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PENNINGTON STRUGGLED FOR FREEDOM, FAITH, AND LEARNING

[Above: Pennington as depicted in William Franklin Henney, Birthplace of American Democracy: Hartford, Commonwealth of Connecticut. Hartford, CN: The Connecticut Magazine Company, 1906. Public domain, Wikimedia File:Wcpennington.jpg]


BORN INTO SLAVERY around 1807, a blacksmith named James made a dangerous and daring attempt to escape when he was about nineteen. Captured after a few days, he managed to break free and make a second dash for freedom. Eventually, starving and thirsty, he made his way into Pennsylvania where Quakers sheltered him and taught him to read. He took the name Pennington in honor of a notable Quaker leader, and mastered his studies so well that in the 1830s he was allowed to audit classes at Yale. He became an educator and preacher in New York and published the first-known history of blacks in America in 1841.

In a famous sermon, “Covenants Involving Moral Wrong are Not Obligatory upon Man” (1842), Pennington argued that the moral law, derived from God, trumps human law if the human law commands people to do evil. Freedom is an unalienable right, given by God. Americans who enforced laws holding others in slavery were transgressing the moral law. And those who restored escaped slaves to masters were violating Isaiah 16:3-4 which commands God’s people to hide outcasts.

In 1849 Pennington’s autobiography, The Fugitive Blacksmith, was published in London. It gave the harrowing details of his escape and his rise to become a Christian minister. During the early 1850s, he spent time in Britain and on the European continent, eluding the Fugitive Slave Act and raising money to free slaves. The University of Heidelberg awarded him an honorary degree.

Back in New York, he was one of a group of black Americans who litigated against racial segregation on street cars and won on appeal in the State Supreme Court in 1855. A supporter of abolition, he ministered to Congregations in the south after the Civil War.

Regretably Pennington became an alcoholic. This addiction hastened his death, which came on this day, 22 October 1870, in Jacksonville, Florida. One-hundred-and-forty-six years later, in 2016, Yale dedicated a classroom to Pennington, declaring him the school’s first black student.

Dan Graves

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Contemplate the story of the Incarnation day-by-day throughout the season of Advent in our latest publication, The Grand Miracle. Based on the writings of C. S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, George MacDonald, Dorothy Sayers, and others, each day’s reading offers a fresh look at the birth of Christ through the eyes of a modern author. Scripture, prayer, and full-page contemplative images complete each entry. 28 days, 64 pages. Preview the Devotional here.

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Pennington is not as famous for his escape as Harriet Tubman but they both risked their lives to escape the shackles of enslavement. Harriet Tubman: They Called Her Moses. Watch it at RedeemTV.

(Harriet Tubman: They Called Her Moses can be purchased at Vision Video.)


For more about the slave experience in the United States, read Christian History #62, Bound for Canaan


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