DAILY PRAYER (BY SPURGEON)
Help us to love Christ intensely, to love the souls of men most heartily, to love your truth with earnestness, to love the name of Jesus above everything. May we be ravished with the sound of it. Give us to have every grace, not only love, but faith, and hope, and holy gentleness, meekness, patience, brotherly love. Build us up, we pray, Lord, in all knowledge, and in all experience, and give us with this submission to your will, holy resignation, great watchfulness, much carefulness in our speech, that we may rule the tongue, and so rule the whole body.
Amen.
VERSE OF THE DAY (COMMENTARY BY SPURGEON)
The kings of the earth say… “Let’s tear off their chains and throw their ropes off of us.” (Psalm 2:3)
Earth loves not her rightful monarch, but clings to the usurper’s sway: the terrible conflicts of the last days will illustrate both the world’s love of sin and the Lord’s power to give the kingdom to his only Begotten. To a graceless neck the yoke of Christ is intolerable, but to the saved sinner it is easy and light. We may judge ourselves by this, do we love that yoke, or do we wish to cast it from us?
RECOMMENDED RESOURCE
FREE Seminary Class: Paul’s Letters with Patrick Schreiner*
Every book of the New Testament — the four Gospels, the letters, and even Revelation — point us to the glory of Jesus, crucified for sinners and risen from the dead. What a blessed book for deep study!
Studying the New Testament in depth is always a useful activity, because we haven’t yet seen all the glories of Jesus that it reveals.
Recently, I’ve been really loving Patrick Schreiner’s New Testament 2 class from Midwestern Seminary. This class covers all of Paul’s Letters (Romans–Philemon).
The best part? This class is available 100% FOR FREE!
If you sign up at the link in my bio, you can get complete access to this incredible class, know your Bible better, and love Jesus more — all for free.
I can’t wait to hear about all the wonderful things that God does in your life as you dive deeper into his Word using this free resource.
Click here to get started with this FREE seminary-level course.