On John Woolman (Thing of Things)

Link post

My favorite EA blogger tells the story of an early abolitionist.

The subtitle, “somewhat in favor of guilt”, is better than any summary I’d write.

John Woolman would probably be mad at me for writing a post about his life. He never thought his life mattered.


Partially, he hated the process of traveling: the harshness of life on the road; being away from his family; the risk of bringing home smallpox, which terrified him.

But mostly it was the task being asked of Woolman that filled him with grief. Woolman was naturally “gentle, self-deprecating, and humble in his address”, but he felt called to harshly condemn slaveowning Quakers. All he wanted was to be able to have friendly conversations with people who were nice to him. But instead, he felt, God had called him to be an Old Testament prophet, thundering about God’s judgment and the need for repentance.


I don’t think you get John Woolman without the scrupulosity. If someone is the kind of person who sacrifices money, time with his family, approval from his community, his health—in order to do a thankless, painful task that goes against all of his instincts for how to interact with other people, with no sign of success—

—a task that, if it advanced abolition only in Pennsylvania by even a single year, prevented nearly 7,000 years of enslavement, and by any reasonable estimate prevented thousands or tens of thousands more—

Well, someone like that is going to be extra about the non-celebration of Christmas.