2022/11/02

The Best Spiritual Autobiographies (130 books) | Goodreads

The Best Spiritual Autobiographies (130 books) | Goodreads

The Best Spiritual Autobiographies

1
Traveling Mercies: Some Tho...

by 
 4.13 avg rating — 46,316 ratings
2
The Seven Storey Mountain

by 
 4.05 avg rating — 18,161 ratings
3
Autobiography of a Yogi

by 
 4.23 avg rating — 58,506 ratings
4
Confessions

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 3.94 avg rating — 57,204 ratings
5
Surprised by Joy: The Shape...

by 

 4.05 avg rating — 58,955 ratings
6
The Journey Home: Autobiogr...

by 
 4.62 avg rating — 4,351 ratings
7
A Grief Observed

by 

 4.20 avg rating — 71,026 ratings
8
Eat, Pray, Love

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 3.60 avg rating — 1,640,101 ratings
9
The Long Loneliness: The Au...

by 

 4.01 avg rating — 4,768 ratings
10
The Hiding Place: The Trium...

by 
 4.44 avg rating — 296,053 ratings
11
Story of a Soul: The Autobi...

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 4.39 avg rating — 15,437 ratings
12
Girl Meets God

by 
 3.86 avg rating — 8,474 ratings
13
The Life of Saint Teresa of...

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 4.14 avg rating — 2,372 ratings
14
Tortured for Christ

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 4.34 avg rating — 15,511 ratings
15
Amazing Grace: A Vocabulary...

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 4.07 avg rating — 6,448 ratings
15
Grace (Eventually): Thought...

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 3.95 avg rating — 16,399 ratings
15
Auspicious Good Fortune: On...

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 3.97 avg rating — 31 ratings
18
My Country 'Tis of Thee

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 3.58 avg rating — 1,076 ratings
18
If Truth Be Told: A Monk's ...

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 4.40 avg rating — 2,012 ratings
20
Evolving in Monkey Town: Ho...

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 4.22 avg rating — 9,511 ratings
21
Apprenticed to a Himalayan ...

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 4.41 avg rating — 2,883 ratings
22
A Severe Mercy: A Story of ...

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 4.26 avg rating — 19,117 ratings
23
The Summer of the Great-Gra...

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 4.15 avg rating — 2,517 ratings
24
Plan B: Further Thoughts on...

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 4.04 avg rating — 20,763 ratings
25
A Circle of Quiet (Crosswic...

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 4.21 avg rating — 6,410 ratings
26
The White Hindu

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 3.92 avg rating — 13 ratings
26
Meant To Be (Mark Miller's ...

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 4.92 avg rating — 25 ratings
28
Living with the Himalayan M...

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 4.15 avg rating — 4,212 ratings
29
The Spiral Staircase: My Cl...

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 3.92 avg rating — 8,414 ratings
29
Take This Bread: A Radical ...

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 3.98 avg rating — 5,320 ratings
29
The Book Of Ammon

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 4.08 avg rating — 37 ratings
32
Through the Narrow Gate: A ...

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 4.12 avg rating — 1,825 ratings
33
Dakota: A Spiritual Geography

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 3.99 avg rating — 5,251 ratings
34
Srīla Prabhupāda Līlāmrta: ...

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 4.61 avg rating — 156 ratings
34
The Truth of Love

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 4.42 avg rating — 12 ratings
36
The Journals of Father Alex...

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 4.61 avg rating — 147 ratings
37
The Rage Against God: How A...

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 3.75 avg rating — 1,884 ratings
37
Blue Like Jazz: Nonreligiou...

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 3.90 avg rating — 111,087 ratings
39
Snake in the Water (Mark Mi...

by 
it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 8 ratings
40
The Cloister Walk

by 
 4.05 avg rating — 8,727 ratings
41
God's Counterpoints (Mark M...

by 
 4.92 avg rating — 12 ratings
41
Accidental Saints: Finding ...

by 
 4.18 avg rating — 12,246 ratings
43
The Quest for God: A Person...

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 3.59 avg rating — 103 ratings
44
Pastrix: The Cranky, Beauti...

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 4.31 avg rating — 12,938 ratings
45
Red Hot and Holy: A Heretic...

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 4.08 avg rating — 542 ratings
46
The Sacred Journey: A Memoi...

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 4.32 avg rating — 1,760 ratings
46
A Marvelous Net (Mark Mille...

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it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 8 ratings
48
A Separate Reality

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 4.08 avg rating — 17,889 ratings
49
I Am Somebody (Potatoes Don...

by 
 4.50 avg rating — 4 ratings
49
Legs in the Attic

by 
 4.11 avg rating — 9 ratings
49
Finding Home: An Imperfect ...

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 4.02 avg rating — 214 ratings
49
Ramana Maharshi and the Pat...

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 4.46 avg rating — 144 ratings
49
Tragic Treasures: Discoveri...

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 3.92 avg rating — 12 ratings
49
The Truth About Butterflies...

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 3.74 avg rating — 1,212 ratings
49
Deeply Rooted in Faith & Fa...

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 3.86 avg rating — 14 ratings
49
Dying in Indian Country: A ...

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 3.80 avg rating — 44 ratings
49
The Apple Tree Wish -- Made...

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 4.05 avg rating — 21 ratings
49
The Butterfly Mosque: A You...

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 4.06 avg rating — 4,544 ratings
49
I Choose:  Subtlety in Cults

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 4.50 avg rating — 8 ratings
49
Astronomicon minorem - DMT,...

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 3.65 avg rating — 17 ratings
49
Protected by the Light: A S...

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 4.50 avg rating — 12 ratings
49
Meditation's Secret Treasur...

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 4.33 avg rating — 3 ratings
49
Up From Slavery: An Autobio...

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 4.09 avg rating — 31,045 ratings
49
All the Pretty Things: The ...

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 4.17 avg rating — 1,574 ratings
49
Avery and Me: Intuitive Hea...

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it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating
49
Swinging on the Garden Gate...

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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 79 ratings
49
The Poet and The Princess: ...

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 3.97 avg rating — 30 ratings
49
Diam's: autobiographie

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 4.31 avg rating — 169 ratings
49
Daughter of Fire: A Diary o...

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 4.34 avg rating — 179 ratings
49
Following the Red Bird: Fir...

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 4.37 avg rating — 38 ratings
49
Healing My Life from Incest...

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 3.83 avg rating — 6 ratings
49
The Spell Of The Horse: Sto...

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 4.19 avg rating — 47 ratings
49
Running from God: My Journe...

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 3.50 avg rating — 2 ratings
49
The Silver Thread of Life

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 3.85 avg rating — 41 ratings
49
Fulfillment: A Journey Thro...

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 4.07 avg rating — 29 ratings
49
WANTED

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 4.58 avg rating — 26 ratings
49
Arising

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 4.64 avg rating — 14 ratings
49
Life's Not Yoga...or is it?...

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 4.32 avg rating — 211 ratings
49
Escaping Christianity: Find...

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 4.39 avg rating — 18 ratings
80
Book of Shadows

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 3.92 avg rating — 2,813 ratings
80
Apologia Pro Vita Sua

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 4.11 avg rating — 1,418 ratings
80
Krishnamurti: The Years of ...

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 4.15 avg rating — 137 ratings
80
Letter to a Priest

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 3.97 avg rating — 298 ratings
80
A Cure for Emma, One Mother...

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 4.08 avg rating — 25 ratings
80
The Hand of God (Mark Mille...

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it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 7 ratings
80
Gandhi: An Autobiography

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 4.09 avg rating — 65,443 ratings
80
No Time to Grieve: An Autob...

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liked it 3.00 avg rating — 3 ratings
80
Life of St. Rita of Cascia,...

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did not like it 1.00 avg rating — 1 rating
80
The Surrender Experiment: M...

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 4.07 avg rating — 11,270 ratings
80
Writing the Sacred Journey:...

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 4.20 avg rating — 138 ratings
80
Call of an Angel

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 4.11 avg rating — 104 ratings
80
Use It, Don't Abuse It: A S...

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liked it 3.00 avg rating — 3 ratings
80
Becoming

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 4.49 avg rating — 880,988 ratings
94
Called Out of Darkness: A S...

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 3.63 avg rating — 2,168 ratings
94
The Golden String: An Autob...

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 4.26 avg rating — 81 ratings
94
Confessions of an Ex-Feminist

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 3.83 avg rating — 46 ratings
94
Memoirs of the Bathtub Psyc...

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 3.94 avg rating — 33 ratings
94
For the Love of All (Mark M...

by 
 4.93 avg rating — 15 ratings
94
There is a River: The Story...

by 
 4.25 avg rating — 1,981 ratings
94
The Story of a Soul: The Au...

by 
 4.39 avg rating — 15,437 ratings

2022/11/01

Spiritual autobiography - Wikipedia

Spiritual autobiography - Wikipedia

Spiritual autobiography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Title page from the first edition of John Bunyan's Grace Abounding

Spiritual autobiography is a genre of non-fiction prose that dominated Protestant writing during the seventeenth century, particularly in England, particularly that of Dissenters. 

The narrative follows the believer from a state of damnation to a state of grace; the most famous example is perhaps John Bunyan's Grace Abounding (1666).

 The first known spiritual autobiography is that of Augustine of Hippo, or St. Augustine. He wrote the Confessions and it stands to this day as a classic when studying this genre.

Structure[edit]

Because so many autobiographies were written, they began to fall into a predictable pattern. The "formula" began with a sinful youth, "followed by a gradual awakening of spiritual feelings and a sense of anxiety about the prospects for one's soul."[1] The person would repent, fall again into sin, repent, and sin again; such cycles could last for years. The Bible was often a source of comfort or fear during this time. Finally, the person had a conversion experience, an "epiphany, often of an emotionally shattering character, by which individuals came to realise that they had been singled out by God for salvation."[1] Life was not necessarily easy after this, but it was a good deal less traumatic. These overarching narratives were seen to be not only relevant to human life, but also to human history. Those who practiced this type of spiritual autobiography believed that "history repeats itself not only in man's outward, group existence, but in the spiritual life of individuals."[2]

Evolution[edit]

The spiritual autobiography's intense focus on the individual has led scholars to see it as a precursor to the novel, with later writers such as Daniel Defoe writing fictionalized accounts of a character's spiritual journey, such as Robinson Crusoe or Moll Flanders. Moreover, because, as G. A. Starr argues, English Protestantism had rejected the "otherworldliness" of Catholicism "and insisted on the compatibility of earthly and spiritual callings," the "utterly mundane activities could be drawn upon to illustrate and enforce religious duties." This also contributed to the growth of what we now know as the novel.[3]

Dating the evolution of this genre to a 17th century Protestant writing practice overlooks the earlier example of Margery Kempe, from the early 1430s (see Wikipedia entry The Book of Margery Kempe: A Facsimile and Documentary Edition, ed. Joel Fredell. Online edition.)

In the late 20th century, the spiritual autobiography has often reflected the struggle to reconcile variant forms of sexuality with Christian belief traditions, with the element of sincere struggle sometimes producing a polemical tone. Notable among these are titles by Jesuit John J. McNeill, Bothe Feet Firmly Planted in Midair: My Spiritual Journey (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press); Episcopalian priest Malcolm Boyd, Gay Priest, An Inner Journey (New York: St Martin's Press); Evangelical Minister Mel White's Stranger at the Gate: To Be Gay and Christian in America (New York: Plume/Penguin, 1995); Chris Glaser, self-described originally as a "fundamental Baptist and biblical literalist", published Uncommon Calling: A Gay Man's Struggle to Serve the Church (San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1988).

Beyond the Abrahamic traditions[edit]

Recent examples in the genre often come from outside the Abrahamic traditions. See, for example, the expatriate British writer Christopher Isherwood's "My Guru and His Disciple" (London: Methuen, 1980)

Jane Hamilton Merritt's "A Meditator's Diary: A Western woman's unique experiences in Thailand Monasteries" (London: Mandala/Unwin paperbacks, 1986);

 Irina Tweedie's "Daughter of Fire: A Diary of a Spiritual Training with a Sufi Master (Nevada City: Blue Dolphin Publishing, 1986. Originally published as "The Chasm of Fire", 1979); 

Andrew Harvey's "A Journey in Ladakh: Encounters with Buddhism" (1983) and "Hidden Journey: A Spiritual Awakening" (1991); 

Mark Matousek's "Sex Death Enlightenment: A True Story" (1996) and 

Victor Marsh's "The Boy in the Yellow Dress" (Melbourne: Clouds of Magellan Press, 2014). 

Worth considering too is Carol P. Christ's "Laughter of Aphrodite: Reflections on a Journey to the Goddess" (Harper San Francisco, 1988).

Insightful work coming from the contemporary encounter of Western aspirants with Buddhism, includes Stephen Batchelor's "Confession of a Buddhist Atheist" (2011, New York, Spiegel and Grau)

From the Japanese Zen tradition: Soko Morinaga Roshi's "Novice to Master: An Ongoing Lesson in the Extent of My Own Stupidity", trans. by Belenda Attaway Yamakawa (Boston: Wisdom Publications, 2002)

Of special interest here is the remarkable study by Sarah H. Jacoby, "Love and Liberation: Autobiographical Writings of the Tibetan Buddhist Visionary Sera Khandro" (New York: Columbia University Press, 2014). Dr Jacoby's study draws on the rare autobiographical and biographical writing of Sera Kandro, "one of the few Tibetan women to record the story of her life." Sera Khandro (1892 - 1940), who studied outside of the monastic disciplines, also wrote the biography of her guru, Drimé Özer.

Selection of spiritual autobiographies[edit]

  • John Bunyan's Grace Abounding
  • Richard Norwood's Confessions
  • A Short History of the Life of John Crook
  • Lawrence Clarkson's The Lost Sheep Found
  • The Narrative of the Persecution of Agnes Beaumont
  • William Apess' "A Son of the Forest"
  • Play of Consciousness: A Spiritual Autobiography by Swami Muktananda
  • The Confessions of St. Augustine
  • Robert Bell's “Metamorphoses of Spiritual Autobiography”

Notes[edit]

  1. Jump up to:a b Spiritual AutobiographyThe Literary Encyclopedia. Retrieved on 8 June 2007.
  2. ^ Starr, G.A. Defoe and Spiritual Autobiography. New York  : Gordian Press (1979), 13.
  3. ^ Starr, 11.

Resources[edit]

  • Caldwell, Patricia. The Puritan Conversion Narrative. Cambridge. 1983.
  • Damrosch, Leopold, Jr. God's Plot and Man's Stories. Chicago, 1985.
  • Delany, Paul. British Autobiography in the Seventeenth Century. London, 1969.
  • Ebner, Dean. Autobiography in Seventeenth-Century England. The Hague, 1971.
  • Hindmarsh, D. Bruce. The Evangelical Conversion Narrative: Spiritual Autobiography in Early Modern England. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.
  • Spacks, Patricia MeyerImagining a Self: Autobiography and Novel in Eighteenth-Century England. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1976.
  • Starr, G. A. Defoe and Spiritual Autobiography. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1965.
  • Augustine, Saint. The Confessions of St. Augustine. Translated by E. B. (Edward Bouverie) Pusey, 2002.
  • Hunter, J. Paul. “Spiritual Biography.” The Reluctant Pilgrim: Defoe’s Emblematic Method and Quest for Form in Robinson Crusoe. Johns Hopkins Press, 1966.
  • Bell, Robert. “Metamorphoses of Spiritual Autobiography.” ELH, vol. 44, no. 1, 1977, pp. 108–126.
  • Hindmarsh, D. Bruce. The Evangelical Conversion Narrative: Spiritual Autobiography in Early Modern England. OUP Oxford, 2005.
  • Ashley, George T. (George Thomas). From Bondage to Liberty in Religion: A Spiritual Autobiography. 2010.

External links[edit]

The Journal of John Woolman: And a Plea for the Poor by John Woolman | Goodreads

The Journal of John Woolman: And a Plea for the Poor by John Woolman | Goodreads








The Journal of John Woolman: And a Plea for the Poor

John Woolman
3.90
81 ratings14 reviews

The "journal" or spiritual autobiography of John Woolman was the characteristic literary expression of Quakerism in its first two centuries. Woolman's Journal was first published in 1774 (shortly after his death). His life, as recorded by himself, was the finest flower of a unique Quaker culture, Whose focus, as Howard H. Brinton has put it, was not on the literary or plastic arts but on "life itself in home, meeting and community," a life which was an "artistic creation as beautiful in its simplicity and proportion as was the architecture of its meeting houses..." Its distinguishing marks marks were not dogmas but practical testimonies for equality, simplicity and peace. These testimonies, once revolutionary in their social implications, were already becoming institutionalized in Woolman's time as the badges of a "peculiar people." In his quiet way-- he must have been the quietest radical in history-- John Woolman reforged them, tempered them in the stream of love, and converted them once again into instruments of social revolution.
Genres
Biography
Theology
Christian
History
264 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1960

Original Title
The Journal of John Woolman and a Plea for the Poor
This edition
Format
264 pages, Paperback
Published
October 19, 1972 by Kensington Publishing Corporation
------

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John Woolman
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John Woolman was a North American merchant, tailor, journalist, and itinerant Quaker preacher, and an early abolitionist in the colonial era. Based in Mount Holly, New Jersey, he traveled through frontier areas of British North America to preach Quaker beliefs, and advocate against slavery and the slave trade, cruelty to animals, economic injustices and oppression, and conscription. Beginning in 1755 with the outbreak of the French and Indian War, he urged tax resistance to deny support to the military. In 1772, Woolman traveled to England, where he urged Quakers to support abolition of slavery.

Woolman published numerous essays, especially against slavery. He kept a journal throughout his life; it was published posthumously, entitled The Journal of John Woolman (1774). Included in Volume I of the Harvard Classics since 1909, it is considered a prominent American spiritual work. The Journal has been continuously in print since 1774, published in numerous editions; the most recent scholarly edition was published in 1989.

Librarian note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.

John^Woolman

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3.90
81 ratings14 reviews

Wayne Sutton
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June 17, 2018
An American spiritual autobiography that I found as compelling and powerful as the Confessions of Augustine. Every American Christian should read this book.

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Keith
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September 30, 2008

One of the earlier Quakers and an early advocate for the abolition of slavery, Woolman's journal speaks mostly of his travels among Friends (another term for Quakers for those who don't hang in these circles) speaking to those who held slaves of his concerns. Woolman is pretty well single-handedly responsible for convincing Quakers to give up the institution of slavery, after which they went on to join the broader abolitionist movement, often in prominent position.

The Journal itself is maybe a bit awkward of a read, focusing a lot on the details of his going from place to place and mentioning conversations only in terms such as "we talked for a while about such and such" (not an actual quote from the text). The Journal might also be about half as long were it not for the continual reitterances of praise and thankfulness to God. I understand their presence, I'm just saying, a modern editor, editing a modern journal would cut a lot of those sentences.

The section A Plea For the Poor is more of a pamphlet style thing, and is as such more focused on getting to the heart of the message of living simply and with compassion for all.

The Journal is a good read on my Quaker research quest, pointing to both the changes and consistencies in the Society of Friends, as well as being a notable piece of the history of abolition.

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Chapter 6:
Small Pox
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smallpox

In the winter of this year, the small-pox being in our town, and many being inoculated, of whom a few died, some things were opened in my mind, which I wrote as follows:—
.....
Had he endowed men with understanding to prevent this disease (the small-pox) by means which had never proved hurtful nor mortal, such a discovery might be considered as the period of chastisement by this distemper, where that knowledge extended. But as life and health are his gifts, and are not to be disposed of in our own wills, to take upon us by inoculation when in health a disorder of which some die, requires great clearness of knowledge that it is our duty to do so.

Rum and Indians:
often sell rum to the Indians, which I believe is a great evil. In the first place, they are thereby deprived of the use of reason, and their spirits being violently agitated, quarrels often arise which end in mischief, and the bitterness and resentment occasioned hereby are frequently of long continuance. Again, their skins and furs, gotten through much fatigue and hard travels in hunting, with which they intended to buy clothing, they often sell at a low rate for more rum, when they become intoxicated; and afterward, when they suffer for want of the necessaries of life, are angry with those who, for the sake of gain, took advantage of their weakness. Their chiefs have often complained of this in their treaties with the English. Where cunning people pass counterfeits and impose on others that which is good for nothing, it is considered as wickedness; but for the sake of gain to sell that which we know does people harm, and which often works their ruin, manifests a hardened and corrupt heart, and is an evil which demands the care of all true lovers of virtue to suppress. While my mind this evening was thus employed, I also remembered that the people on the frontiers, among whom this evil is too common, are often poor; and that they venture to the outside of a colony in order to live more independently of the wealthy, who often set high rents on their land. I was renewedly confirmed in a belief, that if all our inhabitants lived according to sound wisdom, laboring to promote universal love and righteousness, and ceased from every inordinate desire after wealth, and from all customs which are tinctured with luxury, the way would be easy for our inhabitants, though they might be much more numerous than at present, to live comfortably on honest employments, without the temptation they are so often under of being drawn into schemes to make settlements on lands which have not been purchased of the Indians, or of applying to that wicked practice of selling rum to them.

And here luxury and covetousness, with the numerous oppressions and other evils attending them, appeared very afflicting to me, and I felt in that which is immutable that the seeds of great calamity and desolation are sown and growing fast on this continent.

They and my friends appeared glad to see me return from a journey which they apprehended would be dangerous; but my mind, while I was out, had been so employed in striving for perfect resignation, and had so often been confirmed in a belief, that, whatever the Lord might be pleased to allot for me, it would work for good, that I was careful lest I should admit any degree of selfishness in being glad overmuch, and labored to improve by those trials in such a manner as my gracious Father and Protector designed.

Chapter 8 "I love to feel where words come from."

Chapter 9: “Doth pride lead to vanity? Doth vanity form imaginary wants? Do these wants prompt men to exert their power in requiring more from others than they would be willing to perform themselves, were the same required of them? Do these proceedings beget hard thoughts? Do hard thoughts, when ripe, become malice? Does malice, when ripe, become revengeful, and in the end inflict terrible pains on our fellow-creatures and spread desolations in the world? “Do mankind, walking in uprightness, delight in each other’s happiness? And do those who are capable of this attainment, by giving way to an evil spirit, employ their skill and strength to afflict and destroy one another? Remember then, O my soul! the quietude of those in whom Christ governs, and in all thy proceedings feel after it. “Doth he condescend to bless thee with his presence? To move and influence thee to action? To dwell and to walk in thee? Remember then thy station as being sacred to God. Accept of the strength freely offered to thee, and take heed that no weakness in conforming to unwise, expensive, and hard-hearted customs, gendering to discord and strife, be given way to. Doth he claim my body as his temple, and graciously require that I may be sacred to him? O that I may prize this favor, and that my whole life may be conformable to this character! Remember, O my soul! that the Prince of Peace is thy Lord; that he communicates his unmixed wisdom to his family, that they, living in perfect simplicity, may give no just cause of offence to any creature, but that they may walk as He walked!”

Thus, for instance, among an imperious, warlike people, supported by oppressed slaves, some of these masters, I suppose, are awakened to feel and to see their error, and through sincere repentance cease from oppression and become like fathers to their servants, showing by their example a pattern of humility in living, and moderation in governing, for the instruction and admonition of their oppressing neighbors;

Though travelling on foot was wearisome to my body, yet it was agreeable to the state of my mind. Being weakly, I was covered with sorrow and heaviness on account of the prevailing spirit of this world by which customs grievous and oppressive are introduced on the one hand, and pride and wantonness on the other.

Chapter 10
I have gained by reading a caution and warning to Great Britain and her colonies, written by Anthony Benezet, it is right for me to take passage in a vessel employed in the West India trade. “To trade freely with oppressors without laboring to dissuade them from such unkind treatment, and to seek for gain by such traffic, tends, I believe, to make them more easy respecting their conduct than they would be if the cause of universal righteousness was humbly and firmly attended to by those in general with whom they have commerce; and that complaint of the Lord by his prophet, “They have strengthened the hands of the wicked,” hath very often revived in my mind.

I have for some years past declined to gratify my palate with those sugars.

mind I spoke to them of the necessity of our yielding in true obedience to the instructions of our Heavenly Father, who sometimes through adversities intendeth our refinement.
chapter 11
and that all of us who are acquainted with the pure gospel spirit may lay this case to heart, may remember the lamentable corruptions which attend the conveyance of merchandise across the seas, and so abide in the love of Christ that, being delivered from the entangling expenses of a curious, delicate, and luxurious life, we may learn contentment with a little, and promote the seafaring life no further than that spirit which leads into all truth attends us in our proceedings.

12

On inquiry in many places I find the price of rye about five shillings; wheat, eight shillings per bushel; oatmeal, twelve shillings for a hundred and twenty pounds; mutton from threepence to fivepence per pound; bacon from sevenpence to ninepence; cheese from fourpence to sixpence; butter from eightpence to tenpence; house-rent for a poor man from twenty-five shillings to forty shillings per year, to be paid weekly; wood for fire very scarce and dear; coal in some places two shillings and sixpence per hundredweight; but near the pits not a quarter so much. O, may the wealthy consider the poor! The wages of laboring men in several counties toward London at tenpence per day in common business, the employer finds small beer and the laborer finds his own food; but in harvest and hay time wages are about one shilling per day, and the laborer hath all his diet. In some parts of the north of England poor laboring men have their food where they work, and appear in common to do rather better than nearer London. Industrious women who spin in the factories get some fourpence, some fivepence, and so on to six, seven, eight, nine, or ten pence per day, and find their own house-room and diet. Great numbers of poor people live chiefly on bread and water in the southern parts of England, as well as in the northern parts; and there are many poor children not even taught to read. May those who have abundance lay these things to heart!

Great is the trade to Africa for slaves; and for the loading of these ships a great number of people are employed in their factories, among whom are many of our Society.

13

“His disorder, which proved the small-pox, increased speedily upon him, and was very afflicting, under which he was supported in much meekness, patience, and Christian fortitude. To those who attended him in his illness, his mind appeared to be centred in Divine love, under the precious influence whereof we believe he finished his course, and entered into the mansions of everlasting rest.
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Jonathan
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November 30, 2020
Standing up for convictions is hard, especially within faith groups where acceptance and unity are paramount to self identity. When those issues affect the economic way of life of the community (slavery, animal rights, laborers’ rights, discouraging seeking after wealth and status symbols), the courage to take a stand is exponentially harder and more complicated. Woolman did this consistently and relentlessly with a surprising level of success.

In our personal efforts to change the world or at least affect change within our sphere of influence, we can learn a lot from Woolman’s example of faith and integrity. I’m grateful he wrote some of his experiences down and opened his soul for the benefit of future generations.

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Christina
222 reviews
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July 17, 2020
Woolman is meek in the best and most biblical sense of the word. I think he has a lot to offer us in our current situations.

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Milan Homola
227 reviews
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July 16, 2020
Reads like the book or Acts. Very interesting to get a cultural look at Quaker values in the mid 18th century. One thing you can learn from his journal—-the long supported argument (“people in their day are excused on issues relating to the inconsistencies of Christianity and slavery because it was an unquestioned social institution”) doesn’t hold up.
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Brooks Lemmon
98 reviews
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December 16, 2021
This book was painfully difficult to read. It was extremely difficult to stay interested since the subject matter was so boring. I feel terrible talking about a book in this way, but these are just my honest thoughts. I've been reading this book for the last 5 months and it feels so good to finally put it on the shelf for good. Phew!

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Stephen
94 reviews
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July 11, 2013
Very thought-provoking. Was much ahead of his time in terms of business ethics, his opinions on slavery, and many other social issues.

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Katherine Harris
80 reviews
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July 15, 2020
Some would refer to John Woolman as the “father of civil disobedience.” This journal tells of his heart for the Lord and in the ways he follows after the Holy Spirit’s promptings to deny himself and choose God. He takes some very controversial stands, “acting contrary to present outward interest, from a motive of Divine love and in regard to truth and righteousness...”

I enjoyed reading his dependence on God and the way he found being obedient to the Father was in “exercising goodness towards every living creature.” This journal is written in a less distracted and “simpler” time, but I thought it had some great insight to seeking, listening, love and obedience.

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Danny Marsh
26 reviews
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July 31, 2021
You are reading a journal. There are going to be some extremely dull moments of describing the day-to-day activity. However, there are some incredible nuggets of wisdom through the journal. Woolman was a man of conviction who saw the evils of slavery and would not stand by while these injustices took place.

He could easily be described as "annoying," but I saw his conviction as motivational and inspiring. He listened to the Lord to know when to speak and when to remain silent.

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Top reviews from the United States
Jojo
5.0 out of 5 stars A Soft and Sensitive Heart
Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2013
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John Woolman has such a sensitive, kind, and loving heart. He was so concerned for the welfare of his fellow colonial Americans no matter what the color of their skin. He was out there talking to people about the evils of slavery back in the 1650's long before others did the same. His heart was open to God's love and therefore he was filled with love. This love, which only comes from God, poured out onto all. He didn't move or speak unless the Spirit of God told him to do so. He is a model for us all. I highly recommend this book.
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Char Mankin
5.0 out of 5 stars I see that John Woolman was instrumental in helping to ...
Reviewed in the United States on October 9, 2014
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I see that John Woolman was instrumental in helping to discourage slave holding among the Quakers. He would be an exponent in the abolition cause of the Quakers who in turn were the first to free their slaves and endorse emancipation to the fullest.
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Carol Matthews
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent clean book!
Reviewed in the United States on August 17, 2015
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Clean copy - like new. thanks
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Amos Smith
5.0 out of 5 stars The Quakers were few in number, but made an extraordinary impact on U.S. History. Woolman is a shining example of this.
Reviewed in the United States on December 12, 2014
John Woolman is an extraordinary figure in U.S. History. He was a Quaker (FGC), who as a result of his faith and practice was convicted that Slavery is wrong. As a result of his thorough conviction he traveled throughout the Eastern States advocating strongly for abolition. Woolman was one of the earliest abolitionists in America. Some writers argue that Woolman's witness plowed the fields of the American Conscience, so they would be ready for the fights for abolition yet to come. The Quakers were few in number, but made an extraordinary impact on U.S. History. Woolman is a shining example of this.
I loved how Woolman constantly wrestled with his own conscience in his journal. He would worry about just prices for merchandise in his shop. He had a practical sense of right and wrong, of applying "love of neighbor" to the nitty gritty details of life including minute business transactions. This is not the easiest read but worth the work.
-Amos Smith (author of Healing The Divide: Recovering Christianity's Mystic Roots)
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