The Faith of Our Mothers

Surveying the countless women in history who lived audaciously for Christ, we have a tall order to fill.

Her.meneutics July 10, 2009

This week is Vacation Bible School at our church, and my four-year-old daughter’s first year in attendance. In a moment of questionable sanity, I volunteered to help out in the nursery, with my two-year-old and three-month-old sons in tow. Suffice it to say, it’s been a very VBS-centric sort of week.

On the CD of VBS songs, there’s a hip-hop rendition of “To God Be the Glory” that starts out with a funky beat and a suave voice chanting, Check it out now, to God be the glory! “I wonder what Fanny Crosby would think of this?” I asked my husband as we listened to the CD in the car on our way home from church.

“Why?” he asked.

“She wrote this song,” I told him. “She wrote, like, a hundred hymns or something, I think. I read a biography about her when I was little.”

When we got home, I looked up Fanny Crosby online and found that my memory was slightly off. Crosby actually wrote over 8,000 hymns during her lifetime, and is considered by some to be the most prolific hymnist in recorded history.

In the anthology Literary Mama: Reading for the Maternally Inclined, editors Amy Hudock and Andrea J. Buchanan write about the legacy left to mother-writers by women who have mothered and written throughout history. But “our cultural memory seems so short,” they observe. “Many of the mother-writers of the past have been largely forgotten, their legacy lost for their creative daughters.”

I thought about the legacy that Christian women throughout the ages have left for their daughters as I started reading, again, about Fanny Crosby. Blinded in 1820 at six weeks of age by an improperly performed medical procedure, Crosby’s story began to take on more meaning for me as I read about not only her hymnody, but also her life as a preacher, a lobbyist, and a mother whose only child died as a baby. About her blindness, Crosby is quoted as saying:

It seemed intended by the blessed providence of God that I should be blind all my life, and I thank him for the dispensation. If perfect earthly sight were offered me tomorrow I would not accept it. I might not have sung hymns to the praise of God if I had been distracted by the beautiful and interesting things about me.

Wow.

The church’s history is rich with stories of remarkable women like Fanny Crosby, women who did incredible things for their Lord and for the world. Harriet Tubman, Florence Nightingale, Anne Bradstreet, Hildegard of Bingen – these women’s stories are ones that I want to make sure I pass on to my daughter, and my sons.

Back in April, writing about modern-day evangelical women, Katelyn Beaty asked readers to “help us think of the women we have forgotten who are shaping the broader culture for Christ.” I’d like to ask something similar: who are the Christian women throughout history whose stories have moved you? Whose testimonies, whose stories of faith do you want to ensure we don’t forget?

In 1875, a blind woman wrote a song that my daughter will uh-huh her way through today at Vacation Bible School. I’d like to think Fanny Crosby would be happy, knowing that her faith and her love for the Lord were reaching forward into future generations. Or perhaps she would simply say that this is her story, this is her song.

Praising my Savior all the day long.

The Resurgence, a ministry of Mars Hill Church, posted a video this week detailing Crosby’s life. It can be viewed here.

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