Central Grace Church
3596 Franklin Street Rocky Mount, Virginia
Website: www.centralgracechurch.com Email: [email protected]
September 25th 2022
9:30 am -----------------------------------------------The Gospel of Hosea – Hosea 1-14
10:00 am -------------------------------- Christ and a Condemned Woman – John 8:1-11
Wednesday: 7:00 pm --------------------------------------- Message by David Eddmenson
The Lord willing, brother David Eddmenson will preach the gospel to us this Wednesday night.
God’s Discriminating Grace – by William Gadsby
The doctrine of God’s discriminating grace is not fashionable among a certain body of professors; but it is nevertheless true. According to their views, Jehovah Himself is the only being in existence who is not allowed to make a choice. To talk of God’s making a choice, and setting apart a people for Himself . . . they say He is an unjust God and the fault of damnation is His; He is not a holy and just God in that case (they say). According to them, God is unjust because He chooses; yet you find these very characters vindicate their own right to make a choice, in almost every instance. They think they have a right to choose a companion for life; to choose their own food; to choose or reject God; and yet Jehovah has no right to make a choice. He is the only being without that right. Consequently they sink God lower that the lowest beggar in existence, they make Him lower in their estimation than the poorest sinner under the heaven. But . . . when they have used all their arguments and spent all their pride and enmity against God’s right to make a choice, it is still true that God has chosen, and sits on His unshaken sovereign throne; and, in His electing, immortal, and everlasting love, has chosen a people for Himself; a people that shall glorify Him and be His portion forever.
A Sinner Saved/Preacher Made – William Gadsby (1773-1844)
The Lord recorded the lives of many of His saints and in Hebrews 11 honours their memory. God honours those who honour him and honour His Son, and so I honour one of His saints in this paper. I love biographies, especially those in scripture. I love to read how the Lord saved such out and out sinners by His sovereign grace and power and what He did to them and through them. One such sinner saved and called to be a preacher was William Gadsby, born in the small village of Attleboro, England.
Born in great poverty, the last of nine children, son of a sinful and roaming father; William spent his boyhood running wild about the village, barefoot and ragged. He quit school at 13 (never to receive any more education), became a weaver, and ran to great lengths in sin; the ring leader of all his sinful companions. But God . . .
About the age of 17, he later said, “The Lord began to arrest me and bring me to see that I was a guilty criminal about to sign my own death warrant. I knew God could damn me if He would, and I could do nothing to save myself.” He then began to attend a little Baptist chapel in nearby Bedworth and heard the gospel. A short time later he said: “I was then solemnly and blessedly led to believe in God’s free mercy and pardon; and could look up and say that, ‘Christ loved me and gave Himself for me.’ O what sweetness, solemnity and blessedness there was in my poor heart! I sang night and day of the wonders of His love.”
About the age of 25, William preached his first sermon in an upper room. It was said that many were astonished that such a rough looking young man should attempt to preach. But preach he did, and began to preach regularly in on old barn in Hogg Lane, to good number of people on a regular basis. The Lord made quite a preacher of Gadbsy, who also wrote and promoted the singing of hymns; his book, Gadsby’s Hymnal we know and love.
Gadsby was called a strong Calvinist as opposed to John Wesley as a strong Arminian. He was slandered as being an Antinomian because of his strong belief that the law is not the believer’s rule of conduct, and so was despised, opposed and treated with contempt by many.
William Gadsby preached God’s sovereign electing, redeeming grace in Christ for many years; he lived to preached his last sermon on the Lord’s day and died on Saturday. His dying words were recorded. While on his death bed he said, “Christ is the mighty God . . . from everlasting to everlasting. He was precious, He is precious”. . . he then raised his hand and exclaimed, “Victory! Victory! Victory! . . . he slept briefly, awoke and said that he ‘was on the Rock.’ A short time later, his very last words were, “Free grace! Free grace! Free grace! . . . and fell asleep in Jesus.
In his desk, after his death, was found a slip of paper on which he had written his own epitaph. “Let this be put on my stone,” he wrote:
Here rests the body of a sinner base,
Who had no hope, but in electing grace;
The love, blood, life, and righteousness of God
Was his sweet theme, and this he spread abroad.