An Ambitious Abolitionist Account

In Tim Stafford’s novel Stamp of Glory, the main character is a movement

Christianity Today February 1, 2000

“In the world, but not of it” is a challenging position for Christians to occupy. It’s also a challenging position for the writer of historical fiction. Tim Stafford, senior writer for Christianity Today, maintains it well in his new novel The Stamp of Glory (Thomas Nelson), especially considering this is his first foray into the genre (his only other novel, A Thorn in the Heart, is a police mystery). Extensive research helps him step into the years preceding the Civil War; living this side of Civil Rights allows him to connect the crusade for emancipation to today’s political climate.

Stafford says he was drawn to the abolitionist struggle because it is “the most important movement in American history, and also the most interesting.” He also sees “eerie parallels” between abolitionists and current Christian social reformers, a connection he demonstrated in a recent CT article (” How God Won When Politics Failed,” January 10, 2000). Abolitionists were told their sentiments were causing violence, a charge that has recently been leveled at pro-lifers, Baptists, and anyone who speaks out on homosexuality. They were frustrated with both political parties of the day—Whig and Democratic—because neither would take a strong stand on the divisive issue. They tried, unsuccessfully, to enter their own candidate into the political arena. They felt like failures.

The main characters in The Stamp of Glory are not failures, but what ground they gain is hard-fought. Thomas Nichols, the son of a Methodist plantation owner who unexpectedly freed his slaves in his will, first must conquer materialism, lust, and atheism, and even then ghosts from his slave-master past dog his every reforming stride. Theodore Weld, a passionate anti-slavery crusader with grand ideas for education, has the ghastly experience of watching many students at Cincinnati’s fledgling Lane Seminary die of cholera. Arthur Tappan becomes the target of mob riots and death threats after years of being a highly respected merchant in New York. Instead of wondering why it took this country so long to end slavery (as someone with no memories of the Civil Rights movement might), the reader has to marvel that emancipation came at all.

Stafford’s book succeeds in portraying abolition’s lurching progress both inside the crusaders’ minds and outside in the public world. Between passages detailing the often agonized thoughts of Nichols, Weld, and others, people like Charles Finney, Nat Turner, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Frederick Douglass intersect the action. The transitions between Stafford’s narrative and his historical reporting are not always smooth, but it is very useful to see how these headline-makers influenced people who reaped the benefits or consequences of their actions. For example, Catherine, one of Nichols’ freed slaves, and her friends are hunted after Turner’s rebellion is reported in the local newspaper.

Unfortunately, the inclusion of so many people and events sometimes clouds the narrative, which is already complicated by the fact that it spans nearly 40 years. This tension is made obvious by two different descriptions of the book—the back cover calls it “the compelling story of the Nichols family,” while Stafford, on Amazon.com, says it is “a novel about the abolitionist movement.” Not surprisingly, Stafford strikes closer to the truth; the movement, in the abstract, is in some ways a stronger “character” than any of the book’s human protagonists. This stands in contrast to the visceral, immediate confusion of something like William Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom, where the characters don’t understand their place in the sweep of history and readers can only guess. Faulkner’s characters move; Stafford’s tend instead to be moved.

The Stamp of Glory is the first of a four-part “River of Freedom” series in which Stafford will focus on women’s suffrage, prohibition, and civil rights. He says the books “are meant to chronicle the ways in which faith interacts with social justice.” One hopes the characters in these novels will live in their changing worlds as fully as they are agents of that change.

Related Elsewhere

More Christian History, including a listing of events that occurred this week in the church’s past, is available at ChristianHistory.net. Or you can subscribe to Christian History here.

The first chapter of Stafford’s Stamp of Glory: A Novel of the Abolitionist Movement (Thomas Nelson, January 2000) also appears at ChristianityToday.com (The book can be purchased at Worthybooks.com and other bookstores.)

Christian History, has repeatedly looked at slavery and abolitionism. Articles have included:

By Any Means Necessary | Black abolitionists were tired of waiting for a gradual, peaceful end to slavery (from issue 62: The Spiritual Journey of Africans in America: 1619-1865)

The Evil that Baffled Reformers | African slavery thwarted every effort to eradicate it (from issue 56: David Livingstone)

The ‘Shrimp’ who Stopped Slavery | The most malignant evil of the British Empire ceased largely because of the faith and persistence of William Wilberforce (from issue 53: Wilberforce and the Century of Reform)

A Profitable Little Business | The tragic economics of the slave trade (from issue 53: Wilberforce and the Century of Reform)

Christian History Issue 33, The Untold Story of Christianity and the Civil War, also included several articles on slavery and abolitionism. It is not available online, but can be purchased online for five dollars.

Stafford also had two articles about abolitionism in the September/October 1999 issue of our sister publication Books & Culture: ” Abolition’s Hidden History | How black argument led to white commitment,” and ” The Puzzle of John Brown

For more on abolitionism, see Britannica.com, the Library of Congress, and PBS’s Africans in America.

Christian History Corner appears every Friday at ChristianityToday.com. Previous Christian History Corners include:

The Caged Bird Wrote | If only CBS had chosen a true heroine for Black History Month … (Feb. 11, 2000)

A Cave of One’s Own | Who were the early church’s ‘desert mothers’? (Feb. 4, 2000)

For Better or Worse | The Church of England’s current wrestling with divorce echoes its inception (Jan 28, 2000)

Out with the Old? | As rumors of Pope John Paul II’s retirement circulate, it’s worth remembering the story of the last pope to resign (Jan. 21, 2000)

Roman, Lend Me Your Ear | When a bishop rebuked a Christian emperor, who had the final word? (Jan. 14, 2000)

Good King, Bad King | How Christian was the king whose name is almost always associated with the Bible? (Jan. 7, 2000)

Copyright © 2000 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

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