[Bunyan Characters - Third Series by Alexander Whyte]@TWC D-Link book
Bunyan Characters - Third Series

CHAPTER IX--CAPTAIN ANYTHING
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'He is an Anythingarian,' is the answer, 'for he makes his self-interest the sole standard of his life and doctrine.' And Archbishop Leighton, a very different churchman from the bitter author of the _Polite Conversations_, is equally contemptuous toward the self-seeker in divine things.

'Your boasted peaceableness often proceeds from a superficial temper; and, not seldom, from a supercilious disdain of whatever has no marketable use or value, and from your utter indifference to true religion.

Toleration is an herb of spontaneous growth in the soil of indifference.

Much of our union of minds proceeds from want of knowledge and from want of affection to religion.

Many who boast of their church conformity, and that no one hears of their noise, may thank the ignorance of their minds for that kind of quietness.' But by far the most powerful assault that ever was made upon lukewarmness in religion and upon self-seeking in the Church was delivered by Dante in the tremendous third canto of his _Inferno_:-- Various tongues, Horrible languages, outcries of woe, Accents of anger, voices deep and hoarse, With hands together smote that swelled the sounds, Made up a tumult that for ever whirls Round through that air with solid darkness stain'd, Like to the sand that in the whirlwind flies.
I then, with error yet encompass'd, cried, 'O master! What is this I hear?
What race Are these, who seem so overcome with woe ?' He then to me: 'This miserable fate Suffer the wretched souls of those who lived Without or praise or blame, with that ill band Of angels mixed, who nor rebellious proved, Nor yet were true to God, but for themselves Were only.


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