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Saturday June 16, 2007

Book Review - John Newton

John Newton: From Disgrace to Amazing GraceWhile not everyone knows the name of John Newton, everyone knows his song and at least a bit of his story. Immortalized in the words of “Amazing Grace,” the most-recorded song in history, everyone knows that John Newton was wretched and miserable until saved by a grace that forever transformed his life. Two centuries ago, fewer people knew his song, but far more knew his story. That story is told again and told afresh in Jonathan Aitken’s new biography John Newton: From Disgrace to Amazing Grace.

John Newton lived a life that could only have been more dramatic if it were the product of fiction. Forced into naval service when he was young, Newton endeared himself to no one, living a life of utter disregard for authority. While attempting to desert he was captured and dropped to the lowest ranks of seamen. He eventually found a way to be released from the military and wormed his way onto a slave shape with which he sailed down the long coast of Africa. Being deserted for a time on that dark continent, he was made the slave of a slave-trader and suffered terrible abuse at the hands of his captor. After a time he was rescued and became the captain of his own slave ship. But then, during a long passage across the Atlantic Ocean, he began to read a Bible and underwent the remarkable transformation chronicled in the song he wrote years later.

Newton worked in secular employment for a time but soon felt the call to ministry and was ordained an Anglican priest, a position he retained until his death in 1807. In the intervening years he became widely-known through his biography and through his efforts to abolish the slave trade. He served as mentor to William Wilberforce who fought a long but ultimately successful campaign to ban the British slave trade. It was two hundred years ago that this battle was won and two hundred years ago that Newton died. As Eric Metaxas has written a new biography of Wilberforce to mark the occasion, Aitken has done the same with Newton.

And it is quite a good biography. Aitken, who has previously chronicled the lives of Richard Nixon and Chuck Colson is a recent convert who underwent quite a radical conversion. He does a fine job of bringing the life of his subject to a whole new generation. While it may lack the depth of some of the greatest biographies of the greatest Christians, it is eminently readable and enjoyable from the first page to the last. A unique contribution of this book is that it relies on diaries and correspondence that have previously been unpublished. Newton’s own writing, and especially his letters, provide a good deal of the book’s content and some of its most edifying. In fact, the content and depth of these letters persuaded me to seek out a volume published by Banner of Truth titled simply The Letters of John Newton.

The theme of this biography can be aptly summarized by the final words spoken by this hero of the faith. “I am a great sinner, but Christ is a great Savior.” This account takes us from Newton’s days of joyous depravity to his dramatic conversion to his new life and ultimately to the moment he went to meet the great Savior he had come to know and love. It is a worthwhile addition to any library.

Comments (3) »


1. Craig Ervin
June 17, 2007
12:49 PM

Newton had a remarkable life and was a devout minister who eventually fought against slavery. But it was Thomas Clarkson who was responsible for Newton’s involvement against the slave trade. In his book, “Burying the Chains” the author states: “He (Newton) left the trade for medical reasons and not out of belief and kept all his savings invested with his former employers, even while he was a minister and started to write these hymns. He never said a word in public about slavery for more than 30 years after leaving the sea, and only spoke up when some guy named Thomas Clarkson came to see him.”
Newton was a man of his time who only quit the slave trade because of he had a seizure and was told to stop being a sailor. He never had another seizure, which makes me think it was the hand of providence in Newton,s life.

He loved the Lord, but saw no evil in the slave trade for decades after his conversion. It makes me wonder how much of our thinking has been captured more from our culture than the Spirit and the Word.


2. Brian
June 17, 2007
10:36 PM

I rcv’d an advance copy of this a couple weeks ago, and I ditto your review: Newton’s bio reads like something out of an adventure novel. The depth of God’s grace is clearly present throughout the pages of his life, and the remarkable thing was not only how long God sought this man, but how his providential ways were manifest in so many different occasions.

As a father (since I’m writing this on Father’s day), it showed the importance of reading and catechizing our children. Although Newton went his own way for a long period, his mother’s faithful ministering for the first 6 years of his life (she died when he was six), always drew him back to wrestling with God through Scripture.

Definitely recommended.


3. pilgrim
June 18, 2007
11:54 PM

I find more comfort in the fact that Newton didn’t immediately leave the slave trade upon conversion. It helps in my struggles to know I am not perfect and it’s all of Christ.