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Part of the popular Trailblazer series
Derick Bingham was the teaching pastor at Christchurch, Belfast. He was also an Adjunct Professor of English Literature at the John Brown University and a Fellow of the Royal Society for Arts. A popular author and well known public speaker Derick passed away on the 6th of March 2010 following a long battle with Leukemia.
"The abolition of slavery in the U.K. has an anniversary in the
year 2007. This is why teachers, sunday school teachers and
children's workers should make sure they stock up on Wilberforce
material in the run up to this. A film on Wilberforce's life is
also being launched in 2006. Make the most of these events and get
Christian books into children's homes on the back of them!"
*Catherine MacKenzie*
"A story deserving to be told to a new generation."
*Rt. Hon. Tony Blair, Former Prime Minister*
"This week I was invited to speak at the Scottish Story telling
Centre on the royal mile in Edinburgh. Through its partnership with
the Scottish Storytelling Forum, the centre supports a national
network of storytellers. It is involved in outreach projects with
local authorities, environmental agencies, community centres and
libaries, engaging with all age groups and diverse cultures of
modern Scotland and providing opportunities for the socially and
educationally excluded to take part in community-based inclusive
cultural experiences.
As the flagship of the network, the centre strives to reinforce
Scotland's vigorous contribution to a world-wide revival of
interest in storytelling and story-telling traditions.
The centre highlights the fact that 'Storytelling happens when the
story is told live without print or technology'. I had none and
found myself facing an overflowing crowd from four Edinburgh
schools with many of them sitting around my feet on the stage.
There is no audience in the world that let's you know how you are
doing like an audience of Children. My story was about the freedom
fighter himself, William Wilberforce.
I traced Wilberforces life through his childhood to University
where he wasted a lot of precious time. I spoke of the influence of
the Rev. John Newton upon Wilberforce's life where he approached
him for advice as an young MP. I spoke of his desire to trust and
follow Jesus Christ and how he became the conscience of the the
nation in his formidable and horrendously despised campaign to
abolish slavery. The Children listened closely as I told them that
the United Nations now tells that there is more slavery in our
world than in Wilberforces day. I encouraged them with the fact
that maybe one of them could get involved in helping to rid the
world of slavery.
The story ended and I went upstairs to engage with the children.
They crowded me and one girl stuck her head through the crowd. 'I
have two questions' she said 'one: could Wilberforce be a woman?
Two: Could one person change the world?'
My, the things children ask! Could Wilberforce be a woman?
certainly. Can one person change the world? I would say 'One person
cannot change the world but you can change the world for one
person.'
The World can then be changed one person at a time!"
*Derick Bingham*
... It is great to see the stories of these Christian heroes made
available to older children and teenagers.
*Liz Baines- Together with Children*
William Wilberforce, the leader of the campaign for the abolition
of the slave trade, was a devoted Evangelical Christian. His
spiritual journals between 1785 and 1833 open a window on the
inward life of this public man. He was frank, self–critical and
conscious of his constant dependence on the God of mercy. Michael
McMullen has transcribed all the journals and added helpful
explanatory notes so as to make this detailed record of
Wilberforce’s Christian journey available for the first time.
*David Bebbington*
Wilberforce has fascinated and confused biographers and historians
for centuries – how did this hilarious, spontaneous, chaotic and
conspicuously gracious man change the world? Christians have
delighted in his attachment to their gospel and have hoped that the
silver stream of world–changing inspiration was divine. And now at
last, in these pages, Wilberforce can speak for himself – and the
conclusion is luminous: Jesus Christ once said that people would be
fruitful as they abide in him. In these pages we see a man, an
undeniably fruitful man, abiding in Christ. Believers will
find a brother travelling the path that they have known, and will
be inspired to press on, rejoicing by faith in the One who brings
fruit into sight. I can’t think of a more thrilling or important
publication from the last ten years.
*Ben Virgo*
William Wilberforce recorded many intimate details about his
spiritual life, and thanks to Michael McMullen’s painstaking work,
many of them are published here for the first time. This book is an
inestimable treasure – it draws back the curtain on Wilberforce’s
struggles and rejoicings in his own words as he wrestled both with
himself and all that God had called him to be and do.
*Eric Metaxas*
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