
Amazing Grace Indeed
For we ourselves also were sometimes foolish, disobedient,
deceived, serving divers lusts and pleasures, living in malice
and envy, hateful, and hating one another. - Titus 3:3
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Who Am I...
I was born in 1725, and
I died 1807. The only godly influence in
my life, as far back as I can remember, was my mother,
whom I had for only seven years. When she left my life through death,
I was virtually
an orphan.
My father remarried, sent
me to a strict military school, where
the severity of discipline almost broke my back.
I couldn't stand it
any longer, and I left in rebellion at the age of ten.
One year later,
deciding that I would never enter formal education again,
I became a
seaman apprentice, hoping somehow to step into my father's
trade and
learn at least the ability to skillfully navigate a ship.
By and by, through a process
of time, I slowly gave myself over to
the devil. And I determined that I would sin to
my fill without
restraint, now that the righteous lamp of my life had
gone out. I did
that until my days in the military service, where again
discipline
worked hard against me, but I further rebelled.
My spirit would not break,
and I became increasingly more and more a rebel. Because of a number
of things that I disagreed with in the military, I finally deserted,
only to be captured like a common
criminal and beaten publicly several times.
After enduring the punishment,
I again fled. I entertained
thoughts of suicide on my way to Africa, deciding that
would be the
place I could get farthest from anyone that knew me.
And again I made a pact with the devil to live for him.
Somehow, through a process
of events, I got in touch with a
Portuguese slave trader, and I lived in his home.
His wife, who was
brimming with hostility, took a lot out on me.
She beat me, and I ate
like a dog on the floor of the home. If I refused
to do that, she would
whip me with a lash.
I fled penniless, owning
only the clothes on my back, to the
shoreline of Africa where I built a fire, hoping to attract
a ship that
was passing by. The skipper thought that I had
gold or slaves or ivory
to sell and was surprised because I was a skilled navigator.
And it was
there that I virtually lived for a long period of time.
It was a slave
ship.
I went through all sorts
of narrow escapes with death only a
hairsbreadth away on a number of occasions. One
time I opened some
crates of rum and got everybody on the crew drunk.
The skipper,
incensed with my actions, beat me, threw me down below,
and I lived on stale bread and sour vegetables for an unendurable amount
of time. He brought me above to beat me again, and I fell overboard.
Because I couldn't swim, he harpooned me to get me back on the ship.
And I
lived with the scar in my side, big enough for me to
put my fist into,
until the day of my death.
On board, I was inflamed
with fever. I was enraged with the
humiliation. A storm broke out, and I wound up
again in the hold of
the ship, down among the pumps. To keep the ship
afloat, I worked
along as a servant of the slaves. There, bruised
and confused,
bleeding, diseased, I was the epitome of the degenerate
man. I
remembered the words of my mother. I cried out
to God, the only way I knew, calling upon His grace and His mercy to deliver
me, and upon His son to save me. The only glimmer of light I would
find was in a crack in the ship in the floor above me, and I looked up
to it and screamed for help. God heard me.
Thirty-one years passed,
I married a childhood sweetheart. I
entered the ministry. In every place that I served,
rooms had to be
added to the building to handle the crowds that came
to hear the gospel that was presented and the story of God's grace in my
life.
My tombstone above my
head reads, "Born 1725, died 1807. A clerk, once an infidel and libertine,
a servant of slaves in Africa, was by the rich mercy of our Lord and Savior,
Jesus Christ, preserved,
restored, pardoned, and appointed to preach the faith
he once long
labored to destroy."
I decided before my death
to put my life's story in verse. And
that verse has become a hymn.
My name?
John Newton.
The hymn?
"Amazing Grace."
Author Unknown
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But after that the kindness and love of God our Saviour
toward man
appeared, Not by works of righteousness which we have
done, but
according to his mercy he saved us, by the washing of
regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost; Which he shed on us abundantly
through Jesus Christ our Saviour; - Titus 3:4-6
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