Mary Artemesia Lathbury (1841-1918), a...
Illustration
Mary Artemesia Lathbury (1841-1918), a daughter of a Methodist preacher, showed promise even as a young girl in the fields of drawing, painting, and writing. She found her greatest creative expression in her association with the Chautauqua Institute, situated on beautiful Chautauqua Lake in western New York. Originally a Methodist camp meeting, this assembly developed programs that included the best talent in the country in such diverse spheres as religion, education, music, and drama. John H. Vincent, founder of Chautauqua, one day asked Mary to write a hymn that could be used with his recently developed "home study course." Undoubtedly moved by her own idyllic setting by Chautauqua Lake, she chose the biblical story of Jesus feeding the multitude by the Sea of Galilee as the basis for the hymn. In words frequently used in communion services she captured the meaning and mood of Jesus' description of himself as the Bread of Life. Her words further direct those who sing the hymn first to the sacred page of the scriptures and then beyond to Christ, the living Word. Whenever this story of Jesus' feeding of the multitude is preached, taught, or read, no more appropriate hymn might be sung than Lathbury's old Chautauqua "Study Hymn." -- Hasler
