Winter of the Soul III: Why Faithful Servants Grow Weary
This week, Dr. John Snyder continues reflecting on spiritual weariness by returning to a lecture Charles Spurgeon delivered to ministerial students on what he called “the fainting fits” of a servant of God. Though Spurgeon addresses pastors directly, the wisdom he offers speaks to every Christian who has known seasons of exhaustion, discouragement, or the quiet temptation to lose heart.
Drawing from Scripture and Spurgeon’s own hard-earned experience, we explore times when faithful servants are most vulnerable to weariness. Spurgeon reminds us that discouragement often follows seasons of great usefulness, precedes seasons of greater blessing, or settles in during long stretches of unbroken labor. He speaks candidly about the weight of criticism, the pain of betrayal, the sorrow of seeing others fall, and the unique loneliness that can accompany spiritual responsibility.
Most searching of all, Spurgeon addresses seasons of darkness that seem to come without clear cause—times when resolution fails, human help feels insufficient, and the soul is tempted to turn inward in accusation rather than upward in faith. Yet his counsel is not despairing. Again and again, he points weary believers away from their own strength, moods, and feelings, and calls them to treasure even a single grain of faith more than a ton of spiritual excitement.
If you are walking through a season where faithfulness feels costly and joy feels distant, Spurgeon’s words remind us that God does not waste the weariness of his servants, and that even in the dark, the safest place is still under the shadow of his wings. If you are in a season of joy and happiness, we hope these words encourage you to pray for those around you, particularly your pastors, who bear a weight that may be hidden from your view.
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Show Notes
Encouragement for the Depressed by Charles Spurgeon (Forward by Randy Alcorn)
Scripture passages referenced:
2 Corinthians 3–4
1 Kings 19
2 Corinthians 12
Mark 6:31
1 Samuel 30
Additional Media Gratiae resources:
Behold Your God: Rethinking God Biblically
Through the Eyes of Spurgeon documentary
From the Heart of Spurgeon podcast
Listen to The Whole Counsel a day early on the Media Gratiae App.