Home :: Books :: Christianity  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity

Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The Treasury of David

The Treasury of David

List Price: $39.97
Your Price: $26.38
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Best of the Best in the Best
Review: Along with Spurgeon's beautiful facility with language, this also has a surprisingly easy format to follow. One need not search in vain for the verse that he is looking for. Nor will one run out of meat if preparing for the sermon or Bible study. Spurgeon has provided the best advice from the best teachers in the best volume on the Psalms. If you are not a pastor or teacher and you are looking for devotional material, this is the cream of the crop. Because the Psalms are prayers, and Spurgeon is the master of prayer, then your soul will be stirred as he speaks of prayer. Reader be blessed.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Best of the Best in the Best
Review: Along with Spurgeon's beautiful facility with language, this also has a surprisingly easy format to follow. One need not search in vain for the verse that he is looking for. Nor will one run out of meat if preparing for the sermon or Bible study. Spurgeon has provided the best advice from the best teachers in the best volume on the Psalms. If you are not a pastor or teacher and you are looking for devotional material, this is the cream of the crop. Because the Psalms are prayers, and Spurgeon is the master of prayer, then your soul will be stirred as he speaks of prayer. Reader be blessed.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Listen To The Man Who Listens To God
Review: Charles Haddon Spurgeon was England's Prince of Preachers in the nineteenth century. Today he is still one of the most well-known and loved authors in the English language - with more of his books and sermons in print (over 100 years) than any other English writer. However, I am not endorsing his works simply because of his popularity or any man's for that matter. I am recommending the works of this man because he is one who listens to God.

The Treasury of David is Spurgeon's Magnum Opus. If he had not written anything else apart from this masterful commentary on the Psalms, he would still be considered among the greatest Christian writers of all history. Students of the life of Spurgeon would know that he was not a strict academician. However, in all sense of the word, he was a man of learning who was acquainted with much of the scholarly issues of his times. Ultimately, he was a man who listen to God and labored for God's honor among men. This Treasury is the supreme monument to his 21 year labor.

In the compiling of this Treasury, Spurgeon read up hundreds of theological texts and commentaries (much of which was quoted among his own notes and comments). In the original edition, Spurgeon also included his "Notes to the Village Preacher" on every Psalm - showing that Spurgeon will always be very important to anyone who wishes to speak from the Pulpit. I believe, however, that the worth of this book is even more for the lay student (Spurgeon's heart beats for them the most throughout his life). He attempted to share with them the best scholarship of his time and to lead them beyond scholarship to the worship of David's God. Reading this volume led me into worship of the same God - and I will never recover from Him! I exult in Him!

We will see, as many other readers have seen that the greatest treasures of the ancient Israelite Kingdom was not the Temple that Solomon built, the gold and harem that the kings acquired nor even the Ark of the Covenant (that so many modern authors are speculating about) but these simple, unassuming songs that came from the worshipping heart of Israel's King David and his fellow worshippers. In this Treasury, we see a prayer for every occasion. We see the entire spectrum of the spiritual man's experience - penitence, courage, humiliation, power, confidence, exultation, doubt, weeping, laughter, awe, dread, fear and ultimately worship. Rightly did Faber exclaimed, "The Thought of Thee is almost prayer". This volume brings together the worship of David to Jehovah and Spurgeon to Jesus showing that they were both ultimately worshipping One same God. "Hear O Israel, the Lord thy God is One Lord".

The volume I'm reviewing here is an update of the original 7 volume set written in Victorian English. What we have here is the result of Roy H. Clarke's 10 year research into the life and writtings of Spurgeon. For those of you who distrust any update of a classic, rest assured that the work done here is exemplary work. Clarke has too much respect for Spurgeon to ever water down his words - every word by Spurgeon is here (only archaic words are replaced with modern English usage of the same). Clarke did not water down Spurgeon's words with the language of commerce but allowed the spaciousness, reverence and expansiveness of Spurgeon's English to be retained - and to speak afresh to us today in language that we can understand. Clarke removed most of the quotations from the other commentators in Spurgeon's original volumes and included only the most significant in this volume side-by-side with Spurgeon's own notes (something only done in this volume for the first time). Finally, the original notes of preachers are now presented in outline form according to the outlines for Spurgeon's own sermons (something that Roy Clarke himself spent his 10 years studying). Reading this volume makes me want to seek out the original 7 volume set (still in print) but I would say that even for those who have already read the original, this volume is still very valuable - for its dynamism, its freshness and as an aid by which we can listen to a man who listens to God.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Spurgeon's At His Best!
Review: Charles Spurgeon was indeed the prince of preachers. No one in the history of the English speaking world has been able to match Spurgeon's sermons or his literary works. I thank God that the words and works of Charles Spurgeon are preserved for readers today.

This work on the book of Psalms is the most complete commentary I have ever seen. If Spurgeon would have done a similar commentary on the entire Bible then the Church would not need any other commentaries. Spurgeon gives us not only his own comments on the entire book of Psalms but he gives us outlines, quotes, and other views from various Puritan teachers. Spurgeon's vast knowledge of the Word of God is clearly seen in THE TREASURY OF DAVID and yet his passion shines through on every page. Oh for preachers to have the passion that Charles Spurgeon had and a love for the truth of the Scriptures to go forth!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Genuine 'Treasury'
Review: Charles Spurgeon's 'The Treasury of David' is a classic among classics, a prodigious work that took this greatest of 19th century preachers (lived 1834-1892) at least fifteen years to complete. Originally published in six volumes, this edition is in three hard-backed volumes. Spurgeon gives his own verse-by-verse exposition of each psalm, and then calls on the published work of a host of other Bible teachers who had written about that psalm overall or about specific verses. In a final section of each psalm's commentary, Spurgeon ran through the verses again in "Hints to Preachers." For the Bible student, the preacher or pastor, or for those who just love the Psalms, this is a most worthy addition to a library.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An Abundance of Counselors
Review: The Bible says that in the abundance of [godly] counselors there is safety. Spurgeon has applied this wisdom in the Treasury of David. When you read this commentary, you find scores of Bible teachers and commentators addressing the truths of God's Word in the Psalms. Something very useful is that when commentators disagreed on an interpretation of particular verses, Spurgeon included the opposing views (assuming the views were not expressing cardinal error). With this commentary on your shelf, you eliminate the need to buy a bunch of different commentary sets on the Psalms. Spurgeon has put it together for you. After reading this, the only thing you'll need to do is study the Psalms for yourself (which is what God wants you to do anyway). But we all need help from time to time to think "out of the box." The Treasury of David will provide that opportunity.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Needless to say
Review: This commentary on The Psalms is a treasury of Puritan thoughts. I Praise the Lord that He led a man of such caliber like Spurgeon to collaborate articles on such a blessed book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful
Review: This is a wonderful book , inside and outside, the format is so beautiful, the text is the same of First Edition of this great commentary, is on three vol, there is a original preface of c.h.Spurgeon with his signature, you will love him.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates