What is one to make of a man described as strangely compounded, peculiarly constituted, and oddly framed ? It conjures up in the mind an image of Stevenson s Mr. Hyde, or Shelley s Frankenstein, or Hugo s Quasimodo. But such is J. C. Ryle s (1816-1900) description of Augustus Montague Toplady (1740-1778), author of what has been called the best-loved English hymn.
One wonders why someone would bother writing a biography or reading one about a strange, peculiar, odd person. Nevertheless, Ryle declared that no account of Christianity in England in the 18th century would be complete without featuring remarkable Toplady.
Douglas Bond, author of more than thirty books--several now in Dutch, Portuguese, Romanian, and Korean--is father of six, and grandfather of eleven--and counting--is Director for the Oxford Creative Writing Master Class and the Carolina Creative Writing Master Class, two-time Grace Award book finalist, adjunct instructor in Church history, recent advisory member to the national committee for Reformed University Fellowship, award-winning teacher, speaker at conferences, and leader of Church history tours in Europe.
Excellent little volume about the obscure author of a famous hymn ("Rock of Ages"). Toplady died of tuberculosis at age 38 and little is known about his life apart from his own writings and those of a few contemporaries. The figure that emerges from Douglas Bond's book is an appealing one of a man deeply aware of his sinfulness and his need of Christ's saving work, a warm and engaged pastor, and an author of many poems that have found their way down through the years into hymnbooks (although they seem to be vanishing, bit by bit, unfortunately). The book seemed a mite repetitive at times (perhaps due to the paucity of source material) but is eminently readable and very much worthwhile.
An excellent, brief introduction to the life of Augustus Toplady, of whom J. C. Ryle said that "no account of Christianity in England in the eighteenth century would be complete without featuring [him]".