From Aldershot to Pretoria - A Story of Christian Work among Our Troops in South Africa by W. E. Sellers
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page 16 of 196 (08%)
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Meanwhile the camp itself has been reconstructed, so that at last the
empire can look without shame upon it; and the brave spirits who first caught the awakening, or saw that it should not die,--many of whom have joined the majority, but some of whom are still enriching their country by their lives,--can rejoice in the work they have been permitted to accomplish. And the result? 'Ah, sir,' exclaimed a sergeant, as he entered one of the Aldershot Homes, 'you are at last giving us a chance. Hitherto you have provided for us as though we were all bad, and all wanted and meant to be; and bad we became. But now, sir, you are giving us a chance, and you will see what will be the result.' And truly we do; for the life of the nation is enriched, not enfeebled, by the men who return to it from the Army and the Royal Navy. And all ranks of society are becoming convinced that religion is the prime factor in the service efficiency and in the national well-being. Thus God is, after all, seen to be the greatest need, and the one true enrichment of human life and character--the vital force by which alone the commonwealth can live. The wonderful records which will be found in the succeeding chapters of this book, telling as they do of Christian life and service in the South African War, will still further show the fruits of this great awakening. Chapter II |
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