Making a Difference
For more than five years, Nina Halpern has been helping at the Gateway of Hope in Langley, B.C.
By Dan FergusonSalvation Army volunteers such as Nina Halpern play an indispensable role.
Salvation Army volunteers such as Nina Halpern play an indispensable role.
"You won't find peace and contentment until you do what God is asking of you," says Lieutenant Jenny Rideout.
Now free of substance use, having a place to call his own and working in the home-renovation industry while embracing faith to keep himself on track, 54-year-old Gerald Jorgensen has altered the course of his life with the help of The Salvation Army and is helping others who are homeless by handing out water, food and clothing.
New film about Flannery O'Connor invites audiences to consider the interplay between pain and suffering in a fallen world and the transcendent grace of a loving God.
The Salvation Army in Bermuda is offering three new day camps—STEAM, CREATE and sports—as part of a revamped camping ministry.
For thousands of years, humans have been foretelling the end, the meltdown, the apocalypse. They’ve been making predictions like there’s no tomorrow.
“You can minister to people in different ways, and I just hope over my 42 years, I’ve done that.”
Lieutenant Neil says, "if God is calling you to officership, don't ignore him."
Joan Daines journey to The Salvation Army started with income taxes. But from there, she went on a joyful journey through volunteering, then attending, until she made it official “It just feels like the right place for me. I love The Salvation Army. They’re my family.”