Ted Lee Eubanks Photography

  • Home
  • Browse
  • Search
  1. Churches and Sacred Spaces

Saint Louis Windows - Left

Read More
  • Samuel Judge - Pane #1

    Samuel Judge - Pane #1

    Left Windows #1
    Pane #1

    Reading: "So he took his firstborn, who was to succeed him as king, and offered him as a burnt offering upon the wall. The wrath against Israel was so great that they gave up the siege and returned to their own land." II Kings: III:27

    1) Samuel Judge (left window #1, bottom panel)
    2) Daniel window (left window #2, pane #4)
    3) Zacharias window (left window #4, pane #1)
    4) Eli window (right window #1, pane #1)

    In each case, OT prophets are shown dressed as high priests, wearing ephods and a distinctive headdress. Ephods were embroidered linen rectangles worn on the chest, to which a jeweled breastplate was attached. The Biblical references are Exodus 28:4-30, 29:5, 39:2-21; Leviticus 8:7-8.

    The same passages specify that the high priest should wear a "mitre" (in the Douai-Rheims; the NRSV translated it as "turban") in Exodus 28:36-7, which specifies that a gold plate to be worn on the front of the turban); same in Exodus 39:29-30. Leviticus 8.9 also places such a plate on the front of the turban.

    The mitres worn by the OT prophets in the windows are more like crowns, with protrusions off to the sides. As such, they follow in a western Christian artistic tradition that became fully established by the 15th century, a design something like a bishop's mitre worn sideways. The design might also have been prompted by some vague awareness of crowns worn by eastern Orthodox clergy. Rabbis are often shown, in both Italian and Northern Renaissance art, wearing a headdress divided down the middle, giving rise to exaggerated protrusions, as seen in the windows.

    LeftSamuelJudgePane

  • Samuel Judge

    Samuel Judge

    Left Windows #1
    Pane #2

    Reading: "Away with this man, release unto us Barabbas." Luke XXIII:18

    LeftSamuelJudgePanel

  • Samuel Judge

    Samuel Judge

    Left Windows #1
    Pane #3

    Reading: "And Jesus said to Ischariot: Friend, where to art thou come?" Matthew XXVI:50

    LeftSamuelJudgePanel

  • Samuel Judge

    Samuel Judge

    Left Windows #1
    Pane #4
    Reading: "The chief [and] priests appointed him thirty pieces of silver." Matthew XXVI:15

    Notice that the chief priest is handing a bag marked XXX to Judas.

    LeftSamuelJudgePanel

  • Samuel Judge

    Samuel Judge

    Left Windows #1
    Pane #5
    Reading: "But the Pharaisees said: Thou hast a devil." Matthew IX:34

    John VII:19-20 is another verse that perhaps more accurately explains this panel.

    LeftSamuelJudgePanel

  • Samuel Judge

    Samuel Judge

    Left Windows #1
    Samuel, Judge

    Bright
    These images have been brightened and corrected from the source image.

    Interestingly, the theme of the window is established by the first pane, usually a prophet or judge from the Old Testament. Then, the panes are organized from the top down. In this gallery, I have reorganized the panes so that the thematic structure is more easily understood. The images of the entire windows are how they are seen in the chapel at St. Louis.

    LeftSamuelJudgeBright

  • Samuel Judge

    Samuel Judge

    Left Windows #1
    Samuel, Judge

    Source

    This is the original image with a dark exposure that avoided the washing out of the windows.

    LeftSamuelJudgeSource

  • Daniel - Pane #1

    Daniel - Pane #1

    Left Windows #2
    Pane #1
    Prophet Daniel

    LeftDanielPane

  • Daniel

    Daniel

    Left Windows #2
    Pane #2

    Reading: "His blood be upon us and upon our children." Matthew XXVII:25

    The entire USCCB reading helps with context:

    "When Pilate saw that he was not succeeding at all, but that a riot was breaking out instead, he took water and washed his hands in the sight of the crowd, saying, “I am innocent of this man’s blood. Look to it yourselves.”

    And the whole people said in reply, “His blood be upon us and upon our children.”

    Then he released Barabbas to them, but after he had Jesus scourged, he handed him over to be crucified."

    LeftDanielPane

  • Daniel

    Daniel

    Left Windows #2
    Pane #3

    Reading: "Herod questioned him in many words but he answered him nothing." Luke XXIII:9

    LeftDanielPane

  • Daniel

    Daniel

    Left Windows #2
    Pane #4

    Reading: "And the high priest said: If thou be the Christ: Tell us." Luke XXII:66

    LeftDanielPane

  • Daniel

    Daniel

    Left Windows #2
    Pane #5

    Reading: "Before the cock crow, thou wilt deny me thrice. Matthew XXVI:75

    Look closely and you will see the cock crowing over the head of Peter. Jesus is in the upper left being led away with his cross, looking back at Peter.

    LeftDanielPanel

  • Daniel

    Daniel

    Left Windows #2
    Prophet Daniel

    Source

    LeftDanielSource

  • Daniel

    Daniel

    Left Windows #2
    Prophet Daniel

    Bright

    LeftDanielBright

  • Amos

    Amos

    Left Windows #3
    Bright

    LeftWindowsAmosBright

  • The Prophet Amos

    The Prophet Amos

    Left Windows #3
    Pane #1

    Reading: "On that day—oracle of the Lord GOD—I will make the sun set at midday and in broad daylight cover the land with darkness." Amos VIII:9

    This foreshadows Matthew 27:45 - "From noon onward darkness came over the whole land until three in the afternoon," the time that Jesus dies on the Cross.

    The Prophet Amos is the first Hebrew prophet to have a biblical book named for him.

    LeftWindowsAmosPanel

  • Amos

    Amos

    Left Windows #3
    Pane #2

    Reading: "And platting a crown of thorns, they put it upon his head." Matthew XXVII:29

    LeftWindowsAmosPanel

  • Amos

    Amos

    Left Windows #3
    Pane #3

    Reading: "He was wounded for our inequities. He was bruised for our sins." Isaiah 53:5

    The spelling for Isaiah shown on this window is "Isaías," which is Spanish for Isaiah. I have no explanation for why.

    LeftWindowsAmosPanel

  • Amos

    Amos

    Left Windows #3
    Pane #4

    Reading: "Whosoever being struck shall look on it shall live." Numbers: XX!:8

    The full reading in the USCCB is as follows (Numbers XXI:7-9):

    "Then the people came to Moses and said, “We have sinned in complaining against the LORD and you. Pray to the LORD to take the serpents from us.”

    So Moses prayed for the people, and the LORD said to Moses: "Make a seraph and mount it on a pole, and everyone who has been bitten will look at it and recover."

    Accordingly Moses made a bronze serpent and mounted it on a pole, and whenever the serpent bit someone, the person looked at the bronze serpent and recovered."

    Moses appears in two windows, left window #3, panel #4, and right window #3, panel #1. In both cases, Moses is shown with rays of light protruding from his head. In the Douai-Rheims Version, Exodus 34:29: "And when Moses came down from the mount Sinai, he held the two tables of the testimony, and he knew not that his face was horned from the conversation of the Lord." It seems that when St Jerome did his Vulgate translation, he read a Hebrew word as "horns," which may instead have been intended to indicate rays of light.

    LeftWindowsAmos

  • Amos

    Amos

    Left Windows #3
    Pane #5

    Reading: "He put forth his hand and took the sword to sacrifice his son." Genesis: XXII:10

    If you look closely at the lower left, you will see the ram that is caught in the thicket that will be sacrificed instead of Isaac.

    This is the entire reading from Genesis in the USCCS (Gen XX:10-13):

    "Then Abraham reached out and took the knife to slaughter his son.

    But the angel of the LORD called to him from heaven, “Abraham, Abraham!” “Here I am,” he answered.

    “Do not lay your hand on the boy,” said the angel. “Do not do the least thing to him. For now I know that you fear God, since you did not withhold from me your son, your only one.”

    Abraham looked up and saw a single ram caught by its horns in the thicket. So Abraham went and took the ram and offered it up as a burnt offering in place of his son.*

    LeftWindowsAmos

  • Amos

    Amos

    Left Windows #3
    Source

    LeftWindowsAmosSource

  • Zacharias

    Zacharias

    Left Windows #4
    Bright

    LeftWindowsZachariasBright

  • The Prophet Zacharias

    The Prophet Zacharias

    Left Windows #4
    Pane #1

    Zacharias, Prophet

    Reading: "And God made the two great lights–the greater light (the sun) to rule the day and the lesser light (the moon) to rule the night. He also made the stars." Zach 13:16

    Also Genesis 1:16 "God made the two great lights, the greater one to govern the day, and the lesser one to govern the night, and the stars."

    LeftWindowsZachariasPanel

  • Zacharias

    Zacharias

    Left Windows #4
    Pane #2

    Reading: "They made the sepulchre [sepulcher] sure, sealing the stone." Matthew XXVII:66

    Archaic spelling of sepulcher.

    LeftWindowsZachariasPanel

  • Zacharias

    Zacharias

    Left Windows #4
    Pane #3

    Reading: "And they wrapped him in fine linen and laid him in a sepulchre [sepulcher]." Luke XXIII:55

    LeftWindowsZachariasPanel

  • Zacharias

    Zacharias

    Left Windows #4
    Pane #4

    Reading: "Attend and see if there are any sorrow like to my sorrow."

    Although there is no reference on the window, this quote is from Lamentations I:12.

    LeftWindowsZachariasPanel

  • Zacharias

    Zacharias

    Left Windows #4
    Pane #5

    Reading: "And bearing his own cross he went forth to Golgatha." John XIX:17

    LeftWindowsZachariasPanel

  • Zacharias

    Zacharias

    Left Windows #4
    Source

    LeftWindowsZachariasSource

  • Church of the Transfiguration in Philadelphia

    Church of the Transfiguration in Philadelphia

    The original installation of the windows. The Amos window is on the left; the Zacharias window is on the right. Because of space constraints, Saint Louis did not acquire the large windows in the center. All of these windows were made by the world-famous F.X. Zettler Studio.

    ChurchtheTransfigurationWindowInstallation

  • Photo Sharing
  • About SmugMug
  • Browse Photos
  • Prints & Gifts
  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Contact
  • Owner Log In
© 2023 SmugMug, Inc.