Maltbie Davenport Babcock
Born: August 3, 1858, Syracuse, New York.
Died: May 18, 1901, Naples, Italy.
Buried: Oakwood Cemetery, Syracuse, New York.
Babcock attended Syracuse University and Auburn Theological Seminary. He ranked
high as a student and participated in both athletic and musical activities.
Tall, broad shouldered, and muscular, he was president of the baseball team, an
expert pitcher, and a good swimmer. He played several musical instruments,
directed the school orchestra, and played the organ and composed for it. He was
a singer and leader of the glee club. He could do impersonations, was clever at
drawing, and had a knack with tools. He was also an avid fisherman. He might
have become a professional musician had he not chosen the ministry.
His first pastorate was at the First Presbyterian Church,
Lockport, New York. In 1886, he was called to Brown Memorial Church, Baltimore,
Maryland, where he often counseled students at Johns Hopkins University. As his
fame spread, he was asked to preach at colleges all over America. Babcock was
not a great theologian or deep thinker, but had a talent for presenting
spiritual and ethical truths with freshness and effect. In doing this, he was
aided by his agile mind, wide range of knowledge, dramatic ability, speech
fluency, and magnetic personality.
After almost 14 years in Baltimore, Babcock was called to the
prestigious pastorate of the Brick Presbyterian Church in New York City, to fill
the vacancy left by the retirement of Henry Van Dyke. Babcock had been there
only 18 months when he made a trip to the Holy Land. While overseas, he died of
brucellosis.
Though Babcock published nothing during his life, his wife
Catherine collected and published many of his writings after his untimely death.
A volume of his poems contained This Is My Father’s World. Babcock,
of course, never heard his famous hymn sung.
Hymns