St. Margaret's RC Memorial Church
Dunfermline, Fife
The reredos depicts four figures who represent symbolically the identity of Scottish
Catholic Christians:
- The first is an Irish missionary monk: St. Columba of Iona. The Celtic missionary
monks who struggled against extreme odds in the Dark Ages to establish the early
Church in Scotland are represented by St. Columba.
- The next is the Apostle, St. Andrew. The Jewish roots of our Christianity are represented
by St. Andrew. Apostle and martyr, patron saint of Scotland, his relics were brought
to St. Andrews by early missionaries from Rome and became a focus for pilgrimage.
- The next is a Hungarian princess who became Queen of Scotland when she married King
Malcolm Canmore in the 11th century. She is St. Margaret. The universal influence
of the Catholic Church in the medieval world, and indeed today, is represented by
St. Margaret.
- The last is the Scottish missionary, St. Mungo. The heroic Scottish priests who led
the people to God by their example are represented by St. Mungo (native of Fife,
educated at Culross Abbey, he was guided by St Serf and is said to have had a hermit's
cave at Dysart. He became Bishop of Glasgow in the 6th Century).
A Pilgrim People led towards God by the example of apostolic missionaries, monastic
teachers, heroic priests and visionary saints - this was the Scottish Catholic Church's
identity in the early Renaissance world. The great schism of the Reformation saw
a gap in this long tradition - St. Margaret's Abbey Church was sacked and partially
destroyed, the monks and priests were deported, the relics of the saint were scattered
and the pilgrimages stopped.
Over 160 years of Community can be celebrated by the members of St. Margaret's Roman
Catholic Church in Dunfermline. But who are these Christians? To find the answer
to this question we have only to look at the REREDOS (carved stone altarpiece - see
below) behind the present high altar of the Church.
Copyright © St. Margaret's RC Memorial Church, Dunfermline 2009. All rights reserved.