Charles H. Spurgeon told of a young preacher who asked an elderly
minister for his opinion of a sermon he had preached when the older
gentleman had been one of the congregation to which he had spoken.
"A very poor sermon, indeed!" was the reply.
"A poor sermon!" exclaimed the young man; "it took me a long time to
prepare it."
"Ah, no doubt of it!" And then the older man said that while the
discourse had merit as a lecture, it was not a good sermon because "there
was no Christ in it."
"Well!" was the reply, "Christ was not in the text."
"Don't you know, young man," the venerable minister said, "that from
every town and every village and every hamlet in England, wherever it may
be, there is a road to London, the center? And so, from every text in
Scripture there is a road to the center of the Scriptures,--that is, Christ.
And, my dear brother, your business is to say when you get a text, 'Now,
what is the road to Christ?' and then preach a sermon running along the road
to the great center, Christ." By T. Darley Allen, Signs of the Times,
January 28, 1930
Quote: "Jesus did not come to change the law, but He came to explain it.
There is no need to explain that which is abrogated. By thus explaining the
law, He confirmed it."
By Charles H. Spurgeon, Signs of the Times, February
29, 1944