Thomas Spurgeon (20 September 1856 – 17 October 1917) was a British
Reformed Baptist preacher of the
Metropolitan Tabernacle, one of the fraternal twin sons of the famous
Charles Spurgeon (1834–92).
Life
Thomas and his twin brother were born a month before the tragedy at the
Royal Surrey Gardens
Royal Surrey Gardens were pleasure gardens in Newington, Surrey, London in the Victorian period, slightly east of The Oval. The gardens occupied about to the east side of Kennington Park Road, including a lake of about . It was the site of ...
Music Hall of 19 October 1856 while their father was preaching. Their mother,
Susannah
''Susannah'' is an opera in two acts by the American composer Carlisle Floyd, who wrote the libretto and music while a member of the piano faculty at Florida State University. Floyd adapted the story from the Apocryphal tale of Susanna (Book of D ...
became an invalid at the age of 33 while the boys were still in their teens.
After serving some time as an engraver, Thomas Spurgeon, like his brother Charles, decided to give his life to preaching the gospel. However, his health prevented him from remaining in England. While he was still young, he sailed to Australia, and spent one year in
evangelistic labors there. After his return to England, it was decided that he must return to a better climate for his health. During the early 1880s he preached in many places in Australia, as well as in
New Zealand, and finally he decided to accept the pastorate of a Baptist church in Auckland, the
Auckland Baptist Tabernacle, where his influence was already becoming widely felt.
Thomas married Eliza McLeod Rutherford in 1888 in Auckland. A son, Thomas Harold Spurgeon, was born in 1891.
Thomas returned to England after the death of his father and succeeded him in his pulpit ministry after a brief period under
Arthur Tappan Pierson. During Thomas' fifteen-year pastorate, the Tabernacle burned in 1898 and was rebuilt along similar lines. His brother Charles was pastor of the Greenwich Baptist Church.
Notes
References
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1856 births
1917 deaths
19th-century English Baptist ministers
20th-century English Baptist ministers
English Calvinist and Reformed Christians
Clergy from London
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