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Phillis Wheatley: Faith, Poetry, and the Cost of Speaking While Enslaved
Episode 926th March 2026 • Gospel Gumbo • William Sofield
00:00:00 00:09:24

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Phillis Wheatley was a Christian poet whose voice carried truth into a world that refused to believe she could have one.

Born around 1753 in West Africa, Phillis Wheatley was captured as a child, enslaved, and brought to colonial Boston aboard a slave ship. In an age that celebrated liberty while practicing bondage, she became an astonishing literary figure—the first African American woman to publish a book of poetry, and the first African to publish in English.

This episode of Gospel Gumbo explores Phillis Wheatley’s life as a story of faithfulness without power. Educated by her enslavers yet never freed from suspicion, Wheatley mastered classical poetry, Scripture, Greek, and Latin. She wrote elegant Christian verse that challenged the moral contradictions of her time—not through rage, but through theological clarity and restraint.

Her brilliance drew admiration, but also disbelief. In 1772, Wheatley was forced to stand before a panel of prominent white men—including John Hancock—to prove that her poems were truly her own. Even her genius required validation from authority that never questioned itself.

We trace her journey from enslavement to publication in London, from public acclaim to quiet poverty, and from theological confidence to an early death at age 31. Along the way, this episode examines how Wheatley navigated Christian faith, Enlightenment ideals, slavery, freedom, and suffering—without ever surrendering her devotion to Christ.

Phillis Wheatley did not live to see her work fully honored. She did not escape hardship. But her poetry endures as a witness to the truth that the gospel does not belong to the powerful—and that faithfulness does not depend on recognition.

This episode explores:

  1. Christianity and slavery in 18th-century America
  2. Phillis Wheatley’s poetry and theological convictions
  3. Race, intellect, and credibility in the colonial world
  4. Faithful Christian witness under oppression
  5. The quiet power of truth spoken without protection

Recommended for listeners interested in:

Christian history, Black church history, faith and literature, slavery and Christianity, early American theology, poets of faith, and stories of Christian courage without power.

Thanks for listening.

Contact me here: gospelgumbopodcast@gmail.com for corrections, suggestions, encouragements, questions.

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