Product Description
- By Gordon Taylor
- 427/538 pages.
- Includes historical photographs and illustrations
- Published 2019, Salvation Books
Part 1 1829-1878 The Man and His Mission
William Booth was born into a middle-class family, but did not aspire to wealth or prosperity and amassed no personal fortune. He adopted a simple lifestyle, lived in modest but comfortable surroundings, and worked tirelessly for others, rather than himself. During his long life, he played many parts: the willful youth ᄀᆰ the reluctant student ᄀᆰ the pawnbroker's apprentice ᄀᆰ the passionate convert ᄀᆰ the Methodist minister ᄀᆰ the ardent lover and father of three sons and five daughters ᄀᆰ the mission superintendent. Thirty-four years after his conversion to Chris, he became the General of The Salvation Army a few months before his 50th birthday.
Part 2 1878-2015 The General and His Army
In thirty-four years as General of The Salvation Army, William Booth was a tireless evangelist, a world traveler and a social reformer. A legend in his own lifetime, his well-worn voice can be heard on gramophone recordings, and his distinctive features can be seen in photographs and on early cinematograph film. Vilified by his critics and admired by his supporters, he was called 'The Prophet of the Poor', 'God's Solder', and 'The General Next to God'. Colleges and schools, hostels, homes and hospitals, and even a mountain were named after him. He met kings and prominent statesmen, became a Freeman of London and Nottingham, and was awarded an honorary degree by Oxford University. In 2015, at the Army's 150th anniversary in London, his life and legacy were celebrated by 35,000 Salvationists from around the world.