St. Margaret's current
Parish Priest, Father David Barr succeeded Father Urquhart in 1989. Heir
to a long line of distinguished Parish Priests, Father Barr quickly proved
himself a match for St Margaret's. Deeply spiritual and capable of the
most stirring homilies, he is also a man of the people, a pragmatic,
practical, energetic leader whom parishioners have quickly taken to
their hearts. He has
been energetic in ensuring that the large 19th Century building does not
deter modern worshippers. The environs of the Church, now used as a car
park have been paved. Flood-lighting has been introduced to enhance the
architecture and identify the nobility of the building as a landmark in
the town. The vexed issue of heating the huge building has been tackled
with success despite much initial cynicism inspired by the failure of
earlier attempts.
Father Barr has been
particularly successful in continuing the adaptation of the Church
interior to the demands of post Vatican II liturgical practice. He had the
Church repainted in warmer tones; introduced new halogen lighting and
extensive carpeting; brought the sanctuary to the people by extending it
and resiting the altar and font in closer proximity to the congregation.
He acquired marble from the beautiful chapel of St Mary's Balnakeil,
Galashiels, when it closed down. This he had refashioned to form an ambo
(lectern), baptismal font, altar and tabernacle plinth. All these
practical and aesthetic measures have created a more intimate ambience.
Daily Mass incorporating prayers from the Sacred Office takes place in the
re-orientated Lady Chapel. Holy Communion under the species of both bread
and wine is administered at both Sunday and daily Masses. A children's
liturgy is a regular part of the 9.00am Mass on Sundays, and Baptisms form
part of
the 11.00am Sunday Mass on a monthly basis, all of which confirms the faithful in their dedication to
God.
There is a strong emphasis
on Community in St Margaret's. The most retiring of parishioners find
themselves drawn into the activities of the Parish. The Parish Council is
a thriving body with numerous sub-committees deputed to deal with every
aspect of Church life. Spiritual life is nourished by groups such as the
RCIA, the Scripture Study Group and the Prayer Group. For the more
politically aware there is the Third World Group. Lay Readers and
Ministers of the Eucharist both male and female are the norm in St
Margaret's as are both male and female acolytes. Lay people share the
burdens of their parish with the clergy : taking Holy Communion to the sick
in Queen Margaret hospital, and to the housebound is one of these.
The high point of Father Barr's
ministry to date must of course be the Margaret 900 Celebrations which
took place over an entire year in 1993 to mark the 900th anniversary of
Saint Margaret's death. His influence ensured that Dunfermline's place in
St Margaret' s life was central to the celebrations. The Countess of
Elgin, Lady Bruce, whose husband is a descendant of Robert the Bruce, one
of St Margaret's most famous pilgrims, agreed to be Patroness. She was
tireless in her support of the efforts of the 900 Committee. She permitted
her home to be used for fundraising. A figure of £30,000 was realised
which enabled an ambitious programme of events to be planned.
St Margaret's Pilgrim
People expanded to include people from all walks of life. Father Barr
observed afterwards:
"As
it turned out all our plans proved to be far too humble and low key.
Little did we know that Margaret who influenced the country of her day
would wield the same influence on us ... in our Procession of Pilgrims we
would include people from high and low estate; HRH Princess Margaret; The
Lord High Commissioner; The Moderator of the Church of Scotland; the
Primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church; the late Cardinal Gray; the
President of the Scottish Catholic Bishops; Abbots, Bishops as well as
many parishes and organisations. Over 15,000 pilgrims came to visit St
Margaret's Cave, Dunfermline Abbey and St Margaret's Shrine and to our
National Memorial Church where they venerated the Relic of St
Margaret."
Events included three televised
services from St Margaret's Memorial Church, each on a theme connected
with St Margaret's Life: her tending of the sick; her love of children and
her care of the poor. An Ecumenical service was held in Dunfermline Abbey.
Officiating were clergy from both the reformed Churches and the Catholic
Church. St Margaret must have rejoiced to see her people honour her and
worship God in harmony once more in the very Church she herself had built
900 years before. The visit of Mother Teresa of Calcutta to Scotland
coincided with the celebrations, and the significance of her saintly
example was not lost on the makers of the television programmes, who
included an interview with her as part of the transmission from the
Memorial Church of the Ecumenical Service for the poor. "On
reflection," Father Barr concluded, "as well as
attracting Pilgrims to Dunfermline from all over the country, we had in
fact gone all over the country and taken St Margaret to her people. "
Historical illustrations by Jurek
Putter of Dunfermline's royal and monastic past were commissioned for the
900 celebrations by the District Council. Copies of these are disposed
around St Margaret's Church. (For an example of one of the illustrations,
go to Gallery).
The beautiful Memorial Church of St
Margaret now has a historic rose window to commemorate the 900th
anniversary of her death. Father Barr commissioned the stained glass
window from the Fife artist, John Blythe. £2,200 was raised by
parishioners and further funds were contributed by the generous bequest of
Miss A. Madden. A further £1,500 was raised by a sponsored walk to Knock
in Ireland undertaken by Kevin Barnes whose daughter Ciara had the honour
of presenting a bouquet to Princess Margaret, a descendant of Queen
Margaret, on the occasion of the window's dedication. The window depicts
Margaret in the centre as Queen and Saint holding her Book of the Gospels
and the Holy Rood. On the right she is seen again arriving at St
Margaret's Hope and on the left once more reading to King Malcolm in front
of the Church built for their marriage in 1070. The style has a strong
medieval quality using traditional colour and composition and emphasising
the lessons to be learned from St
Margaret's exemplary life. It is certainly, as Father Barr intended, "something
of lasting artistic value that future generations will come and see".
The wheel has come full circle. St
Margaret has never ceased to watch over the people of Dunfermline. She has
reunited them through their devotion to her. In 1996, St Margaret's
Memorial Church celebrated one hundred and fifty years of community and a
hundred years of stone raised to the glory of God. In doing so it also
celebrated the living stones that make up God's spiritual house: the
people of St Margaret.
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