My Jesus I Love Thee Explained

My Jesus I Love Thee
Composer:William Ralph Featherston
Genre:Hymn
Written:1864
Meter:11.11.11.11
Melody:"Gordon" by Adoniram Judson Gordon

My Jesus I Love Thee is a poem written by William Ralph Featherston in 1864 when he was 16 years old,[1] although one source says he could have been just 12 years old.[2] The first two lines of this poem are nearly the same as a hymn written by Caleb J. Taylor, published in 1804; this hymn is used as the basis for the song Imandra by Ananias Davisson in the Supplement to the Kentucky Harmony in 1820, reprinted in Southern Harmony in 1835.[3] [4] There are other similarities between Featherston's poem and camp-meeting songs published in the 1820s onward.[5] [6] [7]

In 1876 Adoniram Gordon added music to Featherston's poem. Featherston died at the age of 27, well before his poem had become a well-known inspirational hymn. The poem is believed to have been his only publicly published work.

Inspiration

According to Tim Challies,[2]

Not much is known about Featherston, except that he attended a Methodist church in Montreal, that he was young when he wrote the poem (12 or 16 years old), and that he died at just 27 years of age. One story about how the poem became public is that Featherston mailed it to his aunt in Los Angeles who, upon reading it, quickly sought its publication... It wasn't until several years after Featherston's death that Adoniram Judson Gordon (founder of Gordon College and Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary) added a melody and published it in his book of hymns, thus forever transforming this poem to a song.

The United Methodist Church's Hymns of the United Methodist Church, a guide to the denomination's hymnal, states that Featherstone was 16 years old when he wrote the text in 1864. Kenneth Osbeck writes of this hymn in his book, 101 More Hymn Stories: "It is difficult to realize that this beloved devotional hymn, which expresses so profoundly a believer's love and gratitude to Christ ... was written by a teenager".[8]

Notable recordings

Additional Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Sanchez, Diana . The Hymns of the United Methodist Hymnal . Nashville, Tennessee . Abingdon Press. 1989 . 0-687-43149-2. 72.
  2. Web site: Hymn Stories: My Jesus I Love Thee | Challies Dot Com . Challies.com . March 10, 2013 . October 17, 2013.
  3. Steel, David Warren, and Richard H. Hulan. 2010. The Makers of the Sacred Harp. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois.
  4. Web site: Christian Classics Ethereal Library, Southern Harmony, Imandra. January 25, 2017.
  5. Web site: Social and Camp-Meeting Songs for the Pious. Baltimore, MD: Armstrong and Plaskitt, 1822. 216 pp.. January 25, 2017.
  6. Web site: Shaffer's Pilgrim Songster. Zanesville, Ohio, 1848. 216 pp.. January 25, 2017.
  7. Web site: Music and words to Imandra at Choral Public Domain Library. January 25, 2017.
  8. Book: Osbeck, Kenneth. 101 More Hymn Stories. Kregel. Grand Rapids, MI. 1985. 0-8254-3420-3. 61.
  9. Web site: Be Still and Know... Hymns & Faith. AllMusic. February 12, 2016.
  10. Web site: My Jesus I Love Thee . Amazon . September 7, 2016.
  11. Web site: MY JESUS I LOVE THEE (TRACK #9) . Selah . September 7, 2016.
  12. Web site: Darlene Zschech. My Jesus, I Love Thee from Darlene Zschech's #RevealingJesus Project . https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211215/rDXTqTuG1Nk . 2021-12-15 . live. YouTube . March 5, 2013 . September 7, 2016.