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THE
GREYHOUND had been thrashing about in the north Atlantic storm for
over a week. Its canvas sails were ripped, and the wood on one
side of the ship had been torn away and splintered.
The
sailors had little hope of survival, but they mechanically worked
the pumps, trying to keep the vessel afloat. On the eleventh day
of the storm, sailor John Newton was too exhausted to pump, so he
was tied to the helm and tried to hold the ship to its course.
From
one o'clock until midnight he was at the helm.
With
the storm raging fiercely, Newton had time to think. His life
seemed as ruined and wrecked as the battered ship he was trying to
steer through the storm.
Since
the age of eleven he had lived a life at sea. Sailors were not
noted for the refinement of their manners, but Newton had a
reputation for profanity, coarseness, and debauchery which even
shocked many a sailor.
He
was known as "The Great Blasphemer." He sank so low at
one point that he was even a servant to slaves in Africa for a
brief period.
His
mother had prayed he would become a minister and had early taught
him the Scriptures and Isaac Watts' Divine Songs for Children.
Some of those early childhood teachings came to mind now. He
remembered Proverbs 1:24-31, and in the midst of that storm, those
verses seemed to confirm Newton in his despair:
Because
I have called, and ye refused . . . ye have set at nought all my
counsel, and would none of my reproof: I also laughed at your
calamity; I will mock when your fear cometh: when your fear cometh
as desolation, and your destruction cometh as a whirlwind; when
distress and anguish come upon you. Then shall they call upon me,
but I will not answer.
Newton
had rejected his mother's teachings and had led other sailors into
unbelief. Certainly he was beyond hope and beyond saving, even if
the Scriptures were true. Yet, Newton's thoughts began to turn to
Christ. He found a New Testament and began to read. Luke 11:13
seemed to assure him that God might still hear him: "If ye
then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children:
how much more shall your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to
them that ask him."
That
day at the helm, March 21, 1748, was a day Newton remembered ever
after, for "On that day the Lord sent from on high and
delivered me out of deep waters."
Many
years later, as an old man, Newton wrote in his diary of March 21,
1805: "Not well able to write; but I endeavor to observe the
return of this day with humiliation, prayer, and praise."
Only
God's amazing grace could and would take a rude, profane,
slave-trading sailor and transform him into a child of God. Newton
never ceased to stand in awe of God's work in his life.
Though
Newton continued in his profession of sailing and slave-trading
for a time, his life was transformed. He began a disciplined
schedule of Bible study, prayer, and Christian reading and tried
to be a Christian example to the sailors under his command.
Philip
Doddridge's The Rise and Progress of Religion in the Soul provided
much spiritual comfort, and a fellow-Christian captain he met off
the coast of Africa guided Newton further in his Christian faith.
Newton
left slave-trading and took the job of tide surveyor at Liverpool,
but he began to think he had been called to the ministry.
His
mother's prayers for her son were answered, and in 1764, at the
age of thirty-nine, John Newton began forty-three years of
preaching the Gospel of Christ.
John
and his beloved wife Mary moved to the little market town of
Olney. He spent his mornings in Bible study and his afternoons in
visiting his parishioners.
There
were regular Sunday morning and afternoon services as well as
meetings for children and young people. There was also a Tuesday
evening prayer meeting which was always well attended.
For
the Sunday evening services, Newton often composed a hymn which
developed the lessons and Scripture for the evening. In 1779, two
hundred and eighty of these were collected and combined with
sixty-eight hymns by Newton's friend and parishioner, William
Cowper, and published as the Olney Hymns. The most famous of all
the Olney Hymns, "Faith's Review and Expectation," grew
out of David's exclamation in I Chronicles 17:16-17. We know it
today as "Amazing Grace." Several other of the Olney
hymns by Newton continue in use today, including "How Sweet
the Name of Jesus Sounds," and "Glorious Things of Thee
are Spoken."
In
1779 Newton left Olney to become rector of St. Mary Woolnoth in
London. His ministry included not only the London poor and the
merchant class but also the wealthy and influential.
William
Wilberforce, a member of Parliament and a prime mover in the
abolition of slavery, was strongly influenced by John Newton's
life and preaching. Newton's Thoughts on the African Slave Trade,
based on his own experiences as a slave trader, was very important
in securing British abolition of slavery.
Missionaries
William Carey and Henry Martyn also gained strength from Newton's
counsel.
Newton
lived to be eighty-two years old and continued to preach and have
an active ministry until beset by fading health in the last two or
three years of his life.
Even
then, Newton never ceased to be amazed by God's grace and told his
friends, "My memory is nearly gone; but I remember two
things: That I am a great sinner, and that Christ is a great
Savior."
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