Be known to us in breaking bread (StF 573)

Authors & translators:
Montgomery, James
Tune:
Belmont
Composers & arrangers:
Gardiner, William
Source:
Singing the Faith: 573 (CD24 #1)
Verses:
2
STF Number:
573

More information

This succinct, gentle, even intimate, communion hymn was written by a radical Sheffield journalist and passionate anti-slavery campaigner, James Montgomery. It was originally published in Montgomery's own The Christian Psalmist (1825) with the heading "The Family Table". A little unusually for a communion hymn, the words draw their inspiration not so much from the story of Jesus' last supper before his crucifixion so much as from the post-resurrection story in which Jesus joins with two believers on the Emmaus Road (Luke 24: 28-31, 35). There are also suggestions of John 6: 51: "I am the living bread that came down from heaven. Whoever eats of this bread will live for ever; and the bread that I will give for the life of the world is my flesh."

Four hymns by James Montgomery are included in Singing the Faith, amongst them two hardy perennials associated with the Christmas season: Angels, from the realms of glory (StF 190) and Hail to the Lord's anointed (StF 228). He wrote around 400 more.

James Montgomery

Though he had written poetry of all kinds since boyhood, Montgomery once observed that none of them would stand the test of time – except perhaps a few hymns.

He was born in 1771 into a Moravian family. His father was a Moravian minister in Irvine, Ayrshire; he and his wife would both die while working as missionaries in the West Indies while James was still young. He was sent to the Moravian seminary at Fulneck near Leeds, to train for the ministry, but his academic record was poor and abandoned this calling to become an apprentice baker and later a shop assistant.

Aged 21, Montgomery moved to Sheffield and became assistant to Mr Gales, editor and owner of the Sheffield Register, a radical newspaper. Gales fled the country in 1794 to avoid a political prosecution, and Montgomery took over the paper, renaming it the Sheffield Iris. He was subsequently imprisoned twice in York Castle, once for printing a song celebrating the Fall of the Bastille, and once for printing an account of a political riot in Sheffield. Less controversially, “Angels, from the realms of glory” also made its first appearance in the Iris.

Montgomery became a well-known figure in Sheffield (a memorial statue stands in the cathedral grounds); he was outspoken in his support for foreign missions and the Bible Society, and fearless in his denunciation of the slave trade, child chimney-sweeps and state lotteries. In 1809, he wrote an epic anti-slavery poem called 'The West Indies'. He also associated himself with the Wesleyan Methodists, particularly in their Sunday School work.

Read more about James Montgomery.
 
 

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