By Rev. Dr. Ed and
Janice Hird
-previously published in the August 2020 Light Magazine
Cholera. Everyone’s fear, and it was happening again.
William and Catherine Booth were there to help feed, clothe, and care for the
sick in the stinky, rancid streets of East London. It was 1866.
The incoming tide from the Thames River dumped sewage into
East London’s water reservoir. Almost 6,000 people died. Two years earlier, Catherine and William
Booth had started the Christian Mission in this part of London. This is where the poorest of the poor lived.
Charles Dickens commented: “I consider the offensive smells,
even in that short whiff, have been of a most head and stomach-distending nature.”
The smell from the Thames was so bad that people became violently ill. The Great Stink was not completely dealt with
until 1875.
Catherine, because of scoliosis curvature of the spine at
age 14 and incipient tuberculosis at age 18, was often forced to spend weeks
lying in bed. Nothing however stopped
her passion to make a difference in the lives of lost and hurting people. She was always kind to everyone and never
told a lie.
She had a strong Methodist upbringing, reading the Bible
through eight times before the age of 12. As a preteen, she became concerned
with the effects of alcoholism on the community, serving as Secretary for the
Juvenile Temperance Society. Her father, while part of a total-abstinence
league, used to periodically fall off the wagon.
At the home of Edward Rabbits, in 1851, she met William
Booth, who, like Catherine, had been expelled by the Wesleyans for reform
sympathies. He was reciting a temperance poem, “The Grog-seller’s Dream,” which
appealed to Catherine.
As a vegetarian, she abhorred cruelty to animals. If she saw a driver mistreating a horse, she
would rush out onto the street and compel the driver to treat the horse more
humanely. Catherine, despite her natural
shyness, would go to the slum tenements in East London, knock on doors, and ask
them ‘Can I tell you about Jesus?” Some people say that she was a better
preacher than her husband William. She
even wrote a 10,000-word essay, asserting equality for women in ministry. Although William Booth had initially rejected
the idea of women preachers, he changed his mind, later writing that "the
best men in my Army are the women."
One of Catherine’s sons later commented, "She reminded me again and
again of counsel pleading with judge and jury for the life of the prisoner. The
fixed attention of the court, the mastery of facts, the absolute
self-forgetfulness of the advocate, the ebb and flow of feeling, the hush
during the vital passages—all were there."
Catherine Booth lobbied Queen Victoria to successfully support
the "Parliamentary Bill for the protection of girls", changing the
age of consent form 13 to 16. Three
hundred and forty thousand people signed her petition to end sex trafficking of
thirteen-year olds. Catherine Booth started
the Food-for-the-Million Shops where the poor could purchase hot soup and a
three-course dinner for just sixpence. On special occasions such as Christmas
Day, Catherine would cook over 300 dinners to be distributed to the poor of East
London. She became known as the “Mother of The Salvation Army”. Queen Victoria
noted, “Her majesty learns with much satisfaction that you have with other
members of your society been successful in your efforts to win many thousands
to the ways of temperance, virtue and religion.”
William, originally a pawnbroker’s assistant, was a practical
doer. In 1865, he used a tent on a used Quaker graveyard in East London. His passion was for soup, soap and salvation.
His motto was to ‘go for souls and go for the worst.’ Many of the local churches didn’t want William’s
poor young converts because they would soil the seats.
In 1867, the Booths only had 10 full-time workers, but by
1874, the ‘Hallelujah Army’ had grown to 1,000 volunteers and 42 evangelists,
all serving under the name “The Christian Mission.” In 1878, William changed
the name to Salvation Army, with all the converts becoming soldiers or
officers. “Onward Christians Soldiers”
became their favorite marching song. In
1882, 669 Salvationists were brutally assaulted, with one woman dying. During 1881 to 1885, 250,000 people were
converted and joined the Army. More Londoners in an 1882 survey were
worshipping with the Salvation Army than all the other churches combined.
Catherine designed the Salvation Army flag and bonnets which
served as helmets to protect from rocks and rotten eggs. The red on the flag symbolizes the blood shed
by Christ, the yellow for the fire of the Holy Spirit and the blue for the
purity of God the Father. The star contains the Salvation Army's motto, 'Blood
and Fire'. This describes the blood of Jesus shed on the cross to save all
people, and the fire of the Holy Spirit which purifies believers. The Salvation Army uses this flag in their
marches of witness, dedication of children and the swearing-in of soldiers. It
is sometimes placed on the coffin at the funeral of a Salvationist. Catherine had the Salvation Army flag brought
into her bedroom as she was dying, saying “the blood and fire, that has been my
life. It has been a constant fight.”
Catherine and William revolutionized the match factories. Women were earning a pittance for sixteen-hour
days. The deadly fumes from the yellow
phosphorus rotted their jaws, turning their face green and black with foul-smelling
pus. Catherine pointed out that other
European countries produced matches tipped with harmless red phosphorus. The factory owners Bryant and May said that
red phosphorus was too expensive to make the switch. After Catherine’s death from breast cancer in
1890, her grief-stricken husband William opened a Salvation Army match factory,
paying the workers twice the usual wage while using harmless red phosphorus. He
organized tours by MPs and journalists to meet the yellow phosphorus victims,
and to see the new alternative red phosphorus match factory. In 1901,
Bryant and May buckled under the pressure and stopped using the toxic
yellow phosphorus.
Catherine loved the poor.
“With all their faults”, she said, “they have larger hearts than the
rich.” William said at her funeral, “She
was love. Her whole soul was full of tender deep compassion. Oh, how she loved.” Catherine believed that
“if we are to better the future, we must disturb the present.” May the blood
and fire of William and Catherine Booth’s ministry inspire us to disturb our
present with love.
Rev. Dr. Ed and Janice Hird
-co-authors, Blue Sky novel
1 comment:
What a great reminder of the work of this brave couple. Thanks, Ed.
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