Amazing Grace in John Newton: Slave-ship Captain, Hymnwriter, and Abolitionist

Couverture
Mercer University Press, 2001 - 270 pages
In "Amazing Grace," the best-loved of all hymns, John Newton's allusions to the drama of his life tell the story of a youth who was a virtual slave in Sierra Leone before ironically becoming a slave trader himself. Liverpool, his home port, was the center of the most colossal, lucrative, and inhumane slave trade the world has ever known. A gradual spiritual awakening transformed Newton into an ardent evangelist and anti-slavery activist. Influenced by Methodists George Whitefield and John Wesley, Newton became prominent among those favoring a Methodist-style revival in the Church of England. This movement stressed personal conversion, simple worship, emotional enthusiasm, and social justice. While pastoring a poor flock in Olney, he and poet William Cowper produced a hymnal containing such perennial favorites as "Glorious Things of Thee Are Spoken" and "God Moves in a Mysterious Way." Later, while serving a church in London, Newton raised British consciousness on the immorality of the slave trade. The account he gave to Parliament on the atrocities he had witnessed helped William Wilberforce obtain legislation to abolish the slave trade in England. Newton's life story convinced many who are "found" after being "lost" to sing Gospel hymns as they lobbied for civil rights legislation. His close involvement with both capitalism and evangelicalism, the main economic and religious forces of his era, provide a fascinating case study of the relationship of Christians to their social environment. In an afterword on Newtonian Christianity, Phipps explains Newton's critique of Karl Marx's thesis that religious ideals are always the effect of what produces the most profit. Phipps relies on accounts Newton gives in his ship journal, diary, letters, and sermons for this most readable scholarly narrative.
 

Table des matières

Through Many Dangers
1
African Sojourn
9
The Prodigals Return
16
Was Blind
25
To Charleston as First Mate
29
Voyages as Captain
39
Now Am Found
65
The Olney Parson
86
Now I See
159
Encounters with Abolitionists
173
Working with Wilberforce
178
As Long as Life Endures
205
The Londoners Wider Impact
211
The Last Years
224
Afterword
243
A Bibliography
259

How Sweet the Sound
115
The Ministry of Song
118
Cowpers Collaboration
146

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