Painted Windows 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Painted Windows, by Harold Begbie 
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Title: Painted Windows Studies in Religious Personality 
Author: Harold Begbie 
Release Date: February 9, 2005 [EBook #14996] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PAINTED 
WINDOWS *** 
 
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Distributed Proofreading Team. 
 
[Illustration: BISHOP GORE] 
 
PAINTED WINDOWS 
STUDIES IN RELIGIOUS PERSONALITY 
BY 
A GENTLEMAN WITH A DUSTER AUTHOR OF "THE MIRRORS 
OF DOWNING STREET" 
WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY KIRSOPP LAKE 
_It was simply a struggle for fresh air, in which, if the windows could 
not be opened, there was danger that panes would be broken, though
painted with images of saints and martyrs. Light, coloured by these 
reverend effigies, was none the more respirable for being picturesque._ 
J.R. Lowell. 
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY EMILE VERPILLEUX 
G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS NEW YORK AND LONDON The 
Knickerbocker Press 1922 
_For the information presented in the biographical records connected 
with the several chapters the publishers desire to express their 
indebtedness to "Who's Who."_ 
 
FOREWORD 
BY PROFESSOR KIRSOPP LAKE 
No one who believes that the Christian churches have in the past been 
the moral leaders of western civilization can fail to be interested in the 
presentation of some of the English religious leaders by "A Gentleman 
with a Duster" especially if, like myself, he have some passing 
acquaintance with most of them. Nor can any neglect to regard 
seriously his warning that the Church is failing as a moral leader. 
What is the reason for that failure? It cannot, I think, be found in lack 
of earnestness; for today all the guides of the churches in England are 
serious, upright men, who would gladly lead if they could. Nor is it 
because they are voices uttering strange announcements in the 
wilderness; if they have a fault it is rather that they have so little to 
announce. The defect which is disclosed by the pictures given by "A 
Gentleman with a Duster" is primarily intellectual, and I propose to 
devote to its explanation the introduction which the publisher has asked 
me to write for the American edition of Painted Windows. 
From the third century to the eighteenth the Christian Church presented 
views of life and theories of the origin, weakness, and possible 
redemption of human nature, which were both self consistent and 
rational. It offered men an infallible guide of life, to be found in the 
Church, the Bible, and the Christ. Different branches of the Christian 
church emphasised one or the other, but the three formed in themselves 
an indivisible trinity. Nor did the laity doubt that this presentation was 
correct. The clergy were the professional and expert exponents of an 
infallible revelation which they had studied deeply and knew better 
than other men, and on which they spoke with the authority of
experience. It was firmly believed that to follow their teaching would 
lead to future salvation; for the centre of gravity in life for seriously 
minded men was the hope of attaining everlasting salvation in the 
world to come. 
The situation today is changed in two directions. The Church, the Bible, 
and even the Teaching of Jesus are no longer regarded as infallible. 
History first abundantly proved that the voice of the Church was not 
inerrant; then science discredited the biblical account of man's origin 
and development; and finally the "kenotic" theory of Bishop Gore 
showed that what were considered the ipsissima verba of the Lord 
himself could no longer be regarded as infallible. The _coup de grâce_ 
to the belief that Jesus must be followed literally was administered by 
official sermons during the war. This does not mean that men and 
women within or without the Church do not admire and venerate the 
teaching of Jesus and regard him as the best teacher whom they know. 
But they are not willing to accept all his teaching; they have been 
forced to admit that it is sometimes lawful to resist evil by force; they 
doubt whether he is to appear as the Judge of the living and the dead; 
they accept much of his teaching and try to follow it because they 
believe that it is true, but they do not believe that it is true because it is 
his teaching. It is therefore impossible today for educated men, even 
among those who most sincerely adopt it, to settle a moral argument by 
an appeal to the teaching of Jesus. The tragedy is that there are 
probably as many today outside    
    
		
	
	
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