Digital Logos Edition
Spurgeon Commentary: 2 Thessalonians collects Charles Spurgeon’s thoughts on 2 Thessalonians in a commentary format, along with sermon illustrations and applications. Illustrations are indexed by theme, enabling you to quickly find a fitting observation, whether you’re searching by topic or verse. Updated language brings greater clarity to the teachings of Spurgeon, allowing you to better understand and apply his rich insights into the story of the 2 Thessalonians.
The print edition of Spurgeon Commentary: 2 Thessalonians is included in a collected volume with 2 Timothy and Titus.
Benefit from the incredible wisdom of Charles Spurgeon, passage by passage. Spurgeon’s writings on the Bible fill dozens of volumes; his thoughts on particular passages are scattered across numerous books and sermons. The Spurgeon Commentary series makes Spurgeon’s biblical reflections accessible—there’s no longer a need to comb through many volumes looking for one nugget of wisdom. Spurgeon’s writings are now curated in a format that is tied directly to the biblical text.
The Logos Bible Software editions of the Spurgeon Commentary series are enriched with relevant details that integrate these valuable features of Logos Bible Software. Use Spurgeon’s application-oriented content in your sermons—it’s clearly labeled. Find great illustrations with hand-curated tags to preaching themes, making them searchable in Logos’ Sermon Starter Guide. Take advantage of Charles Spurgeon’s in-depth research to better understand, apply, and illustrate the Bible.
The Spurgeon Commentary series helps you swim through the vast sea of Spurgeon’s sermons by compiling and organizing his brilliant sermons into a commentary. I hope more preachers, teachers, and students of God’s word will read and reap from the spiritual treasures overflowing in these Spurgeon commentaries. If you want more Christ-exalting, joy-inducing, text-illuminating comments on the Scriptures—stock up on Spurgeon.
—J. A. Medders, author and preacher of Christ
I am thrilled with the Spurgeon Commentary series by Lexham Press. The late Charles Spurgeon was perhaps one of the finest nineteenth-century preachers of the biblical text and his insights are pure gold.
—Nate Pickowicz, teaching pastor, Harvest Bible Church, Gilmanton Iron Works, New Hampshire; author of How to Eat Your Bible
Charles Haddon Spurgeon remains one of the greatest and most influential communicators of the word of God in history, and yet, he never wrote a commentary. To see his thoughts on a particular text during my sermon preparation is both immensely valuable and a profound privilege. I utilize the Spurgeon Commentary series every time I tackle a passage that Spurgeon has covered.
—R. G. Colpitts, lead pastor, Swift Creek Baptist Church, Colonial Heights, Virginia
“I will only further say upon this point that a Christian may expect to grow in faith the more troubles he has. You, as Christians, must have your stormy times and your rainy days if you are to bring forth the flowers of grace and the fruit of the Spirit. You will probably grow more in the cloudy and dark day of adversity than you will while the sun of prosperity is shining brightly upon you. So be of good courage under the most adverse circumstances, for they are working for your lasting good.” (Page 24)
“Paul held that it was consistent to expect the Lord to come quickly, and yet to know that certain events must occur before He did come. That is just the condition, I think, to which a man’s mind will come if he diligently and impartially reads the Scriptures, especially the prophetic parts of them. The Lord will come in such an hour as we do not think, yet there are clear indications of certain things that are to happen before He does come.” (Page 31)
“To destroy the wicked is a matter of necessity in which His spirit takes no delight, for He does this, according to the text, not so much when He comes to do it as when He shall come with another object, namely, ‘To be glorified on that day in his saints and to be marveled at among all who believe.’” (Page 14)
“Most men would see others better if their own eyes were clearer. When a man honestly feels that his fellow Christians are for the most part much better than himself, and that he would willingly sit at the feet of many of them, then he is himself in a healthy state.” (Page 22)
Charles Haddon Spurgeon (1834–1892) began preaching at the New Park Street Chapel in London at nineteen years of age. He gained instant fame, becoming known as the “prince of preachers.” The congregation grew during his pastorate from two hundred members to more than five thousand, moving to the Metropolitan Tabernacle in 1861. Many of Spurgeon’s sermons were published each week and regularly sold more than twenty-five thousand copies in twenty languages. Spurgeon also founded the Pastor’s College (now Spurgeon’s College), various orphanages and schools, mission chapels, and numerous other social institutions.