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The man and the story behind 'Amazing Grace'

By Peter Rahme - posted Wednesday, 9 May 2007


Newton, an only child of John Sr and Elizabeth Newton, was born on July 24, 1725 in London, England. Thirteen days before his 7th birthday, his devout mother died of tuberculosis. His father, a commander in the Mediterranean trade, remarried the following year. At the age of 11, the young boy was taken on his maiden sea voyage. Over the next seven years he made several more trips.

At the age of 18, Newton - a confused adolescent - was press-ganged on board HMS Harwich, a man-of-war. Unable to hold up under its rigid discipline and unwilling to handle its daily routine, the defiant sailor deserted ship. He was sought and found, stripped and flogged. Filled with bitter rage and full of black despair, the demoted midshipman was eventually discharged from the British Royal Navy and dispatched onto a slave trading ship.

After he enjoyed six months of freedom on the open sea, the 20-year-old then endured a long year of captivity in West Africa. There his dream of work and wealth turned into a nightmare of sickness and starvation while he served a cold-hearted English master and suffered at the cruel hands of his African mistress. Soon after his release, the man of the sea became a master of slaves.

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At the age of 22, Newton - a wretched sinner, was converted from a daring blasphemer of God into a devout believer in Christ. His "great deliverance" took place on March 21, 1748 while sailing back to England from Africa. He and the crew of the Greyhound, a cargo ship, were caught in a violent storm. Battered by monstrous winds and beaten by mountainous waves, the tired sailors, like their torn sails, were helpless as they battled against the raging seas, trying desperately to save their badly leaking boat and rapidly sinking vessel.

For the young seaman, however, the day of salvation was here; the hour of decision had arrived; the moment of truth was at hand. In the midst of the chaos and the confusion, the frenzy and the fear, Newton called on the Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity and truth, crying out in genuine repentance for the Redeemer's tender mercies. And God saved him.

Seven years later Newton, a growing disciple, turned his back on the sea and “the business at which his heart shuddered”. Over the next four years, he searched the scriptures daily and studied its truths diligently. On December 16, 1758, he surrendered his life to preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

After some religious opposition, John was eventually ordained as a curate at the age of 40. He was appointed to the parish church of Olney, near Cambridge. This working class village, in the county of Buckinghamshire, was known for its bobbin lace manufacturing and Shrove Tuesday pancake race.

Five years later Newton, a singing preacher, was enjoying a harmonious life at home and exercising a holy leadership at church. Conservative and reformed he was, but conventional and rigid he was not!

Being a man of innovation and initiative, he searched for different means to reach his community and sought dynamic methods to teach his congregation. In the midweek service for example, he introduced his evangelical “low Anglican” parish to new hymns and spiritual songs, some he wrote himself and others he co-wrote with his friend William Cowper.

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Amazing Grace was one of those fresh compositions that God inspired his dedicated heart and instructed his disciplined mind to complete in late December of 1772.

Originally entitled Faith’s Review and Expectation, the prayerfully chosen lyrics were carefully written for a New Year’s Day service. After reading the Biblical passage of 1 Chronicles 17:16-17 and reviewing his own life in the light of David’s response, Newton reflected on how far he had come since his seafaring days of sinful lifestyle, self-indulgence and slave trading.

The Vicar of Olney, like the King of Israel, was overwhelmed by God's amazing goodness and awesome greatness. It was right at this point, what would eventually become his best-known work was born. Here is how it appeared in Olney Hymns, 1779 (but in today's text):

Amazing grace! (how sweet the sound) that sav'd a wretch like me!
I once was lost but now am found, was blind but now I see.
‘T was grace that taught my heart to fear, and grace my fears reliev'd;
how precious did that grace appear, the hour I first believ'd!
Thro’ many dangers, toils and snares, I have already come;
‘T is grace hath brought me safe thus far, and grace will lead me home.
The Lord has promis'd good to me, his word my hope secures;
He will my shield and portion be, as long as life endures.
Yes, when this flesh and heart shall fail, and mortal life shall cease;
I shall possess, within the vail, a life of joy and peace.
The earth shall soon dissolve like snow, the sun forbear to shine;
But God, who call'd me here below, will be for ever mine.
 
In 1835, Faith’s Review and Expectation found its soul mate in “New Britain” and was born again as Amazing Grace. The seed was conceived and a song was delivered after the spiritual message from England's central east met and married a simple melody from America's deep south.

In 1900, American composer and successful publisher, Edwin Othello Excell (1851-1921) added the finishing touches with his musical arrangement. He also removed the final verse from the original poem and replaced it with the following stanza from Jerusalem, My happy Home:

When we've been there ten thousand years, bright shining as the sun;
We've no less days to sing God's praise than when we first begun.

At the age of 57, Newton - an accomplished author, found himself standing at a ministry crossroad and staring at a major dilemma. The Newtons were forced to make a decision to leave the "Olney community" that they had come to love and serve for nearly 16 years. The veteran childless couple moved their home from the small village of Olney to the big city of London. On December 19, 1779 John preached his first sermon as Rector of the St Mary Woolnoth Church.

God blessed Newton's ministry and enlarged his coast from England's banking district to Australia's Botany Bay. As leader of "the Eclectic Society" (a practical group of evangelical clergy and Christian laymen), John approached Reverend Richard Johnson on September 23, 1786 to consider the chaplaincy on the first fleet to the land Down-Under. Reverend Johnson accepted, and the rest is Australian history.

The earlier work of Newton's excellent writings, Authentic Narrative - a personal testimony - continued to challenge more hearts for God and change many lives for good. So did also his newly published and necessarily controversial Thoughts on the African Slave Trade. The latter equipped and empowered his beloved disciple, William Wilberforce MP, who after 20 years of faithful campaigning to abolish slavery, finally succeeded in 1807 in passing an act of parliament in all British colonies.

Newton died on December 21, 1807.

The life of John Newton, wretched sinner that he was, clearly demonstrates that no matter how deep in sin you have gone so far, God’s grace is still so far greater. God’s Amazing Grace is all sufficient regardless of whosoever you are in this world and whatsoever you’ve done with your life.

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About the Author

Reverend Peter Rahme is the founding pastor of the Inner West Baptist Church in Sydney. His book, The Man & the Story behind Amazing Grace, was launched on April 27, 2007, by the Reverend Fred Nile MLC who also wrote the foreword. Endorsed by a large number of respected Christian leaders, the inspiring new book about the world's greatest hymn .is a condensed but comprehensive historical account of the soul of John Newton and the story of his Amazing Grace.

Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

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