THIS IS A DEVELOPMENT WEBSITE FOR TESTING PURPOSES - DO NOT PLACE ORDERS HERE!
PLEASE VISIT banneroftruth.org TO PLACE ORDERS.
Section navigation

The Face of Jesus Christ – A Review by Ben Ramsbottom

Category Book Reviews
Date September 11, 2012

Until recently the name of Archibald Brown was just a name to us. We must confess, however, how interested we have become in reading his biography1, and now with pleasure we have read his sermons (twenty-two in the book2), and commend them to our readers. It will be said, ‘There is not the depth that we find in J.C. Philpot and J.K. Popham.’ There certainly is not – either in doctrine or experience. But there is a beauty and an attraction in these sermons.

Though there is a simplicity, yet there is a faithful contending for

It may be felt that Archibald Brown is a little flowery in some of his expressions, and, though he uses the Authorised Version, he does in places refer to the new Revised Version. But there is the gracious experience. In preaching he often refers to what he himself feels – so different from so many modern preachers. Especially (page 168), preaching in deep sorrow [probably following the death of his wife], he says:

I only wish that it [the text] might come to you with one tithe of the power it came to me. It came to me the other day, or rather, I should say, the other night, in deep depression that I cannot describe. I was sitting alone in a house that has been stripped of everything that made life bright – sitting utterly alone, in a deep depression which, as I say, I cannot describe in words. I sat in a stupor till past the midnight hour, thinking about the past, and about one o’clock in the morning, I mechanically took this Testament in my hand, and opened it without a thought. It opened on this 22nd chapter of Revelation, and my eye fell on two words: ‘I, Jesus.’ They were enough. The darkness vanished . . . Though children die, though wives be cut down, though husbands go to the grave, though fortunes break, though all depart, yet in the darkness, and through the storm, there comes a voice, and it says, ‘I, Jesus – I live still. Whatever else thou mayest have lost, I, Jesus, am with thee yet.’

We commend this book.

Notes

    • The Face of Jesus Christ
         

      The Face of Jesus Christ

      Sermons on the Person and Work of Our Lord

      by Archibald G. Brown


      price From: $12.00

      Description

      Until recently the name of Archibald Brown was just a name to us. We must confess, however, how interested we have become in reading his biography1, and now with pleasure we have read his sermons (twenty-two in the book2), and commend them to our readers. It will be said, ‘There is not the depth that […]

    • Book Cover for 'Archibald G. Brown'
         

      Archibald G. Brown

      Spurgeon's Successor

      by Iain H. Murray


      price From: $15.00

      Description

      Until recently the name of Archibald Brown was just a name to us. We must confess, however, how interested we have become in reading his biography1, and now with pleasure we have read his sermons (twenty-two in the book2), and commend them to our readers. It will be said, ‘There is not the depth that […]

Ben Ramsbottom is editor of the Gospel Standard magazine from the September 2012 edition of which the above is quoted with permission.

Latest Articles

13 Reasons to Read Lloyd-Jones on Romans 13 October 7, 2025

D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones (1899-1981), or ‘the Doctor’ of Westminster Chapel, was known for the clarity of his thought, the thoroughness of his exposition of Scripture, and the living vitality of his application of the Bible to the lives of his hearers. His treatment of Romans 13:1-7 exemplifies these qualities. To commend this teaching, which is […]

‘This Itching After Investigation’: Calvin’s Concern for Lelio Sozzini September 9, 2025

John Calvin was a prolific correspondent. He wrote to civil rulers and dignitaries, to fellow reformers, and even to figures who would later stray from the path of orthodox biblical faith. One such man was the Italian Lelio Sozzini[mfn]He was sometimes known by the Latin denomination, Laelius Socinus[/mfn] (1525–1562) who would, together with his nephew […]