St Margaret's
LochgilpheadCatholic.com
OUR HERITAGE

 

In This Section:

A Shared History
Cats Corner
Stations
Windows


Click for a randomly selected prayer!
Other Sections:
WELCOME - an introduction, site guide and prayers
LIVING CHURCH - news, campaigns and a photo album of special days
VISITORS GUIDE - a who's who and other tools for newcomers and visitors alike

 

Our Twelve Windows

From dawn to dusk, in the darkest hour as well as in the brightest;
the House of God is the constant still-point in an ever-changing world of rush and change.
Standing in St Margaret's, you are surrounded by twelve beautiful stained glass windows depicting saints from the past. With the clock-style aerial view of the church below, you can view all twelve.

Choose a window:
Holy Family Work of Peace Crowning Glory St Francis St Ogilvie St Pius X St Mungo St Columba St Ignatius St Patrick St Margaret St Peter

 

 

Close up:

Saint Ogilvie in a scene from Glasgow Cross, where St John Ogilvie was martyred

About St John Ogilvie:

Walter Ogilvie was a Scottish noble who raised his son John in the state religion of Scotland, Calvinism. John converted to Catholicism at age 17 at Louvain, Belgium. He attended several Catholic educational institutions before joining the Jesuits in 1597, and being ordained in Paris in 1610. He was then sent to work in Rouen, France.

He repeatedly requested assignment to Scotland. "Send only those," wrote the Earl of Angus to the Jesuit General, "who wish for this mission and are strong enough to bear the heat of the day, for they will be in exceeding danger." Wholesale massacres of Catholics had taken place in Scotland, but by this point the hunters concentrated on those priests who attended Mass. The Jesuits were determined to minister to the oppressed Catholic laity. When captured, they were tortured for information, then hanged, drawn, and quartered.

Ogilvie's request was granted, and he returned to Scotland in November 1613. He worked as an underground missionary in Edinburgh and Glasgow, dodging the Queen's priest-hunters, disguised as a soldier named Watson. After 11 months in the field, John was betrayed by a phoney Catholic, imprisoned, interrogated, then tortured for the names of active Catholics. He suffered, but gave them no information. "Your threats cheer me; I mind them no more than the cackling of geese." Asked if he feared to die he said, "No more than you do to dine."

After three trials, he was convicted of treason for being loyal to the Pope, and denying the king's supremacy in spiritual matters. He was hanged on the 10th March 1615 at Glasgow, and no relic of his body has survived. He is the Church's only officially recorded Scottish martyr.

He was canonized in 1976 by Pope Paul VI.

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St Margaret's Roman Catholic Church, Argyll Street, Lochgilphead, Argyll, Scotland
Email: enquiries@lochgilpheadcatholic.com