William and Catherine
Booth
1829 1912
1829 1890
"Never!" Catherine cried form the first row of the
balcony, before her husband could utter a word. William Booth, a Methodist minister, had
been faulted for welcoming the poor, neer-do-wells and street toughs to his
services. Church leaders wanted him to promise that the welcome mat would be rolled up and
put away. Catherine answered for him. Little wonder that she wrote, "The more I see
of fashionable religion, the more I despise it."
William Booth was born in Nottingham, England, into a home that
knew the bitter taste of poverty. His father died when he was fourteen, and William became
a pawnbroker's apprentice. He never forgot the anxiety, the bleakness and, above all, the
degradation of penury. He would eventually startle Britain with his book, In Darkest
England and the Way Out. Booth knew the socially wretched intimately, the people who
worked themselves into exhaustion and then died from starvation, unable to afford as much
food as the British government guaranteed the worst criminals in the nations jails.
In 1890, the year his book appeared, there were three million such people in England.
Their enslavement meant unyielding despair.
Yet Booth was never tempted to become a secular programmer of
social change: he was always the evangelist. Converted at age fifteen in a Wesleyan
chapel, he ever after wanted only to declare that the Word of Truth which brings Life to
its hears and sets them on the Way of discipleship. Ordained a Methodist minister, he was
soon dismissed by church authorities as a "reformer" and was stripped of his
clergy-standing.
He found a temporary new home among New Connexion Methodists, but
a few years of "settled ministry" convinced him that this was not his vocation.
Together with his wife, Catherine Mumford, he began conducting preaching missions in
Wales, Cornwall, and the Midlands areas that had suffered the worst economic and
human blight in the shadow-side of industrialization. Once again, church authorities
attempted to appoint him to a settled ministry. By now he had wearied of their inability
to recognize his calling. He left. In 1865 the Christian Mission opened in East London. In
1878 it was renamed The Salvation Army.
Persecution began immediately. "Take their flag, tie it
round their necks and hang em," fumed the mayor of Folkestone. Following
outdoor services in Sheffield in 1882, William Booth "reviewed" his stalwart
soldiers. They were bespattered with egg-yolk, mud, and blood, their brass instruments
battered beyond repair. "Now is the time to have your photographs taken," he
commented wryly. In that year alone seven hundred Salvationists were assaulted on the
streets of Great Britain.
Catherine was the intellectual genius of the organization. As
highly-born as her husband was not her father had been a clergyman Catherine
was gifted with a keen mind, undeflectable conviction, and resolute courage. Long periods
of childhood illness had led her to probe philosophy, theology and history. She had read
through the entire Bible by age twelve. She would eventually write compellingly on behalf
of women preachers. Her husband agreed with her it this. The Orders and Regulations that
he drafted maintained that "women should have the right to equal share with men in
the work of publishing salvation." And in a vein that would cause modern feminists to
rejoice, William also insisted that "women must be treated as equal with men in all
intellectual and social relationships of life."
Booth continued his multi-pronged attack on the strongholds of
evil. On the one hand, he unashamedly instructed the evangelists he trained to
"preach damnation with the cross at the centre." On the other hand, he never
rested until he had secured permanent changes in the world around him. No longer did
dirt-poor "phossy-jawed" workers in the match-making industry find their
jawbones glowing in the dark and their lives at risk because of the phosphorus they were
obliged to work with. Tirelessly he exposed the "white salve" trade: thirteen to
sixteen year old prostitutes who were much in demand in Paris and London. Three hundred
and ninety-six thousand signatures later, he saw the practice outlawed.
At his death in 1912 The Salvation Army had 9,415 congregations
throughout the world. The organization is now found in ninety-four countries, stretching
form India, the site of the first major overseas venture, to El Salvador, added in 1989.
The most recent additions are Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Latvia and Russia.
The Booths had always known that the work of God would advance
only if Christians dedicated themselves without hesitation or qualification. Catherine
urged this upon all as she wrote, "There comes a crisis, a moment when every human
soul which enters the Kingdom of God has to make its choice of the Kingdom in preference
to everything that it hold and own." Always less reflective than his wife, William
himself asserted,
While women weep, as they do
now, Ill fight;
While little children go hungry, Ill fight;
While men go to prison, in and out, in and out, Ill
fight;
While there is a drunkard left,
while there is a poor lost girl on the streets,
where there remains
one dark soul without the light of God Ill fight!
Ill fight to the very end!
When Booths funeral cortège wound its way through the
streets of London, city offices closed. One hundred and fifty thousand people filed past
his casket. Queen Mary was one of the 40,000 who attended his funeral. Spared another
days fighting, the General had been promoted.
Victor Shepherd