Ruth Carter

Ruth Carter

Hymn writer • Lyricist

Biography last updated 5 hours ago

1 hymn on Hymnal Library 9 biography views
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1 Hymns on Hymnal Library
9 Biography views
569 Total hymn views

About Ruth Carter

Ruth Carter (1900–1982) was a dedicated English church leader and remedial school teacher whose deep commitment to children's education quietly yielded one of the most widely used modern hymns on the history and preservation of the Holy Scriptures. Born in London at the dawn of the twentieth century, Carter spent most of her life working outside the spotlight of mainstream hymnody or theological academia. She dedicated her daily professional life to assisting children with learning difficulties, a vocation that required immense patience, clarity, and an innate ability to break down complex, grand ideas into simple, memorable concepts that young minds could easily grasp.

Her singular, historic contribution to global hymnology was born out of a practical, immediate classroom need around the year 1932. While leading a Congregational Church Sunday School class in Buckhurst Hill, Essex, Carter developed and taught an interactive, multi-week course of lessons entitled "How We Got the Bible." As the course drew to its conclusion, she searched extensively through existing denominational hymnals for a closing song that could accurately synthesize the historical journey of the scriptures for her young students, who were between the ages of eight and eleven. Finding only abstract, overly complex theological anthems that completely ignored the physical history of the text, Carter decided to sit down at her kitchen table and write a custom verse that would serve as a structural summary of the lessons.

The resulting hymn, "For Your Holy Book We Thank You," is exceptional and perhaps entirely unique in global hymnody because it explicitly gives thanks not just for the divine inspiration of the Bible, but for the actual human labor required to preserve it across millennia. Written in a highly scannable, rhythmic meter, the opening stanza offers a childlike yet structurally profound prayer of gratitude for the writers, guardians, and translators who protected the text so that its pages might continually reveal God's strong love and tender care to people everywhere. For five years, the hymn remained a private piece used exclusively within Carter's local parish. Believing it might benefit other educators, she finally submitted the text to the National Sunday School Union in 1937, where it was published in the Graded Schools Intermediate Quarterly.

From those humble magazine pages, the hymn spread organically across the globe, crossing oceans to be formally adopted by major international hymnals, including the Australian Hymn Book, the Salvation Army Song Book, and the Seventh-day Adventist Hymnal, which famously commissioned a custom tune for the text from the American composer Blythe Owen. Throughout her later years, Carter remained remarkably modest about her global literary success, readily cooperating with international hymnal committees to update archaic pronouns to contemporary language and graciously allowing stanzas to be added to fit different liturgical traditions. She passed away in 1982 at the age of eighty-two, leaving behind a legacy as a faithful teacher who, in trying to solve a simple classroom problem, gifted the global church its most definitive song of thanksgiving for the preservation of the Word.

Hymns by Ruth Carter

# Title Year Views
1 For Your Holy Book We Thank You 1912 569 View

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