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Posts Tagged ‘Catherine Booth’

On the first Sunday in July we at The Salvation Army in many settings around the world, traditionally celebrate Founders’ Day and Covenant Renewal.

A day in which we remember our history, commit to the future, and encourage people to consider their covenant as a member, be that an adherent, soldier, or an officer of The Salvation Army 😃

Now if you have the Lectio 365 App, a Christian daily devotional resource that helps you and I encounter God and shape our lives by praying the Bible every day. You would have noticed on the 2nd of July a devotional written by Phil Togwell ‘Catherine & William Booth: Heroes of Justice and Hospitality’.

Which got me thinking about what other devotionals are out there about The Salvation Army Founders.

A quick google search tells me that there are about 1,910,000 results, admittedly when you start scrolling through you find multiple mentions for books and devotionals that have been written that feature William & Catherine etc. 

But one caught my eye, a devotional entitled “William and Catherine Booth and Audious Evangelism”, this has been written as part of another church’s three year devotional series, to encourage and motivate its members to be effective in their life, faith and ministry.

As I read through it I thought it quite pertinent for those of us within The Salvation Army, it reads; 

The Salvation Army was born in May, 1878. News of the name change fired the imagination of the East London Christian Mission workers and soon military words and phrases were popping up everywhere.
The Bible was now a “sword.” Larger mission houses became “citadels” and smaller ones “forts.” Groups of workers called themselves “troops” who together made up “corps.” Everyone wanted a rank. Part-time workers over 15 years of age became soldiers and full-time workers became officers.

When they preached, the captains opened with “Fire a volley” and the audience yelled back a mighty “Hallelujah.” When it was time to pray, everyone did “knee drill.” Bible reading became “taking rations.” The Christian Mission Magazine was renamed The War Cry and a second magazine was published for children called Little Soldiers.

A uniform was adopted and worn proudly. William Booth came up with a pattern for the Salvation Army flag. It had a red background for the blood of Jesus, a blue border for the holiness of God and a yellow sun for the fire of the Holy Spirit. The new mission motto, “Blood and Fire,” was emblazoned across it.

Soldiers and captains competed for the best way to draw a crowd. A converted drunk did a show that involved Houdini-like escapes to illustrate his “Trap Doors of Hell” sermon. Another soldier who had been in the Navy wore half his old uniform down one side and half his Salvation Army uniform down the other side to illustrate his old life and his new life as a soldier for Christ.

William’s son, Bramwell, sometimes climbed into a coffin and was carried along the streets to St. Paul’s Cathedral by six men. Once they reached the steps, the young evangelist would jump out and begin preaching on life after death. Another man decided to lie perfectly still in the snow near a local marketplace. When a crowd gathered he would preach on how God can thaw the coldest heart.

The newspapers called this new Salvation Army and its methods “unbecoming and extreme” but the people loved it and it continued to grow. Opposition was increasing and the Salvation Army was soon to know its first martyr, but for now the Army was growing so quickly that William did not want to quench what the Holy Spirit was doing in their midst.

William Booth desired to win the lost for Christ! He walked the streets of London to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ to the poor, the homeless, the hungry and the destitute. He abandoned the conventional concept of a church and a pulpit, instead taking his message to the people. His fervor led to disagreements with other church leaders, who preferred traditional methods.

He is quoted as saying “If I thought I could win one more soul to the Lord by walking on my head and playing the tambourine with my toes, I’d learn how!

What lengths will you go to to win a soul for His Kingdom? Are our ‘methods “unbecoming and extreme”’? Or have we succumbed to the more traditional methods?

How are you fueling the fire of the Holy Spirit within your own life to motivate you to act?

‘William did not want to quench what the Holy Spirit was doing in their midst.’ Are we by putting processes and systems, policies and procedures in place, to create some semblance of control and order, quenching what it is that the Holy Spirit wants to do in and through us? Or are our processes and systems, policies and procedures their to ensure that we achieve the overall holistic mission?

In writing to the Army at the beginning of the 20th Century William Booth said; “I consider that the chief dangers which confront the coming century will be; religion without the Holy Ghost, Christianity without Christ, forgiveness without repentance, salvation without regeneration, politics without God and heaven without hell.

Oh that we would become emboldened and audacious enough in our evangelism to “go straight for souls, and go for the worst!

Remembering that as our founder once said;

to get a man soundly saved – it is not enough to put on him a pair of new breeches, to give him regular work, or even to give him a university education. These things are all outside a man, and if the inside remains unchanged you have wasted your labor.

You must in some way or other graft upon the man’s nature a new nature, which has in it the element of the Divine.”

The both/and of our salvation mission! Blessings ’til next time 🙂

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The second in a series of posts that I wrote over 18 months ago looking at the future of the church – This one explores the remaining 5 Predictions that Carey Nieuwhof originally wrote about in 2016.

I hope you find it beneficial – Blessings ’til next time 🙂

Perry's avatarThe life and times of Perry...

The Covid-19 pandemic that continues to sweep across our world has dramatically changed our lives and turned our world upside down, and the pain and anxiety that this causes around us is very real.

This is felt right across the societal spectrum including the local church, or as in our setting the local Corps. We have experienced a huge amount of upheaval which has seen our places of worship closed, ministries, programmes, activities and events postponed and/or stopped completely for the time being. While for others that have been able to reopen again for a short period of time and only if significant changes are put in place to restrict interacting the way that we were used to. We have seen a huge amount of change!

This has seen most if not all churches across the world having to re-access, or reimagine their methodology. Churches have had to pivot quite…

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In light of one of my recent posts Why Gathering with the People of God Matters I feel it is timely to revisit a few that I wrote a while ago about this whole area of reimagining what church could look like going forward.

I hope that people find them beneficial blessings ’til next time 🙂

Perry's avatarThe life and times of Perry...

So far this year we have seen a huge amount of upheaval within the church. Churches have had to pivot quite significantly, morphing and shifting their methodologies of ‘doing church’ in ways that many simply weren’t anticipating.

The Covid-19 pandemic that continues to sweep across our world has dramatically changed our lives and turned our world upside down, and the pain and anxieties that this causes around us are real. (At the time of writing this blog entry their have been over 800,000 deaths worldwide).

With so much upheaval, we have seen a huge amount of change! Many churches and Corps have seen ministries, activities and programmes closed down due to social distancing requirements, only for them to reopen for a time, and in many cases close down again. This has seen most if not all churches across the world having to re-access, or reimagine their methodology.

According to an…

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The following four key attitudes of leaders whose churches will thrive in the future are from a post that was written by Thom S. Rainer (author of I Am a Church Member, Autopsy of a Deceased Church, Who Moved My Pulpit? and many more) on the Church Answers website.

  1. “God is not done with us yet.” To be clear, the leaders of secular organizations were unlikely to articulate this attitude in the same way church leaders were. But all of the healthy organizations had attitudes of hope and possibility. Defeatism was a foreign concept to all of them.
  2. “We are not waiting for things to return to normal.” Any organization waiting for a pre-COVID normal is already in trouble. Any churches expecting patterns of attendance, giving, and ministry to be similar to 2019 are really up against a wall. There will not even be a new normal, because normal cannot be defined. These leaders are looking for indicators of a new reality and they are making pivots to these new realities. 
  3. “We will be more outwardly-focused than ever.” Too many churches and other organizations got comfortable prior to 2020. The leaders of future-focused organizations are determined more than ever to reach beyond themselves. The churches and the organizations of the future cannot and must not be navel gazers. 
  4. “Major change is inevitable; we will embrace it.” The healthy church or organization of the future cannot simply move from change-averse to change-receptive. They must proactively seek and move toward radical change. They cannot wait for change to come to the organization. These organizations must take faith-based risks like many have never known before. If the leaders of these organizations succumb to the whiners who lament, “We’ve never done it that way before,” the organization is doomed. Healthy organizations of the future will embrace change with wisdom and courage. 

These four key attitudes if adopted by church leaders could help change the world – Bill Hybels (founding pastor of Willow Creek Community Church) is quoted as saying that “the local church is the hope of the world“, and I’m pretty sure that we all want our churches (or Corps in our setting) to thrive.

The thing is, we’ll need to embrace what God is doing in and through our lives today to impact the world – But throughout the western church it would appear that we have become far too comfortable with ‘normal’ and keeping the wheels of the institutional church or Christian organisation turning.

As Catherine Booth once said “if we are to better the future, we must disturb the present“.

Therefore, we need to challenge the status-quo, the systems, processes, policies and structures that we have built up for our protection and control.

Some of these along with traditions, rituals, symbols and sacred cows are potentially no longer fit for purpose in this day and age.

In 2 Corinthians 10:5 Paul tells us that we need to “destroy every proud obstacle that keeps people from knowing God…” (New Living Translation). According to Matthew 5:13-16 we are to be the salt and light that this world needs. God longs to use us for His purposes, so that others will see Him through our good deeds and glorify our Father in heaven.

Therefore, we need to carefully look at the ways that we have been doing church, our methodologies and ascertain if they are fit for purposes, are they achieving what we set out for them to do?

We’ll quite possibly need to come up with creative ways of engaging with our communities so that we can bring ‘life and hope‘. And we’ll also need to be more adaptable as the Holy Spirit leads us into new ways of doing mission and ministry going forward, reaching people who we would not necessarily reach out too.

The reality is that change is happening at an increasingly faster rate than what we are accustomed to in our world, so we’ll need to be a lot quicker at making decisions.

I believe God is doing a new thing but His overall plan hasn’t changed that He will use us, as His church, to change the world.

Shall we embrace the change? 

Are we up to the task?

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The Covid-19 pandemic that continues to sweep across our world has dramatically changed our lives and turned our world upside down, and the pain and anxiety that this causes around us is very real.

This is felt right across the societal spectrum including the local church, or as in our setting the local Corps. We have experienced a huge amount of upheaval which has seen our places of worship closed, ministries, programmes, activities and events postponed and/or stopped completely for the time being. While for others that have been able to reopen again for a short period of time and only if significant changes are put in place to restrict interacting the way that we were used to. We have seen a huge amount of change!

This has seen most if not all churches across the world having to re-access, or reimagine their methodology. Churches have had to pivot quite significantly, morphing and shifting their methodologies of ‘doing church’ in ways that many simply weren’t anticipating.

I posted the other day an article entitled ‘Reimagining the Methodology‘, in which I referred to Carey Nieuwhof’s predictions about the future church where he says that;

Every generation experiences change. But sometimes you sense you’re in the midst of a truly radical change, the kind that happens only every few centuries.” Increasingly, he thinks we’re in such a moment now.

He goes on to say that he thinks “the change we’re seeing around us might one day be viewed on the same level as what happened to the church after Constantine’s conversion or after the invention of the printing press. Whatever the change looks like when it’s done, it will register as a seismic shift from what we’ve known.

So what will the future of the church, our Corps be like?

The other day I touched on the first five aspects that Carey highlights, now we will turn our attention to the remaining five:

Firstly, “many churches currently try to get people to attend, hoping it drives engagement. In the future, that will flip.

The engaged will attend, in large measure because only the engaged will remain.

If you really think about this… engagement driving attendance is exactly what has fuelled the church at its best moments throughout history. It’s an exciting shift.

Secondly, “For years, the assumption has been that the more a church grew, the more activity it would offer.” The reality is going forward, “Simplified churches will complement people’s witness, not compete with people’s witness.”

Thirdly, “Online Church will supplement the journey but not become the journey. There is something about human relationship that requires presence. Because the church at its fullest will always gather” we need to be spending time with and doing life together in person. We have this innate need to be in community with one another and although that can happen online, inevitably we all want to meet in person to see if we can truly connect.

Fourthly, “Online church has the potential to become a massive front door for the curious, the unconvinced and for those who want to know what Christianity is all about.

In the same way you purchase almost nothing without reading online reviews or rarely visit a restaurant without checking it out online first, a church’s online presence will be a first home for people which for many, will lead to a personal connection with Christ and ultimately the gathered church.

Fifthly, “gatherings will be smaller and larger at the same time.” This may seem like an oxymoron but it is anything but! “Churches with smaller, more intimate gatherings will be attractional to millennials and others as they seek tighter connections and groups.

Meanwhile, almost “paradoxically future large churches will likely become larger not because they necessarily gather thousands in one space, but because they gather thousands through dozens of smaller gatherings under some form of shared leadership. Some of those gatherings might be as simple as at a coffee shop or even home venues under a simple structure.

We will see the emergence of bigger churches and smaller churches at the same time as the gathered church continues to change.

So how do we respond?

By continuing to explore opportunities to bring “hope and life” to those that we come in contact with, by experimenting with different ways of ‘doing church’, and by exhibiting love to all those that we interact with, including our brothers and sisters in Christ, extending grace, mercy and forgiveness.

The thing is God is doing a ‘New Thing’ in our time, positioning His church where it needs to be, so as to impact the world for His glory! And we need to be open to a moving of His Spirit in these days.

Catherine Booth is often quoted as saying “if we are to better the future, then we must disturb the present“. Maybe God is doing that for us in these days because we as the church have grown complacent, and risk averse.

The church has often been called the ‘Hope of the World’, it is His church, His way of impacting the world and I’m pretty sure that He is not done with it yet.

This is the hope that we profess that God is not done with us yet, and that there are greater things still in store for those of us that remain true to His Word, to His fellowship and to His people – the whosoever.

So let’s get excited about what God is doing and step out boldly in faith, counting the cost not as a sacrifice but as an opportunity to do what He has called us to be, the ‘Salt and Light’ in the world impacting people’s lives, one life at a time and doing whatever we can to take Jesus out into the world, using whatever means are at our disposal.

For as we do what we can, God walks along beside us opening up the storehouses of heaven, blessing our endeavours to do His mission!

’til next time God bless 🙂

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