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Wednesday, November 22, 2006
Kathleen Parker :: Townhall.com Columnist
Amazing grace and other things
by Kathleen Parker
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WASHINGTON -- As Americans celebrate Thanksgiving, they might add to the list of things for which they are grateful: Christian evangelicals.

No, I'm not kidding.

It has become fashionable and amusing these days to ridicule conservative Christians who believe in the Bible, even if they fail to live by the Word every waking moment. One fallen preacher comes along and the secular world rejoices in the triumph of hypocrisy.

Yet, anyone familiar with the history of social justice knows that evangelicals, as well as others of different faiths, have led many of the causes that progressives today claim as their turf.

It was, in fact, an evangelical Christian who led the movement to end slavery in the civilized world. His name was William Wilberforce, a British statesman who got himself elected to Parliament in 1780 at age 21, and soon began his crusade.

Wilberforce's name and spirit are back in circulation with the opening in February of the movie ``Amazing Grace: The William Wilberforce Story,'' timed to coincide with the 200th anniversary of Britain's abolition of slavery.

The film is another project from billionaire Phil Anschutz's Bristol Bay Productions, sister company to Walden Media (``The Chronicles of Narnia''). While Walden produces family-friendly movies suitable for all ages, Bristol Bay produces historical dramas such as ``Ray'' -- about Ray Charles.

Anschutz, invariably described as a ``conservative Christian,'' implying some questionable agenda, personally financed ``Ray'' when Hollywood told him he was crazy. Some say the unassuming media mogul is misguided again in hoping to draw audiences to a biopic bereft of sex or violence.

I attended a screening recently and was alternately horrified by what we know about slavery and moved by what was truly amazing grace.

Action-movie fans may not find themselves chewing their nails, but the story is riveting. Watching educated men try to justify slavery is unavoidably mesmerizing. Considering the fragile thread by which civilization hangs -- a fray away from barbarity -- is implicitly cliff-hanging.

The movie tracks Wilberforce's almost single-handed battle to change the hearts and minds of his colleagues in Parliament, many of whom were invested in America's plantations and the slave trade necessary to their prosperity.

A reluctant politician, Wilberforce had been considering entering the clergy when his friend, William Pitt, (Britain's youngest prime minister at age 24) urged him to run for office. Wilberforce sought advice from his childhood pastor, John Newton, the former slave ship captain who wrote the lyrics to the hymn ``Amazing Grace.'' Continued...

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About The Author
Kathleen Parker is a syndicated columnist with the Washington Post Writers Group.
 
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Subject: man...
"How can anyone who claims to be a Christian vote for people who support sodomy, Partial Birth Abortion, homosexual marriage, and other liberal causes."

How can anyone who claims their version of Christianity is the right and literal one, and then denigrates the faith of those who would believe in Christ, and wish hell upon them, profess to be a Christian?

Mary Katherine...

"It has become fashionable and amusing these days to ridicule conservative Christians who believe in the Bible, even if they fail to live by the Word every waking moment."

If they kept their faith to themselves, there would be no opportunity for ridicule, would there?

You don't see people ridiculing Mother Teresa, do you? She didn't keep it to herself but then she wasn't a massive hypocrite telling everyone else how they should live, either.

"One fallen preacher comes along and the secular world rejoices in the triumph of hypocrisy."

The discovery of truth should be followed by rejoicing, in my opinion. But I think you're confusing rejoicing with lurid news stories from the most unlikely of people. It's intriguing.

You make no sense whatsoever here:
" Yet, anyone familiar with the history of social justice knows that evangelicals, as well as others of different faiths, have led many of the causes that progressives today claim as their turf."

So why have evangelicals abandoned them? There is no turf claiming when the other side is so virulently anti-poor, protectionist and racist.

"At last, an issue on which all can agree: Slavery is bad."

Not that any of you care to agree on anything with those durn liberals...

Farmers Wife:

"True peace and freedom can only come through each individual's relationship with God, their Creator, and the Lord Jesus Christ who died that all might be saved."

Thank you for the reminder of what being a Christian is really about :)

Wow, jdw
I'm guessing you're from the South. I don't consider that bad in and of itself, but only a certain type of Southerner would take an article in praise of Christian abolitionists in England and turn it into a rant against the American Civil War and include such revisionist history. The Civil War was ignited by an act of war -- the Confederate Army seizing of the garrison at Ft. Sumter. You could kind of consider it Lincoln's Pearl Harbor or 911. Whether slavery would have died a natural and peaceful death in a decade or so is debatable, as the South was so set on keeping it, no matter what! They felt entitled to maintain their "privileged" position at the expense of human suffering. Abolitionists, speaking from the true heart of Jesus, recognized that the British and American forms of slavery were not anything like the Jewish form of slavery (which was more like indentured servitude) and they saw it as their calling from God to educate the heart of man on this issue. They are no different in that regard than pro-life advocates of today who see an unnecessary cruelty and seek to abolish it.
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