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  1. William Booth

    William Booth

    British Methodist preacher

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  1. William Booth (10 April 1829 – 20 August 1912) was an English Methodist preacher who, along with his wife, Catherine, founded the Salvation Army and became its first General (1878–1912). The Christian movement with a quasi-military structure and government founded in 1865 has spread from London to many parts of the world. It is known for ...

  2. Apr 18, 2024 · William Booth was the founder and general (1878–1912) of the Salvation Army. The son of a speculative builder, Booth was apprenticed as a boy to a pawnbroker. At 15 he underwent the experience of religious conversion and became a revivalist preacher. In 1849 he went to London, where he worked in a

  3. William Booth. William Booth began The Salvation Army in 1865 as a means to help the suffering souls throughout London who were not willing to attend – or even welcomed into – a traditional church. Thieves, prostitutes, gamblers, and drunkards were among his first converts to Christianity, and as his ministry grew, the gospel of Jesus ...

  4. But William Booth was a remarkable man, who was given the title "The Prophet of the Poor." He is best known today as founder and first general of the Salvation Army. Pawnbroker's apprentice.

  5. www.salvationarmy.org.uk › virtual-heritage-centre › peopleWilliam Booth | The Salvation Army

    William Booth was born in Nottingham on 10 April 1829, the son of Samuel Booth and his second wife Mary (nee Moss), both from Derbyshire. Birth and parentage. William Booth was born in Nottingham on 10 April 1829 and had three sisters Ann, Emma and Mary and an elder brother, Henry, who died on his own second birthday. Writing about his father ...

  6. Sep 5, 2018 · On May 9, 1912, Salvation Army founder General William Booth gave his final, most distinguished address to a packed crowd of 7,000 Salvationists at the Royal Albert Hall in London. Booth’s final words sum up the heart of The Salvation Army’s mission and vision and his own 60-year ministry.

  7. www.salvationarmy.org › ihq › william-booth-the-man-and-his-missionWilliam Booth: 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.

  8. www.salvationarmy.org › ihq › william-booth-the-general-and-his-armyWilliam Booth: The General and His Army

    The Life and Legacy of William Booth Part 2: 1878-2015. Gordon Taylor. In thirty-four years as General of The Salvation Army, William Booth was a tireless evangelist, a world traveller 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 ...

  9. William Booth objected to a phrase contained in that year’s annual report: ‘The Christian Mission … is a Volunteer Army.’ By replacing the word ‘volunteer’, The Salvation Army had its new title and with it an inspired metaphor for its role in fighting the injustices of society and in bringing people to understand God. Over time, the ...

  10. The third aspect of this redemptive theology was what William Booth called, in an 1889 article, “Salvation for Both Worlds.”. The Booths always preached personal salvation by faith in Christ ...

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