John Ploughman's talks / Charles H. Spurgeon. [print]
Material type: TextPublication details: Springdale, Pennsylvania : Whitaker House, (c)1993.; Springdale, Pennsylvania : Whitaker House, (c)2012.Description: 193 pages ; 18 cm; 132 pages 18 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780883682609
- 9781603746335
- BJ1571.S772.J646 1993
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Circulating Book (checkout times vary with patron status) | G. Allen Fleece Library CIRCULATING COLLECTION | Non-fiction | BJ1571.S687.J646 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 31923002046957 |
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BJ1535.A6M55 1989 Good anger /John Giles Milhaven. | BJ1535.F3 .F56 2015 The blame business : the uses and misuses of accountability / | BJ1535.G6K37 2004 Conversation peace : improve your relationships one word at a time / | BJ1571.S687.J646 2012 John Ploughman's talks / | BJ1571.T48 1991 The truths we must believe /Chris Thurman. | BJ1581.2 B73 2004 Discovering your natural talents /John Bradley, Jay Carty. | BJ1581.2.C518 2007 Boundaries / |
Preface -- To the idle -- On religious grumblers -- On the preacher's appearance -- On good nature and firmness -- On patience -- On gossips -- On seizing opportunities -- On keeping one's eyes open -- Thoughts about thought -- Faults -- Things not worth trying -- Debt -- Home -- Men who are down -- Hope -- Spending -- A good word for wives -- Men with two faces -- Hints as to thriving -- Tall talk -- Things I would not choose -- Try -- Monuments -- Very ignorant people.
Charles H. Spurgeon's success as a legendary preacher and author was generated from his intense love and concern for "working people." In John Ploughman's Talks, Spurgeon assumes the persona of a simple ploughman to dispense advice and address serious moral issues in the language of the common man. Spurgeon's homespun humor and rustic illustrations reflect on a variety of issues, such as idleness, grumbling, appearance, patience, gossiping, debt, spending, family, hope, and much more. In Spurgeon's words, "That I have written in a semi-humorous vein needs no apology, since thereby sound moral teaching has gained a hearing....There is no particular virtue in being seriously unreadable." In the tradition of John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress, Spurgeon's tale is destined to be enjoyed for generations by people of all ages and backgrounds.
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