One of my friends at college told me of how when she was struggling for
her identity and acceptance she turned to her church. There she 'was forced'
to sing hymns. One of which was Amazing Grace.
"Here I was trying like hell to accept myself, get God to accept me, and they
were having me repeat over and over that I was a 'wretch.' This didn't do my
self image any good, and I left." [K.I.]
And examination of Amazing Grace reveals that those lines are not about the
singer, but about the author:
Amazing Grace was written by John Newton (1725-1807) and was based upon
the scripture reference 1 Chronicles 17:16,17.
For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves; it is
the gift of God: not of works, lest any man should boast. Ephesians 2:8,9.
In a small cemetery of a parish churchyard in Olney, England, stands a
granite tombstone with the following inscription: "John Newton, clerk, once
an infidel and Libertine, a servant of slavers 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 labored to destroy.
"This fitting testimonial, written by Newton himself prior to his death,
describes aptly the unusual and colorful life of this man, one of the great
evangelical preachers of the eighteenth century. John Newton's mother, a
Godly woman, died when he was not quite seven years of age. When his father
remarried and after several brief years of formal education away from home;
John left school and joined his father's ship, at the age of eleven, to begin
life as a seaman. His early years were one continuous round of rebellion and
debauchery. After serving on several ships as well as working for a period
of time on the islands and mainland of the West African coast collecting
slaves for sale to visiting traders, Newton eventually became a captain of
his own slave ship. Needless to say, the capturing, selling and transporting
of black slaves to the plantations in the West Indies and America was a cruel
and vicious way of life.
On March 10, 1748, while returning to England from Africa during a
particularly stormy voyage when it appeared that all would be lost, Newton
began reading Thomas a Kempis's book, Imitation of Christ. Kempis was a Dutch
monk, 1380-1471, who belonged to an order called the Brethren of the Common
Life. This book is still printed today as a religious classic. The message
of the book and the frightening experience at sea were used by the Holy
Spirit to sow the seeds of Newton's eventual conversion and personal
acceptance of Christ as his Savior.
For the next several years he continued as a slave ship captain, trying to
justify his work by seeking to improve conditions as much as possible, even
holding public worship services for his hardened crew of thirty each Sunday.
Eventually, however, he felt convicted of the inhuman aspects of this work
and became a strong and effective crusader against slavery. Newton returned
to England, established a home with his youthful sweetheart, Mary Catlett,
whom he had married on February 12, 1750, and became a clerk at the Port of
Liverpool for the next nine years. During this period he felt the call of God
increasingly to preach the gospel and began to study diligently for the
ministry. He was greatly aided and influenced by the evangelist George
Whitefield as well as the Wesleys, but he decided to stay within the
established Anglican Church rather than to join forces with these Dissenters.
At the age of thirty-nine, John Newton was ordained by the Anglican Church
and began his first pastorate at the little village of Olney, near Cambridge,
England. His work for the next fifteen years (1764-1779) was a most fruitful
and influential ministry. Especially effective was the use of the story of
his early life and conversion experience, which he told often. In addition to
preaching for the stated services in his own church, Newton would hold
services regularly in any large building he could secure in the surrounding
area. This was an unheard of practice for an Anglican clergyman of that day.
Wherever he preached, large crowds gathered to hear the "Old Converted Sea
Captain."
Another of Newton's extremist practices at the Olney Church was the singing
of hymns that expressed the simple, heartfelt faith of his preaching rather
than the staid singing of the Psalms from the Sternhold and Hopkins Psalter,
which was practiced in other Anglican churches. When Newton couldn't find
enough available hymns for this purpose, he began writing his own. To assist
him in this endeavour, he enlisted the aid of his friend and neighbor,
William Cowper, a well-known writer of classic literature of this period. In
1779 their combined efforts produced the famous Olney Hymns hymnal, one of
the most important single contributions made to the field of evangelical
hymnody. In this ambitious collection of 349 hymns, sixty-seven were written
by Cowper with the remainder by Newton. The purpose of the hymnal, according
to Newton's Preface, was "a desire to promote the faith and comfort of
sincere Christians."
Since 1947, and interesting ancient tradition has been revived at the Olney
Church. It is the annual pancake race that is held on the Tuesday (Shrove
Tuesday) prior to the beginning of Lent. The ladies of the parish race from
the center of town to the church flipping pancakes. At the service the winner
is announced followed by the congregation singing "Amazing Grace" and other
Olney Hymnal favorites.
After concluding his ministry at Olney, Newton spent the remaining
twenty-eight years of his life as pastor of the influential St. Mary Woolnoth
Church in London. Among his converts there was Claudius Buchanan, who became
a missionary to the East Indies, and Thomas Scott, the Bible commentator. By
this time Newton had also established a strong relationship with William
Wilberforce and other political leaders engaged in the crusade for the
abolition of the slave trade. It is interesting to note that the year of
Newton's death, 1807, was the same year that the British Parliament finally
abolished slavery throughout all of its domain. In 1790 Newton's wife,
beloved companion for forty years, died of cancer. Mary had been a wife of
true devotion and encouragement, but now John faced the next seventeen long
years without her. In 1893 John and Mary's remains were re-interred in the
Olney Church graveyard, where the massive granite monument can still be
viewed. Until the time of his death at the age of eighty-two, John Newton
never ceased to marvel at God's mercy and grace that had so dramatically
changed his life. This was the dominant theme of his preaching and writing.
Shortly before his death a spokesman for the church suggested that he
consider retirement because of failing health, eyesight and memory. N ewton
replied, "What, shall the old Africa blasphemer stop while he can still
speak? On another occasion before his death he is quoted as proclaiming with
a loud voice during a message, "My memory is nearly gone, but I remember two
things: "That I am a great sinner and that Christ is a great Savior!'"
Undoubtedly, the most representative expression of John Newton's life is his
appealing hymn, "Amazing Grace." The hymn, originally consisting of six
stanzas and entitled "Faith's Review and Expectation," was based on 1
Chronicles 17:16, 17. Three interesting additional verses written by Newton
that are not included in most hymnals are as follows:
1. The Lord has promised good to me, His Word my hope secures; He will
my shield and portion be as long as life endures.
2. Yes, when this heart and flesh shall fail, and mortal life shall
cease, I shall possess within the veil, a life of joy and peace.
3. The earth shall soon dissolve like snow, the sun forbear to shine;
But God, who called me here below, will be forever mine.
The tune, "Amazing Grace," is an early American folk melody. It was first
known as a plantation melody entitled "Loving Lambs." The earliest known
publication of this tune was found in a book entitled The Virginia Harmony,
compiled by James P. Carrell and David S. Clayton and published in 1831 in
Winchester, Virginia. Scarcely a hymnal appeared throughout the South during
the remainder of the nineteenth century that did not include this hymn. John
Newton also wrote the text for "Glorious Things of Thee Are Spoken".