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in Biddy Chambers· Historical Research· Oswald Chambers

Biddy Chambers in Egypt (Who was Biddy Chambers? Part 2)

Biddy Chambers in Egypt, Oswald Chambers, YMCA, WWI, My Utmost for His Highest, Zeitoun, Kathleen Chambers, transcription work

Chambers Family, Egypt 1917 (Wheaton College Library Special Collections)

Who was Biddy Chambers? You can read part 1 here.

Biddy Chambers not only was the wife of Oswald Chambers, but she also served with him in Egypt during World War I.

Oswald was accepted as a chaplain in the YMCA as the first year of WWI drew to a close.

He and Biddy shut down the Bible Training College in Clapham Common, London, took a holiday to Scotland and then Oswald sailed to Alexandria in October 1915.

Biddy and daughter Kathleen stayed behind until the British Expeditionary Forces (BEF) gave them permission to join Oswald outside of Cairo.

Biddy, Kathleen and trusted friend Mary Riley sailed to Egypt in December 1915.

They settled right into ministry work.

Daily life

They lived a simple life on a sandy compound alongside the Egypt General Mission. Oswald lectured and visited recuperating soldiers.

Biddy joined Oswald in the lecture hut each night where she took down, verbatim, everything he said. She also managed the correspondence.

Mary oversaw the cooking with the assistance of native workers. The “ministry of interruption” continued and they always anticipated unexpected guests for meals.

They hosted supper parties. One visitor wrote of them “taking place with such hilarity as might have shocked the respectably religious into believing what the Jews believed of the Apostles on the Day of Pentecost!”

Soldiers loved to play and watch Kathleen, particularly those homesick for their own children. Kathleen, the little girl in the YMCA camp, was a great favorite.

They spent one summer closer to the Suez Canal at Ismailia Camp, where Mary Riley and Biddy ran a weekly canteen that served tea, cookies and cakes. The two women had several soldiers and Egyptian helpers, but the first “free tea,” brought 400 men.

Fun and companionship

While every day life had its challenges, the Chambers family did have time for fun. Biddy and Oswald visited the pyramids several times–at least once traveling by camel. They enjoyed taking tea at Shepheard’s Hotel and their favorite restaurant was Groppis in Cairo.

Biddy Chambers in Egypt, Oswald Chambers, YMCA, WWI, My Utmost for His Highest, Zeitoun, Kathleen Chambers, www.michelleule.com

During those busy years, she and Oswald found time alone in the late evening after the camp shut down. They would walk out into the desert under the bright stars most nights.

Twice they took trips to the Mediterranean Sea. It got up to 120 degrees in the summer.

Over the four and a half years Biddy spent at Zeitoun,  a variety of former students from the Bible Training College came out to Egypt to minister with the YMCA camps. Biddy oversaw romances, heartbreak and wrote many, many letters.

Through it all, she maintained her own personal relationship with God, writing out her prayers in shorthand, and drawing on the deep faith implanted in her soul. She needed it in November, 1917.

Oswald Chambers’ death

Oswald Chambers’ signature reference to being “broken bread and poured out wine,” well described him in the fall of 1917. The war dragged on, but there were hopes the BEF could take Jerusalem (which they did in December 1917).

Oswald, however, worked himself pretty much to death to ensure the spiritual and physical well-being of the soldiers he loved.

After an emergency appendectomy from which he seemed to rally (and with much prayer at the YMCA camp), Oswald Chambers died on November 15, 1917.

(I’ve written in detail about his death here.)

Biddy and Kathleen attended the military burial the next day in the Old Cairo cemetery. Immediately afterwards they let with old friend Eva Spinks to spend two weeks mourning at Luxor and Wasta.

YMCA head William Jessop asked Biddy to remain at Zeitoun for the duration of the war. She did so, taking Sunday morning services bi-monthly, and teaching two classes a week.

The ministry of the books begins

Two months after Oswald’s death, Biddy received his first book, Baffled to Fight Better. She gave away copies for free to YMCA visitors, family and friends.

Biddy began putting together leaflet sermons taken from her copious notes.

For the rest of the war, the YMCA printed 10,000 copies of Oswald’s talks given at Zeitoun, and sent them to camps in Egypt, Palestine and France.

Biddy Chambers in Egypt, Oswald Chambers, YMCA, WWI, My Utmost for His Highest, Zeitoun, Kathleen Chambers, transcription work

Photo courtesy Wheaton College Library Special Collections

The ministry of Oswald Chambers’ books began in Egypt.

While World War I fighting ended with the November 11, 1918 armistice, Biddy remained in Zeitoun as the troops demobilized from Cairo.

She and Kathleen returned to England in June 1919.

As Kathleen said of her mother years later, “She was never hurried; she was relaxed and often said, ‘Let’s see what God does next..”

Tweetables

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Mrs. Oswald Chambers serves in the YMCA Click to Tweet

How did Mrs. Oswald Chambers help her husband in Egypt? Click to Tweet

Who was Biddy Chambers?  Here’s the link to Part 3.

 

Biddy Chambers, Oswald Chambers' wife, My Utmost for His Highest, who wrote My Utmost for His Highest?, Bible Training College, Mrs. Oswald ChambersInterested in Oswald and Biddy Chambers? I’ve written about the amazing ways God led me through the writing of two books about them in a free Ebook available by signing up for my newsletter here.

 

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Filed Under: Biddy Chambers, Historical Research, Oswald Chambers Tagged With: Biddy Chambers, My Utmost for His Highest, Oswald Chambers, World War I, WWI, YMCA, Zeitoun camp

« Miralee Ferrell: 12 Brides of Christmas
Biddy Chambers, Widow (Who was Biddy Chambers Part III) »

Trackbacks

  1. Biddy Chambers, Widow (Who was Biddy Chambers Part 3) | Michelle Ule, Author says:
    November 21, 2014 at 6:56 AM

    […] Biddy Chambers in Egypt (Who was Biddy Chambers? Part 2) […]

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  2. Who Wrote My Utmost for His Highest and How? Part I | Michelle Ule, Author says:
    January 20, 2015 at 3:01 PM

    […] Biddy joined him each evening as he lectured or taught, taking everything down in her impeccable shorthand. He recognized her value to him and to God. […]

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  3. 8 Secrets to Loving (and Doing!) Ministry Together - Joanna Weaver - Intimacy with God in the Busyness of Life says:
    February 14, 2018 at 8:13 AM

    […] can’t imagine what Biddy must have thought when her husband asked her  to join him at a British Army outpost in Egypt in 1915 – and to bring their two-year-old daughter, Kathleen, with […]

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Meet the Author

Michelle Ule

Michelle Ule is a bestselling author of historical novellas, an essayist, blogger and the biographer of Mrs. Oswald Chambers: The Woman Behind the World's Bestselling Devotional.

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