

Morning and Evening with Charles Spurgeon
ClassicDevotionals.com
A daily devotional of Charles Spurgeon’s most beloved work—Morning and Evening.
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Oct 19, 2025 • 0sec
October 19th Evening
 “God, my Maker, who giveth songs in the night.” — Job 35:10 
Any man can sing in the day. When the cup is full, man draws inspiration from it. When wealth rolls in abundance around him, any man can praise the God who gives a plenteous harvest or sends home a loaded argosy. It is easy enough for an Aeolian harp to whisper music when the winds blow — the difficulty is for music to swell forth when no wind is stirring. It is easy to sing when we can read the notes by daylight; but he is skilful who sings when there is not a ray of light to read by — who sings from his heart. No man can make a song in the night of himself; he may attempt it, but he will find that a song in the night must be divinely inspired. Let all things go well, I can weave songs, fashioning them wherever I go out of the flowers that grow upon my path; but put me in a desert, where no green thing grows, and wherewith shall I frame a hymn of praise to God? How shall a mortal man make a…
crown for the Lord where no jewels are? Let but this voice be clear, and this body full of health, and I can sing God’s praise: silence my tongue, lay me upon the bed of languishing, and how shall I then chant God’s high praises, unless He Himself give me the song? No, it is not in man’s power to sing when all is adverse, unless an altar-coal shall touch his lip. It was a divine song, which Habakkuk sang, when in the night he said, “Although the fig-tree shall not blossom, neither shall fruit be in the vines; the labour of the olive shall fail, and the fields shall yield no meat; the flock shall be cut off from the fold, and there shall be no herd in the stalls: yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation.” Then, since our Maker gives songs in the night, let us wait upon Him for the music. O Thou chief musician, let us not remain songless because affliction is upon us, but tune Thou our lips to the melody of thanksgiving. 
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Producer: Todd AdkinsVoice Artist: Ian Cullen 

Oct 19, 2025 • 0sec
October 19th Morning
 “Babes in Christ.” — 1 Corinthians 3:1 
Are you mourning, believer, because you are so weak in the divine life: because your faith is so little, your love so feeble? Cheer up, for you have cause for gratitude. Remember that in some things you are equal to the greatest and most full-grown Christian. You are as much bought with blood as he is. You are as much an adopted child of God as any other believer. An infant is as truly a child of its parents as is the full-grown man. You are as completely justified, for your justification is not a thing of degrees: your little faith has made you clean every whit. You have as much right to the precious things of the covenant as the most advanced believers, for your right to covenant mercies lies not in your growth, but in the covenant itself; and your faith in Jesus is not the measure, but the token of your inheritance in Him. You are as rich as…
the richest, if not in enjoyment,
yet in real possession. The smallest star that gleams is set in heaven; the
faintest ray of light has affinity with the great orb of day. In the family
register of glory the small and the great are written with the same pen. You
are as dear to your Father’s heart as the greatest in the family. Jesus is
very tender over you. You are like the smoking flax; a rougher spirit would
say, “put out that smoking flax, it fills the room with an offensive odour!”
but the smoking flax He will not quench. You are like a bruised reed; and
any less tender hand than that of the Chief Musician would tread upon
you or throw you away, but He will never break the bruised reed. Instead
of being downcast by reason of what you are, you should triumph in
Christ. Am I but little in Israel? Yet in Christ I am made to sit in heavenly
places. Am I poor in faith? Still in Jesus I am heir of all things. Though
“less than nothing I can boast, and vanity confess.” yet, if the root of the
matter be in me I will rejoice in the Lord, and glory in the God of my
salvation.
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Producer: Todd AdkinsVoice Artist: Ian Cullen 

Oct 18, 2025 • 3min
October 18th Evening
 “Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice.” — 1 Samuel 15:22 
Paul had been commanded to slay utterly all the Amalekites and their cattle. Instead of doing so, he preserved the king, and suffered his people to take the best of the oxen and of the sheep. When called to account for this, he declared that he did it with a view of offering sacrifice to God; but Samuel met him at once with the assurance that sacrifices were no excuse for an act of direct rebellion. The sentence before us is worthy to be printed in letters of gold, and to be hung up before the eyes of the present idolatrous generation, who are very fond of the fineries of will-worship, but utterly neglect the laws of God. Be it ever in your remembrance, that to keep strictly in the path of your Saviour’s command is better than any outward form of religion; and to hearken to His precept with an attentive ear is better than to bring the fat of rams, or any other precious thing to lay upon His altar. If you are failing to keep the least of Christ’s commands to His disciples…
I pray you be disobedient no longer. All the pretensions you
make of attachment to your Master, and all the devout actions which you
may perform, are no recompense for disobedience. “To obey,” even in the
slightest and smallest thing, “is better than sacrifice,” however pompous.
Talk not of Gregorian chants, sumptuous robes, incense, and banners; the
first thing which God requires of His child is obedience; and though you
should give your body to be burned, and all your goods to feed the poor,
yet if you do not hearken to the Lord’s precepts, all your formalities shall
profit you nothing. It is a blessed thing to be teachable as a little child, but
it is a much more blessed thing when one has been taught the lesson, to
carry it out to the letter. How many adorn their temples and decorate their
priests, but refuse to obey the word of the Lord! My soul, come not thou
into their secret.
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Producer: Todd AdkinsVoice Artist: Ian Cullen 

Oct 18, 2025 • 3min
October 18th Morning
 “Thy paths drop fatness.” — Psalm 65:11 
Many are “the paths of the Lord” which “drop fatness,” but an especial one is the path of prayer. No believer, who is much in the closet, will have need to cry, “My leanness, my leanness; woe unto me.” Starving souls live at a distance from the mercy- seat, and become like the parched fields in times of drought. Prevalence with God in wrestling prayer is sure to make the believer strong — if not happy. The nearest place to the gate of heaven is the throne of the heavenly grace. Much alone, and you will have much assurance; little alone with Jesus, your religion will be shallow, polluted with many doubts and fears, and not sparkling with the joy of the Lord. Since the soul-enriching path of prayer is open to the very weakest saint; since no high attainments are required; since you are not bidden to come because you are an advanced saint, but freely invited if you be a saint at all; see to it, dear reader, that you are…
often in the way of private devotion.
Be much on your knees, for so Elijah drew the rain upon famished Israel’s
fields.
There is another especial path dropping with fatness to those who walk
therein, it is the secret walk of communion. Oh! the delights of fellowship
with Jesus! Earth hath no words which can set forth the holy calm of a
soul leaning on Jesus’ bosom. Few Christians understand it, they live in
the lowlands and seldom climb to the top of Nebo: they live in the outer
court, they enter not the holy place, they take not up the privilege of
priesthood. At a distance they see the sacrifice, but they sit not down with
the priest to eat thereof, and to enjoy the fat of the burnt offering. But,
reader, sit thou ever under the shadow of Jesus; come up to that palm tree,
and take hold of the branches thereof; let thy beloved be unto thee as the
apple-tree among the trees of the wood, and thou shalt be satisfied as with
marrow and fatness. O Jesus, visit us with Thy salvation!
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Producer: Todd AdkinsVoice Artist: Ian Cullen 

Oct 17, 2025 • 3min
October 17th Evening
 “He shall gather the lambs with His arm.” — Isaiah 40:11 
Our good Shepherd has in His flock a variety of experiences, some are strong in the Lord, and others are weak in faith, but He is impartial in His care for all His sheep, and the weakest lamb is as dear to Him as the most advanced of the flock. Lambs are wont to lag behind, prone to wander, and apt to grow weary, but from all the danger of these infirmities the Shepherd protects them with His arm of power. He finds new-born souls, like young lambs, ready to perish — He nourishes them till life becomes vigorous; He finds weak minds ready to faint and die — He consoles them and renews their strength. All the little ones He gathers, for it is not the will of our heavenly Father that…
one of them should perish. What a quick
eye He must have to see them all! What a tender heart to care for them all!
What a far- reaching and potent arm, to gather them all! In His lifetime on
earth He was a great gatherer of the weaker sort, and now that He dwells in
heaven, His loving heart yearns towards the meek and contrite, the timid
and feeble, the fearful and fainting here below. How gently did He gather
me to Himself, to His truth, to His blood, to His love, to His church! With
what effectual grace did He compel me to come to Himself! Since my first
conversion, how frequently has He restored me from my wanderings, and
once again folded me within the circle of His everlasting arm! The best of
all is, that He does it all Himself personally, not delegating the task of love,
but condescending Himself to rescue and preserve His most unworthy
servant. How shall I love Him enough or serve Him worthily? I would fain
make His name great unto the ends of the earth, but what can my
feebleness do for Him? Great Shepherd, add to Thy mercies this one other,
a heart to love Thee more truly as I ought.
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Producer: Todd AdkinsVoice Artist: Ian Cullen 

Oct 17, 2025 • 3min
October 17th Morning
 “And David said in his heart, I shall now perish one day by the hand of Saul.” — 1 Samuel 27:1  
The thought of David’s heart at this time was a false thought, because he certainly had no ground for thinking that God’s anointing him by Samuel was intended to be left as an empty unmeaning act. On no one occasion had the Lord deserted His servant; he had been placed in perilous positions very often, but not one instance had occurred in which divine interposition had not delivered him. The trials to which he had been exposed had been varied; they had not assumed one form only, but many — yet in every case He who sent the trial had also graciously ordained a way of escape. David could not put his finger upon any entry in his diary, and say of it, “Here is evidence that the Lord will forsake me,” for the entire tenor of his past life proved the very reverse. He should have…
argued from what God
had done for him, that God would be his defender still. But is it not just in
the same way that we doubt God’s help? Is it not mistrust without a
cause? Have we ever had the shadow of a reason to doubt our Father’s
goodness? Have not His lovingkindnesses been marvellous? Has He once
failed to justify our trust? Ah, no! our God has not left us at any time. We
have had dark nights, but the star of love has shone forth amid the
blackness; we have been in stern conflicts, but over our head He has held
aloft the shield of our defence. We have gone through many trials, but
never to our detriment, always to our advantage; and the conclusion from
our past experience is, that He who has been with us in six troubles, will
not forsake us in the seventh. What we have known of our faithful God,
proves that He will keep us to the end. Let us not, then, reason contrary to
evidence. How can we ever be so ungenerous as to doubt our God? Lord,
throw down the Jezebel of our unbelief, and let the dogs devour it.
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Producer: Todd AdkinsVoice Artist: Ian Cullen 

Oct 16, 2025 • 3min
October 16th Evening
 “With Thee is the fountain of life.” — Psalm 36:9 
There are times in our spiritual experience when human counsel or sympathy, or religious ordinances, fail to comfort or help us. Why does our gracious God permit this? Perhaps it is because we have been living too much without Him, and He therefore takes away everything upon which we have been in the habit of depending, that He may drive us to Himself. It is a blessed thing to live at the fountain head. While our skin-bottles are full, we are content, like Hagar and Ishmael, to go into the wilderness; but when those are dry, nothing will serve us but “Thou God seest me.” We are like the prodigal, we love the swine-troughs and forget our Father’s house. Remember, we can make swine-troughs and husks even out of the forms of religion; they are blessed things, but we may put them in God’s place, and then they are of no value. Anything becomes an idol when… 
it keeps us away from God: even the brazen serpent is to be
despised as “Nehushtan,” if we worship it instead of God. The prodigal
was never safer than when he was driven to his father’s bosom, because he
could find sustenance nowhere else. Our Lord favours us with a famine in
the land that it may make us seek after Himself the more. The best
position for a Christian is living wholly and directly on God’s grace — still
abiding where he stood at first — “Having nothing, and yet possessing all
things.” Let us never for a moment think that our standing is in our
sanctification, our mortification, our graces, or our feelings, but know that
because Christ offered a full atonement, therefore we are saved; for we are
complete in Him. Having nothing of our own to trust to, but resting upon
the merits of Jesus — His passion and holy life furnish us with the only
sure ground of confidence. Beloved, when we are brought to a thirsting
condition, we are sure to turn to the fountain of life with eagerness.
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Producer: Todd AdkinsVoice Artist: Ian Cullen 

Oct 16, 2025 • 3min
October 16th Morning
 “Jesus saith unto them, Come and dine.” — John 21:12 
In these words the believer is invited to a holy nearness to Jesus. “Come and dine,” implies the same table, the same meat; ay, and sometimes it means to sit side by side, and lean our head upon the Saviour’s bosom. It is being brought into the banqueting-house, where waves the banner of redeeming love. “Come and dine,” gives us a vision of union with Jesus, because the only food that we can feast upon when we dine with Jesus is Himself. Oh, what union is this! It is a depth which reason cannot fathom, that we thus feed upon Jesus. “He that eateth My flesh, and drinketh My blood, dwelleth in Me, and I in him.” It is also an invitation to enjoy fellowship with the saints. Christians may differ on a variety of points, but they have all one spiritual appetite; and if we cannot all feel alike, we can all feed alike on the bread of life sent down from heaven. At the table of fellowship with Jesus we are…
one bread and one cup. As the loving cup
goes round we pledge one another heartily therein. Get nearer to Jesus, and
you will find yourself linked more and more in spirit to all who are like
yourself, supported by the same heavenly manna. If we were more near to
Jesus we should be more near to one another. We likewise see in these
words the source of strength for every Christian. To look at Christ is to
live, but for strength to serve Him you must “come and dine.” We labour
under much unnecessary weakness on account of neglecting this percept of
the Master. We none of us need to put ourselves on low diet; on the
contrary, we should fatten on the marrow and fatness of the gospel that
we may accumulate strength therein, and urge every power to its full
tension in the Master’s service. Thus, then, if you would realize nearness
to Jesus, union with Jesus, love to His people and strength from Jesus,
“come and dine” with Him by faith.
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Producer: Todd AdkinsVoice Artist: Ian Cullen 

Oct 15, 2025 • 3min
October 15th Evening
 “But the firstling of an ass thou shalt redeem with a lamb: and if thou redeem him not, then shalt thou break his neck.” — Exodus 34:20 
Every firstborn creature must be the Lord’s, but since the ass was unclean, it could not be presented in sacrifice. What then? Should it be allowed to go free from the universal law? By no means. God admits of no exceptions. The ass is His due, but He will not accept it; He will not abate the claim, but yet He cannot be pleased with the victim. No way of escape remained but redemption — the creature must be saved by the substitution of a lamb in its place; or if not redeemed, it must die. My soul, here is a lesson for thee. That unclean animal is thyself; thou art justly the property of the Lord who made thee and preserves thee, but thou art so sinful that God will not, cannot, accept thee; and it has come to this, the Lamb of God must stand in thy stead, or thou must die eternally. Let all the world know of… 
thy gratitude to that spotless Lamb who has already bled for thee, and
so redeemed thee from the fatal curse of the law. Must it not sometimes
have been a question with the Israelite which should die, the ass or the
lamb? Would not the good man pause to estimate and compare? Assuredly
there was no comparison between the value of the soul of man and the life
of the Lord Jesus, and yet the Lamb dies, and man the ass is spared. My
soul, admire the boundless love of God to thee and others of the human
race. Worms are bought with the blood of the Son of the Highest! Dust and
ashes redeemed with a price far above silver and gold! What a doom had
been mine had not plenteous redemption been found! The breaking of the
neck of the ass was but a momentary penalty, but who shall measure the
wrath to come to which no limit can be imagined? Inestimably dear is the
glorious Lamb who has redeemed us from such a doom.
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Producer: Todd AdkinsVoice Artist: Ian Cullen 

Oct 15, 2025 • 3min
October 15th Morning
 “But who may abide the day of his coming?” — Malachi 3:2 
His first coming was without external pomp or show of power, and yet in truth there were few who could abide its testing might. Herod and all Jerusalem with him were stirred at the news of the wondrous birth. Those who supposed themselves to be waiting for Him, showed the fallacy of their professions by rejecting Him when He came. His life on earth was a winnowing fan, which tried the great heap of religious profession, and few enough could abide the process. But what will His second advent be? What sinner can endure to think of it? “He shall smite the earth with the rod of His mouth, and with the breath of His lips shall He slay the wicked.” When in His humiliation He did but say to the soldiers, “I am He,” they fell backward; what will be the terror of His enemies when He shall more fully reveal Himself as…
the “I am?” His death shook earth and darkened
heaven, what shall be the dreadful splendour of that day in which as the
living Saviour, He shall summon the quick and dead before Him? O that the
terrors of the Lord would persuade men to forsake their sins and kiss the
Son lest He be angry! Though a lamb, He is yet the lion of the tribe of
Judah, rending the prey in pieces; and though He breaks not the bruised
reed, yet will He break His enemies with a rod of iron, and dash them in
pieces like a potter’s vessel. None of His foes shall bear up before the
tempest of His wrath, or hide themselves from the sweeping hail of His
indignation; but His beloved bloodwashed people look for His appearing
with joy, and hope to abide it without fear: to them He sits as a refiner
even now, and when He has tried them they shall come forth as gold. Let
us search ourselves this morning and make our calling and election sure, so
that the coming of the Lord may cause no dark forebodings in our mind. O
for grace to cast away all hypocrisy, and to be found of Him sincere and
without rebuke in the day of His appearing.
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Producer: Todd AdkinsVoice Artist: Ian Cullen 


