Tomorrow, March 21, was a tremendously
important day for John Newton, a man who experienced both disgrace and amazing
grace.
EXPERIENCING
DISGRACE
John
Newton was born in London in July 1725. He had good start in life with a godly
mother, but she died when he was six. At the age of 11 he made his first of
five sea voyages with his father, a respected sea captain. When John was still
18, he was “press-ganged” into the Royal Navy—and things went from bad to
worse.
Later exchanged
from his warship to a slave ship, Newton wrote that during that time he was “exceedingly
vile.” According to a biographer, he became such “an aggressive atheist and
blasphemer that even his shipmates were shocked by his oaths.”
Clearly,
by the age of 22 John Newton was a disgrace.
RESCUED BY
GRACE
On March
21, 1747 (or 1748; because of a change in the calendar in 1752, both dates are
found), the ship Newton was sailing on was damaged by such a strong storm he
thought he was going to perish. In his anguish he cried out to God for help—and
he was saved from drowning in the stormy sea.
That
experience was the beginning of Newton’s religious conversion, which continued
to develop over the next many years. In spite of what we would like to think
about people who are converted, Newton continued on as a slaver for the next
six years.
In fact,
it was many years later that he began to oppose slavery.
REFLECTING
ON GRACE
After meeting and being very positively
influenced by George Whitefield and John Wesley, perhaps the two most outstanding
Christian preachers in 18th century England, Newton (at the age of
33) felt a call to the ministry in 1758.
After several rejections, in 1764 Newton was
finally ordained as a priest in the Church of England. He served the Church of
St. Paul and St. Peter in Olney from then until 1780 and then was rector of a
church in London until his death.
In
preparation for his New Year’s sermon for 1773, Newton wrote the words for “Amazing
Grace” with the autobiographical words, “I once was lost, but now am found /
Was blind, but now I see.”
It was still more than a decade, though,
before he clearly saw the sinfulness of slavery and began to oppose it.
About that time, in 1885, he met with William
Wilberforce, who was 34 years his junior, and encouraged him to remain in the
British Parliament and to oppose slavery there—which he did.
Partly because of Newton’s being a mentor to
Wilberforce, the 2006 movie about the latter’s indefatigable efforts to abolish
slavery in Great Britain is titled “Amazing Grace.”
Finally in
1788 Newton published his highly influential pamphlet Thoughts Upon the African Slave Trade.
After
Newton’s death in 1807, the following epitaph was engraved on his tombstone:
JOHN
NEWTON
ONCE AN
INFIDEL AND LIBERTINE
A SERVANT
OF SLAVES IN AFRICA
WAS
BY THE
RICH MERCY OF OUR LORD AND SAVIOR JESUS CHRIST
PRESERVED,
RESTORED, PARDONED
AND
APPOINTED TO PREACH THE FAITH
HE HAD
LONG LABOURED TO DESTROY
At the very end of his fine biographical book John Newton: From Disgrace to Amazing Grace
(2007), Jonathan Aitken concludes that Newton’s self-description “clearly
demonstrated the depth of John Newton’s gratitude to God for rescuing him from
disgrace and redeeming him with amazing grace” (p. 350).
It took many years for Newton to overcome his
blindness to the evils of slavery and to see the humanity of every human being.
So maybe there is hope for all of us who still have blind spots. Maybe there
are issues about which we, too, will someday be able to say with John Newton, I
once “was blind, but now I see."