As we approach Christmas, I wanted to share a video I saw a few years ago produced by ShiftWorship.com that features the words from a sermon Charles Haddon Spurgeon delivered on December 24, 1854 at the New Park Street Chapel in Southwark in London, England. He preached on Isaiah 7:14-15 and expounded on the significance of the word âImmanuelâ which means âGod with us.â
Watch below:
Here’s the transcript of that portion of his sermon:
âImmanuel.â It is wisdomâs mystery, âGod with us.â Sages look at it and wonder. Angels desire to see it. The plumb-line of reason cannot reach half-way into its depths. The eagle wings of science cannot fly so high and the piercing eye of the vulture of research cannot see it! âGod with us.â It is Hellâs terror! Satan trembles at the sound of it. His legions fly apace, the black-winged dragon of the Pit quails before it! Let Satan come to you suddenly and do you but whisper that word, âGod with usââback he fallsâconfounded and confused! Satan trembles when he hears that name, âGod with us.â It is the laborerâs strengthâhow could he preach the Gospel, how could he bend his knees in prayer, how could the missionary go into foreign lands, how could the martyr stand at the stake, how could the confessor acknowledge his Master, how could men labor if that one word were taken away? âGod with us,â is the suffererâs comfort, is the balm of his woe, is the alleviation of his misery, is the sleep which God gives to His beloved, is their rest after exertion and toil.
Ah, and to finish, âGod with usâ is eternityâs sonnet, is Heavenâs hallelujah, is the shout of the glorified, is the song of the redeemed, is the chorus of angels, is the everlasting oratorio of the great orchestra of the sky! âGod with us.â
Amen.