The Angel Adjutant of "Twice Born Men"
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The Angel Adjutant of "Twice Born Men" Minnie L. Carpenter The Angel Adjutant of "Twice Born Men" Table of Contents The Angel Adjutant of "Twice Born Men"............................................................................................................1 Minnie L. Carpenter.......................................................................................................................................1 Introductory Note...........................................................................................................................................1 Foreword........................................................................................................................................................2 I. THE VALUE OF THE ONE......................................................................................................................3 II. CHOOSING HER COURSE.....................................................................................................................5 III. WOMAN'S POSITION IN THE ARMY...............................................................................................11 IV. EARLY BATTLES................................................................................................................................16 V. A CORPS COMMANDER.....................................................................................................................23 VI. SPECIAL EFFORTS.............................................................................................................................31 VII. THE MOTHERING HEART...............................................................................................................37 VIII. A BREAK TO CANADA...................................................................................................................43 IX. IN THE HOMES OF THE PEOPLE.....................................................................................................45 X. 'THE ANGEL ADJUTANT'...................................................................................................................49 XI. COMRADES AND FRIENDS..............................................................................................................54 XII. TROPHIES OF GRACE......................................................................................................................58 XIII. KATE LEE'S SECRET.......................................................................................................................64 XIV. OFF DUTY.........................................................................................................................................72 XV. AT HER DESK....................................................................................................................................79 XVI. UNEXPECTED ORDERS..................................................................................................................89 i The Angel Adjutant of "Twice Born Men" Minnie L. Carpenter This page copyright © 2002 Blackmask Online. http://www.blackmask.com • Introductory Note • Foreword • I. THE VALUE OF THE ONE • II. CHOOSING HER COURSE • III. WOMAN'S POSITION IN THE ARMY • IV. EARLY BATTLES • V. A CORPS COMMANDER • VI. SPECIAL EFFORTS • VII. THE MOTHERING HEART • VIII. A BREAK TO CANADA • IX. IN THE HOMES OF THE PEOPLE • X. 'THE ANGEL ADJUTANT' • XI. COMRADES AND FRIENDS • XII. TROPHIES OF GRACE • XIII. KATE LEE'S SECRET • XIV. OFF DUTY • XV. AT HER DESK • XVI. UNEXPECTED ORDERS This eBook was produced by Curtis A. Weyant, Charles Franks, and the Distributed Proofreading Team INTRODUCTION BY GENERAL BRAMWELL BOOTH FOREWORD BY COMMANDER EVANGELINE BOOTH Introductory Note There is surely little need for me to commend this so intimate and living picture of Staff−Captain Kate Lee. It speaks for itself in speaking of one whose fine character and ceaseless labour were of singular charm and amazing fruitfulness. The Salvation Army has been happy in its Women Officers. The lessons of experience undoubtedly teach us that they are fully qualified for all the work of the ministry of Christ. Long denied the right of public testimony as well as the opportunity to proclaim the truth of the Saviour's mission, women have in the history of our Movement fully proved that they may be as effective, as acceptable, and as successful as their brethren, both as teachers and rulers in the Kingdom of Christ on earth. The extraordinary The Angel Adjutant of "Twice Born Men" 1 The Angel Adjutant of "Twice Born Men" theory that the gifts of the Holy Spirit are confined to those who have taken part in a certain ecclesiastical ceremonial, narrow and mistaken as it may be, is surely a mild and simple form of error, compared with the appalling notion that those gifts are confined to men, and are to be for ever withheld from the other half of the human family. The Churches of the world seem at length prepared to debate within themselves whether they should venture to follow our example, and give to woman a place worthy of her gifts in their various plans of campaign. Perhaps the brief story of this life may help some of them a step forward. Kate Lee was an unfaltering believer in the power of God to save from the power of sin. This was really her secret. That faith dominated her own frail and often sick body with its nights of sleeplessnessits days of pain. It conquered the worst in the worst of men whom she encountered in her work of mercy. It won a multitude of souls to believe in her and in her message, and then to believe in her Saviour. It was ever greater than her circumstances. It was greater than herself. It makes her life, and this story of it, wonderful for us who remain. And Kate Lee was a Salvationist; that is, she was seized with what we sometimes call the spirit of The Armythat union of holy love and fiery zeal and practical common sense which, by the power of Christ, produces wherever it is found the fruits of Salvation in the bodies and souls of those who are without. And I feel no sort of doubt that to any woman, having the opportunity to do so, and to whom she could speak to−day, she would say'Do as I have done.' I do not mean by that that every sincere woman is bound to become a Salvation Army Officer, or is called forthwith to go to the ends of the earth as a member of our Missionary Forces. But I do mean that Christian women everywhere have a part to play in the great Ministry of Conversionin the glorious Mission of the Apostles of every age, for the evangelization of the world. It behooves them to see that they play their part. Bramwell Booth, General. Foreword The story of The Angel Adjutant is sure to continue its very exceptional and wonderfully inspirational work wherever and by whomsoever read, and consequently I am specially glad to know that an American edition is about to be published. Seldom has a living spirit pulsated through biographical pages as it does throughout the simple account here given. Yet it is not merely the spirit of Kate Lee, who surely lives again in these foliosthe simple, unsophisticated, devoted daughter of the Salvation Army, but this book throbs with that life which is begotten and sustained and empowered by the Holy Spirit. He was graciously and solely responsible for the constant stream of helpfulness that all who knew her witness as having resulted from a consecration made by a girl in her teens. And how beautifully enshrined in this life was the soul of the Movement of which she was such a worthy unit. The description, while being a faithful portrayal of a very real person, can still be regarded as typical of a great host of blessed women whose supreme joy in life is found in having associated themselves in holy bonds of service such as their loved, and now glorified comrade, the subject of these memoirs, rendered mankind. While such as Kate Lee lives, the Salvation Army's position as a saving force is secure. Evangeline Booth, Commander U.S. New York, 1922. Foreword 2 The Angel Adjutant of "Twice Born Men" I. THE VALUE OF THE ONE Lucy Lee laid her head on her pillow and, looking through the silence and darkness, smiled up to God. She had won her first soul for Him, and now made her offering. The capture was not a drunkard, nor an outcastmany of whom, in years to come, she was to wrestle over and deliverbut her own sister, whose golden hair lay over the pillow beside her, and whose regular breathing told that she was fast asleep. Nothing did Lucy imagine of the blessing to thousands of souls that was to flow from that night's work. She was happy in the consciousness that she had been faithful to the heavenly vision, and that now she and her sister were one in the experience of Salvation. How Lucy loved her! Her mind ran back over the thirteen years since a baby sister came into her life. She remembered the rapture she felt, when sitting upon her mother's bed, the nurse placed the baby in her arms. She was five years old then, and soon her small arms ached and her legs were cramped, but again and again she pleaded to hold her treasure just a little longer. She had been allowed to name the baby, and had called her Kate. What a frail, sweet little child she had grown! When Kate was six years old their father died. Lucy recalled moving from their nice house in Hornsey Risea suburb of nearer Londonto a smaller home; her start at business; and then, the great event that changed the course of life for both the girls. One Sunday evening, after her mother and Kate had gone