Christian Biographies 3

Christian Biographies 3 January 9, 2008

Stephen Tomkinsā€™ gift seems to be irony and the ability to prick the halo bubble around saints, which he did with John Wesley but does a little less directly in his book William Wilberforce: A Biography.

Wilberforce was exposed to evangelicalism of a Wesleyan sort very young but it concerned his mother, she drew him back into her own orbit of aristocratic friends, and Wilberforce then naturally evolved into a well-to-do, gentlemanly, gambling, quiet church goer with enormous political influence in all of England.
But he found true Christianity. He devoted his life to Bible reading, to prayer, and to a concentrated effort to extinguishing slave trade and slavery. He was also a moral activist, trying to get England more in line with Christian living, but it is his anti-slavery speeches and activism that have led to his powerful reputation. (Tomkins does not hesitate to point out his faults, but heā€™s not as hard on Wilberforce as on Wesley.)
What impressed me most about this book is the tireless work ā€” and it took two decades ā€” to get anti-slave trade laws passed. Wilberforce never gave up; and he was the right man at the right time to get the right job done. He was not alone, of course, but he was a central figure in the center of the storm.


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