April 10 | Morning
3 min
•Apr 10, 20269 days agoSummary
Charles Spurgeon reflects on Calvary and the crucifixion as the ultimate source of spiritual comfort and understanding of divine love. He contrasts the darkness of Christ's death with the profound consolation it provides to believers, arguing that true knowledge of God's love can only be found through contemplating the cross.
Insights
- Spiritual comfort paradoxically emerges from witnessing suffering and sacrifice rather than from joyful or peaceful moments
- Understanding divine love requires engaging with difficult theological truths, not just everyday blessings or surface-level faith
- The crucifixion serves as the interpretive lens through which all other religious experiences and mercies gain their deepest meaning
- Personal spiritual crises (Gethsemane, Golgotha) become transformative sources of consolation when properly understood
Trends
Emphasis on suffering and sacrifice as pathways to spiritual understanding rather than avoidance of painIntegration of emotional and intellectual engagement with religious doctrineUse of natural imagery and sensory metaphors to explain abstract theological concepts
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Charles Spurgeon
Delivers morning devotional reflection on Calvary and the crucifixion as source of spiritual comfort
Quotes
"The hill of comfort is the hill that is called the Skull, or Calvary. The house of consolation is built with the wood of the cross."
Charles Spurgeon
"No scene in sacred history ever gladdens the soul like Calvary's tragedy."
Charles Spurgeon
"We never would have known Christ's love in all its heights and depths if he had not died."
Charles Spurgeon
"If you want to know love, then go afresh to Calvary, And see the man of Sorrows die."
Charles Spurgeon
Full Transcript