to review or to order 'Confidence: How to Succeed at Being Yourself' by Alan Loy McGinnis

Click here to review or to order 'And the Bride Wore White: The Seven Secrets to Sexual Purity' by Dannah Gresh Click here to review or to order 'The Seven Secrets to Sexual Purity' by Dannah Gresh Click here to review or to order 'Pursuing the Pearl: The Quest for a Pure, Passionate Marriage' by Dannah Gresh Click here to review or to order 'Passion and Purity: Learning to Bring Your Love Life Under Christ's Control' by Elisabeth Elliot Click here to review or to order 'Quest for Love: True Stories of Passion and Purity' by Elisabeth Elliot Click here to review or to order 'A Passion for Purity: Protecting God's Precious Gift of Virginity' by Carla A. Stephens

Click here to review or to order 'Lady in Waiting: Developing Your Love Relationships' by Jackie Kendall Click here to review or to order 'Wait For Me: Rediscovering the Joy of Purity in Romance' by Rebecca St. James Click here to review or to order 'What to Do Until Love Finds You: Preparing Yourself for Your Perfect Mate' by Michelle McKinney-Hammond Click here to review or to order 'A Good Man Is Hard To Find Unless You Ask God To Be Head Of Your Search Committee' by Jo Lynne Pool Click here to review or to order 'Secrets of an Irresistible Woman' by Michelle McKinney-Hammond Click here to review or to order 'When God Writes Your Love Story' by Eric Ludy

Click here to review or to order 'The Single Path: To a Promise Fulfilled' by Julia Scott Click here to review or to order 'Authentic Beauty: the shaping of a set-apart young woman' by Leslie Ludy Click here to review or to order 'Relationships' by Les Parrott Click here to review or to order 'Relationships That Work: (And Those That Don'T)' by H. Norman Wright Click here to review or to order '1st Class Single' by Cheryl Martin Click here to review or to order 'Single Men Are Like Waffles--Single Women Are Like Spaghetti: Friendship, Romance, and Relationships That Work' by Bill Farrel

Click here to review or to order 'Let's Just Be Friends: Recovering from a Broken Relationship' by H. Norman Wright Click here to review or to order 'True Love in a World of False Hope: Sex, Romance, & Real People' by Robbie Castleman Click here to review or to order 'Love Hangover: Tips for Christian Singles: Moving from Pain to Purpose After a Relationship Ends' by Shewanda Riley Click here to review or to order 'Falling in Love With Jesus: Abandoning Yourself to the Greatest Romance of Your Life (Workbook edition)' by Dee Brestin Click here to review or to order 'Calm My Anxious Heart: A Woman's Guide to Contentment' by Linda Dillow Click here to review or to order 'Lies Women Believe: And the Truth that Sets Them Free' by Nancy Leigh DeMoss

Click here to review or to order 'Healing the Wounded Spirit' by John Sandford Click here to review or to order 'Battlefield of the Mind: Winning the Battle in Your Mind' by Joyce Meyer Click here to review or to order 'The Bondage Breaker' by Neil T. Anderson Click here to review or to order 'The Three Battlegrounds' by Francis Frangipane Click here to review or to order 'Praying God's Word: Breaking Free From Spiritual Strongholds' by Beth Moore Click here to review or to order 'A Woman's Guide to Spiritual Warfare: A Woman's Guide for Battle' by Quin Sherrer

Click here to review or to order 'The Making of a Spiritual Warrior: A Woman's Guide to Daily Victory' by Quin Sherrer Click here to review or to order 'A Woman's Guide to Breaking Bondages' by Quin Sherrer Click here to review or to order 'A Woman's Guide to Spirit-Filled Living' by Quin Sherrer Click here to review or to order 'Lord, Only You Can Change Me: A Devotional Study on Growing in Character from the Beatitudes' by Kay Arthur Click here to review or to order 'Lord, I Want to Know You: A Devotional Study on the Names of God' by Kay Arthur Click here to review or to order 'Lord, Give Me a Heart for You : A Devotional Study on Having a Passion for God' by Kay Arthur

Click here to review or to order 'How to Study Your Bible' by Kay Arthur Click here to review or to order 'Lord, Teach Me to Pray in 28 Days' by Kay Arthur Click here to review or to order 'Lord, I Need Grace to Make It Today: A Devotional Study on God's Power for Daily Living' by Kay Arthur Click here to review or to order 'As Silver Refined: Learning to Embrace Life's Disappointments' by Kay Arthur Click here to review or to order 'Lord, Heal My Hurts: A Devotional Study on God's Care and Deliverance' by Kay Arthur Click here to review or to order 'Lord, I'm Torn Between Two Masters: A Devotional Study on Genuine Faith from the Sermon on the Mount' by Kay Arthur

Click here to review or to order 'Sex According to God' by Kay Arthur Click here to review or to order 'Lord, Is It Warfare? Teach Me to Stand: A Devotional Study on Spiritual Victory' by Kay Arthur Click here to review or to order 'Search My Heart, O God 365 Appointments with God' by Kay Arthur Click here to review or to order 'God, Are You There?: Do You Care? Do You Know About Me' by Kay Arthur Click here to review or to order 'The Joy of Marriage God's Way' by Kay Arthur