<h1><SPAN name="ch_07"></SPAN>VII</h1>
<h2>The Worker</h2>
<p>’What the Lord wants is, that you shall go about
the business to which He sets you, not asking for
an easy post, nor grumbling at a hard one.’—<i>Mrs. Booth</i>.</p>
<p>If she had not been a worker, our Army Mother would
have done little with her life. The wonderful call
which came to her, her great gifts, the zeal and love
which filled her heart, would all have been useless
had she not been willing to work, and to work hard,
and to work every day.</p>
<p>Stop and think about this. No life accomplishes anything
unless it is full of hard work–often work accompanied
by much drudgery, whether it is the life of a king
or of a poor man. Mrs. Booth has set us all an example
in this, for she would work ceaselessly with head or
hands or heart, as long as ever her health allowed
her to do so. Laziness and idleness of all kinds she
detested; nor could she tolerate a lazy person in her
service.</p>
<p>She worked first of all in her home. When she spent
a morning in her kitchen, the work there was perfectly
done. The dinner was ready at the right time, properly
cooked, good and wholesome. She allowed no waste and
no extravagance. Her bread was light and beautifully
baked, and when she had finished her morning’s
work her kitchen was as neat as when she began. She
finished everything, and put it straight as she went
along.</p>
<p>It was the same with the children. She was alike nurse
and doctor, dressmaker and tailor; she made and mended,
washed and ironed for her boys and girls during their
early years, and herself attended to every smallest
detail of their lives. Strangers who asked where Mrs.
Booth bought her children’s things, so that
they could go to the same shop, could scarcely believe
the reply: ‘Mamma makes all our clothes herself’–so beautifully were they cut and finished.</p>
<p>And when the little garments were of no further service
to her, she would alter and mend them once again,
and give them away. Her baby-clothes, when the last
daughter had outgrown them, were given to a member
of the Mission for his child.</p>
<p>He will never forget taking the little bundle home
to his wife and turning over the tiny things. ‘I
had often heard Mrs. Booth preach,’ he said,
’but those baby-clothes preached a louder sermon
to me and my wife than ever her words had done. They
were all darned and mended and patched, and the work–but,
there, I never saw such stitches! And as we looked,
and knew the hours of toil she must have put into them,
rather than throw them away, as many another would
have done–well, I tell you I listened to her next
sermon as I had never listened before.’</p>
<p>And this same diligent, tireless spirit was with her
to the last. When on her deathbed, able only to use
her left hand, and propped up by pillows, she devised
a little frame on which, painfully, stitch by stitch,
she could work a last token of love for The General.</p>
<p>When her hands were folded still in death, I saw those
slippers. They were beautifully embroidered, one with
the words, ’He will keep the feet of His Saints’;
and the other with the sure and certain hope which
lay beyond the parting, ‘Our feet shall stand
within thy gates, O Jerusalem’–a fitting and
sacred service with which to close her many years of
toil and labour for others.</p>
<p>But our Army Mother had another way of working in
her home–that is, she worked over others. If a girl
wished to learn, Mrs. Booth would take endless trouble
in showing her the best way to wash or iron, or clean
a grate, or do whatever the work on hand might be.
She instructed her servants, explaining to them the
reason for doing their duties in a certain way, teaching
them forethought and common sense, and dealing faithfully
with them over all their failures.</p>
<p>‘Better,’ she said, in one of her addresses–and
she lived it out in her own home–’better take
a girl whom you have to teach how to wash a child’s
face, or to stitch a button on, if she is true and
sincere, than have one ever so clever, who will teach
your children to lie and deceive.’</p>
<p>She worked, too, over the cases of need and poverty
which were often at her door. Not content, like so
many, with giving a few coppers to a beggar, or some
broken food, she would inquire into the <i>cause</i>
of the distress; and then, if the need seemed genuine,
she would help, either by getting the father work,
or by having the home visited and suitable relief
given after the true condition of things had been found
out.</p>
<p>And this was only a little of the homework with which
her hands were ever full. Of her ceaseless care over
her children’s mind and soul training I have
told you elsewhere. But of her public work perhaps
the most exhausting was that which resulted from her
Meetings. For she could not rest content with the
most careful preparation beforehand, nor with pouring
out her whole soul upon the people during the forty
or fifty minutes that her address lasted. At the close
of the Meeting, whenever her health allowed it, she
would labour and toil, often for two hours and more,
dealing herself with the penitents, meeting their difficulties,
one by one, and was unwilling to leave them until,
as far as possible, all had claimed and received the
blessing they sought.</p>
<p>The next day, too, she would follow up any special
case with a long personal letter from her own pen,
or she would arrange another interview, or in some
way keep in close, actual touch with the struggling
soul, until the step of obedience had been taken,
and he or she was fairly started on the Narrow Way.</p>
<p>And it was this careful, earnest, patient after-work
which gave such glorious harvests to her soul-saving
campaigns. Labour and trouble were a joy to her, if
she could but help one sincere, seeking soul into the
light.</p>
<p>But remember this: while she so toiled over all who
came to her for advice and guidance, she never repeated
nor passed on to others their confidences. If she
had done so, people would soon have left off corning
to her; they would have said, ‘We cannot trust
her.’ She was, as you know, a mighty speaker;
but about other people’s affairs she was entirely
silent–as you must learn to be if you wish to be of
any service to God or man.</p>
<p>And Mrs. Booth strove constantly to teach all who
were around her to work as she did. ‘You have
begun well enough–now carry it through,’ she
would say again and again to her children, and whether
it was a doll’s frock, or an article for ‘The
War Cry,’ or a series of Meetings, it was always
the same. Unfinished, half-done work she detested with
all her soul. ’If a thing is worth beginning
at all, then it is worth finishing,’ she would
say; and this great principle followed her through
her life in small things as in great.</p>
<p>This was the reason that, on her deathbed, she could
say, turning to the Chief of the Staff, ’I have
no vain regrets about the past. As far as my strength
allowed, I have finished the work I had to do as I
went along; and now I leave it, all imperfect as it
has been, in His hands.’</p>
<p>Perhaps, by nature, you are not a worker. But what
you are not by nature, you can become by grace. God
can teach you to love work. And as you work, you will,
like our dear Army Mother, learn better and better
how to work; and your life, whenever God calls you
to lay it down, shall be like hers, not unfinished,
but complete.</p>
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