Of course he has. There are hundreds of sermons by Spurgeon. What he quoted does not negate the other sermons that Spurgeon preached. Spurgeon was not the "same Calvinist" that Icon is. That is why I quoted him, and used specific scripture like Romans 10:13 to do so. Most Calvinists would not agree with Spurgeon or use his terminology, even remotely close to it.DHK, every sermon portion, every list Iconoclast has posted, has been spot on in regards to what we believe, being Calvinists.
I have a freshly minted thread that you seem to be avoiding like the plague. Come over and let's debate it, whattya say, mon ami?
For example, instead of commenting on a part of this sermon:
there is no discussion. He simply runs from it and finds a sermon where Spurgeon has preached on the doctrines of grace. I don't disagree that he was a Calvinist. But one at least needs to admit that Spurgeon put a heavy emphasis on salvation by faith and gave invitations to come to the Savior and trust him as Lord and Savior. This is something that most Calvinists today disagree with.And thou canst not perish with God's breath in thee. "Whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved!" But the word "call" signifies a little more, it signifies trust. A man cannot call upon the name of the Lord, unless he trusts in that name. We must have reliance upon the name of Christ, or else we have not called aright. Hear me, then, poor tried sinner; thou hast come here this morning sensible of thy guilt, awakened to thy danger; here is thy remedy. Christ Jesus the Son of God, became a man; he was "born of the virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead and buried." He did this to save sinners such as thou art. Wilt thou believe this? Wilt thou trust thy soul to it? Wilt thou say "Sink or swim, Christ Jesus is my hope; and if I perish I will perish with my arms around his cross, crying —
if I perish I will perish with my arms around his cross, crying —
'Nothing in my hands I bring
Simply to the cross I cling?'"
Poor soul, if thou canst do that, thou wilt be saved. Come, now, no good works of thine own are needed — no sacraments, all that is asked of thee is this, and that he gives thee. Thou art nothing; wilt thou take Christ to be everything? Come, thou art black, wilt thou be washed? Wilt thou down on thy knees, and cry, "Lord, have mercy upon me, a sinner, not for anything I have done, or can do, but for his dear sake, whose blood streamed from his hands and feet, in whom alone I trust?" Why sinner the solid pillars of the universe shall totter rather than thou shouldst perish; ay heaven should weep a vacant throne, and an extinguished Godhead, rather than the promise should be violated in any case in the world. He that trusteth in Christ, calling on his name, shall be saved.