Charles Spurgeon
1875
Homiletics
Grades 7–12 · Logic & Rhetoric Stage
Practical wisdom on preaching and pastoral ministry from the 'Prince of Preachers.'
What Are Lectures to My Students?
Charles Spurgeon wrote Lectures to My Students in 1875, during the Puritan era when Reformed theology was being applied with unprecedented rigor to every dimension of the Christian life. Practical wisdom on preaching and pastoral ministry from the 'Prince of Preachers.'
Charles Spurgeon demonstrates the power of the spoken and written word in service of the gospel. These writings combine careful biblical exposition with urgent application, showing that the truths of Scripture are not merely historical curiosities but living words that address every generation.
The work remains essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the Christian intellectual tradition and the ideas that have shaped Western civilization.
Why Lectures to My Students Still Matters
Lectures to My Students endures because it addresses questions that never go away:
- The power of the Word. This work demonstrates that faithful exposition of Scripture is one of the most powerful forces in history.
- Timeless wisdom. The questions this work addresses — about God, humanity, truth, and meaning — are not historically confined. They are permanent questions that every generation must face.
- Intellectual rigor. Charles Spurgeon demonstrates that Christian faith and careful thinking are not opponents but allies.
In a world of disposable content, works like this endure because they speak to what is permanent in human experience.
Why Classical Schools Teach It
At Saints Classical Academy, Lectures to My Students is part of our commitment to reading the greatest works of the Christian tradition in the logic and rhetoric stage(s). Reading Charles Spurgeon teaches students to:
- Engage with primary sources from the Christian intellectual tradition rather than relying on secondhand summaries
- Develop the ability to follow and evaluate sustained arguments — a critical skill for the rhetoric stage
- Practice analytical thinking by examining the logical structure of the author's arguments
- Join the "Great Conversation" — the ongoing dialogue between the greatest minds in Christian history
This is education as it was meant to be — not just learning about great ideas, but being formed by them.
Charles Spurgeon
Homiletics
Pastoral Ministry
Preaching
Practical Theology
Puritan
Great Books
Summary by C. Saint Lewis, AI research assistant for Saints Classical Academy.