American country singer Garth Brooks sang it at Joe Biden’s inauguration ceremony this past Wednesday afternoon in Washington, DC. Internationally acclaimed Chinese-American cellist Yo-Yo Ma played it for the inaugural celebration that evening. The old, soothing hymn “Amazing Grace” has been known and appreciated around the world for centuries. But how many of us know the story behind it?
Who was this “wretch” who was “once lost,” then found; the hymn-writer who was “blind” but made to see? What had he done that was so wretched? What had he been blind to? How did he come to turn his life around and then write this iconic hymn about his profound spiritual experience?
In his wild and dissolute youth, Englishman John Newton (1725-1807) became the master of a slave ship, ferrying human cargo across the Atlantic from the west coast of Africa to the plantations of America. On one of these voyages, in 1748, when a violent storm lasting eleven hours battered his vessel and swept a crew member overboard, Newton called out for God’s grace and mercy. This moment marked his spiritual conversion.
Ultimately, Newton ended his seafaring, began studying Christian theology, became an Anglican minister and, later, an ardent abolitionist.
When he was the parish priest in Olney, England, Newton began to write hymns. “Amazing Grace” was written to illustrate a sermon he gave there on New Year’s Day, 1773. “With the message that forgiveness and redemption are possible regardless of sins committed and that the soul can be delivered from despair through the mercy of God, ‘Amazing Grace’ is one of the most recognizable songs in the English-speaking world” (Wikipedia). Jonathan Aitken, a Newton biographer, estimates that the song is performed about ten million times a year.
And when asked to sing along – as Garth Brooks asked the inaugural gathering to do – many of us are able to do so because we know these words by heart and are soothed by the familiar tune:
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.
‘Twas 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;
‘Tis grace hath brought me safe thus far,
And grace will lead me home.
…
In 1787 John Newton, convinced that silence, “at such a time, and on such an occasion, would, in me, be criminal,” wrote a pamphlet, his “testimony,” he called it, titled Thoughts Upon the African Slave Trade (still in print today), “which, however sincere,” he wrote, “comes too late to prevent, or repair, the misery and mischief to which I have, formerly, been accessary.”
The impact of this booklet on the abolitionist movement was immediate in that it graphically described the horrors of the slave trade by a white man who not only witnessed it firsthand but participated in those horrors. This publication amounted to a moving confession of repentance for the author’s part in the hideous trade in human beings.
At this week’s historic inauguration “Amazing Grace” became the hymn for the moment, with its universal message about forgiveness, deliverance, transformation, redirection, truth, hope, and faith. New York Times Opinion writer David Brooks (a Republican), called Joe Biden a “transformational president.” Biden is the man for the moment, I believe, to take us in a new direction, out of the sturm und dring of the past four years and on to calmer waters.
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To listen to Judy Collins’ especially moving 60’s rendition of “Amazing Grace” go to:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AtteRD5bBNQ.
And to watch a particularly beautiful 14-minute video on the history of “Amazing Grace,” go to:
Thank you so much, Bonnie, for this important history on everyone’s—probably even atheists’—favorite hymn. I knew its author had been a ‘bad man,’ because he said so himself, but I never knew his and the hymn’s history. It was an apropos anthem to have sung on Inauguration Day.
I wonder how many of your readers sang along when they read the lyrics in your post. I did.
Thank YOU, BeDear, for your response. I can envision John Newton looking down on Wednesday and being deeply moved by Amanda Gorman and her stunning poem.
Great story, Bonnie. And I pray you are right about Biden. I am not a big fan but so far, quite impressive!
Thanks, Kim. Yes, I like to think (hope) that Joe will win everybody — on all sides of the aisle — over! — xx
Wow! Thank you, Bonnie! What a timely and eye-opening piece. I’ve always loved Amazing Grace, and now I love it even more! ♥️
Thank you, dear Vanessa! I’m so glad you liked it. Please share it with your network, if you will. — xx
Another touching and evocative piece from you, Bonnie.
Do you and your readers know there is a strong Kirriemuir link to this story?
https://www.studiointernational.com/index.php/michael-visocchi-interview-south-georgia-commission-whaling-grytviken-chance-to-show-what-we-can-get-right
Greetings from Bonnie but chilly Scotland!
Sandra.
Thank you so much for this, Sandra! No, I wasn’t aware. I’ll check it out right away, and I hope other WOW readers do too! — Mucho love from sunny MX, BB
Sandra, I just went to the link and skimmed the article but couldn’t find the Kirrie connection. What am I missing?
Thanks for the reminder that we all have experienced amazing grace.
De nada, Helaine. Yes, after the tempest we’ve all been through in recent years, we could use a reminder.
Dear Bon,
This was a fascinating post. I never knew any of this background to the song. It changes the way I see this song completely. Thanks for this new knowledge. You never know the things you will learn from WOW.
Love,
Paul
Thank you, dearest Paul. I’m so glad you found it fascinating. I just wish I could reach more people with it… xx
Beautiful Beautiful. Thank you
Thank YOU, Lyn, for your response.
Excellent, Bonnie! And remember Obama’s breaking into it while talking with African Americans in the White House? That was one of his unforgettable moments of grace
. The song’s origin with a former captain of a slave ship reiterates how so much of our world and American culture has roots in “our original sin,” slavery.
Absolutely, Steve! Thanks so much for your input. Hope all is well with you and Donna.
Bonnie, is there a place where I could get a poster size of that picture.
My email address : ercabell@hotmail.com
Sorry, but I don’t know about that, Edward. I got the image from stock photos when I went to Google and typed in Slave Ships. Perhaps you can find it there.