THOMAS, JOHN (1730 - 1804?), Congregational minister, and hymnist

Name: John Thomas
Date of birth: 1730
Date of death: 1804?
Gender: Male
Occupation: Congregational minister, and hymnist
Area of activity: Poetry; Religion
Author: John Dyfnallt Owen

Born in 1730 in the parish of Myddfai, Carmarthenshire (christened 25 March). He came from a thriftless family but was nurtured by relatives. He received short periods of schooling in the neighbourhood of his home and learnt to read Welsh. He worked on farms, reading the Bible, Cannwyll y Cymry , and Taith y Pererin in his leisure hours. He heard Howel Harris preach in the house of Sieffre Dafydd, Llanddeusant (1745), an experience which shook him to the core. He went to Llanddowror as man-servant to the Rev. Griffith Jones and stayed there two years. At the invitation of Howel Harris he went to Trevecka; by this time his greatest delight was in attending religious meetings and societies, in preaching, and exhorting. For some years he taught in some of Griffith Jones's circulating schools in South Wales.

Liking the Congregational church system, he joined that body and on the recommendation of some Congregational ministers, he was received into the Academy at Abergavenny in 1761. Here he devoted more time to preaching and exhorting than to his studies.

He was ordained, 23 April 1767, as minister of Rhayader, Cae Bach, Llandrindod, and Garn by Edmund Jones, Isaac Price and, Richard Tibbott. According to his 'Confession of Faith,' 6 April 1788, he was then minister of Rhayader and Llandrindod. His ministerial life was tempestuous. He left Radnorshire in 1794 and made his way to Llangathen, Abergwili, and Carmarthen, where he died. It is not known when exactly he died - according to Rhad Ras he was alive in the winter of 1803-4, other sources maintain that he lived until 1810 or 1811. His personality was highly complex - he was warm spirited and exceedingly aware of sin. He married Miss Elizabeth Jones of Dyffryn Cothi, parish of Llanfynydd.

His Rhad Ras (published in 1810), which may be called the first Welsh autobiography, and the hymns of William Williams (Pantycelyn) are perhaps the most eloquent expressions of the spirit of the Welsh religious revival of the 18th century. He published Caniadau Sion [ sic ] in six parts between 1758 and 1788 (this work [the separate parts of which were collected into a volume in 1788 ] includes some of our best-known hymns), and translated many of Bunyan's tracts. There are elegies by him to Howel Harris, David Jones of Caeo, and Peter Williams.

Author

Published date: 1959

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