After watching "Amazing Grace" I decided to find out what Wilberforce was actually like, and was debating between this and Belmonte's biographies. When I saw that Belmonte had earlier won "The John Pollock Award," I knew that one author stood taller than the other!
This is a very conservative biography, and by that I mean Pollock commentates and interprets very sparingly. He reports simple facts, and when there is something to be said about his subject, he finds in Wilberforce's own words, or in the words of those who knew him, such lively descriptions as a biographer 200 years later could never invent with a straight face. In these writings from Wilberforce's letters and journals we see the heart of a man desperate to serve his Lord, in the words of those who knew him we see a man with the joy of his Lord in the face of adversity, and sprinkled throughout is good old-fashioned British wit.
Wilberforce was a man of passion and persistence. His discipline to stay the course was apparently not matched by his discipline of organization, but in him we see the power of a man committed to a cause over decades, and how God used the labors of a few men to turn the hearts of an entire nation against the great evil of the day. Wilberforce usually didn't take uncompromising stands as he pursued his great object, but he was relentless in his incrementalism. He pressed on until he couldn't fight any longer, and then was allowed to live just long enough to see the last great victory.
Who will be the relentless voice against todays evils? Who will be the voice crying in the cities to turn the nations? Who will be our Wilberforce?