Until recently, it would have been rash to travel
around staunchly Presbyterian Scotland handing out fliers about
Our Lady. However, times have changed and what the eight of
us, consisting of myself and seven American high-school students
from the Saint Louis de Montfort Academy in Pennsylvania, proposed
to do for three weeks in June 2005 was precisely that. We would
start in Glasgow and work east to Edinburgh, and then north
to Inverness.
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The
reception in Glasgow, Scotland's most Catholic
city, was excellent.
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Glasgow is Scotland’s largest city. It grew
exponentially during the Industrial Revolution as waves of impoverished
Irish immigrants sought work in the mines and factories. This
made Glasgow the most Catholic city in Scotland and a good place
to start.
As expected, the reception was excellent. We quickly saw how
distributing our literature on the street allowed us to meet
and talk with lapsed Catholics, Protestants, Muslims, Hindus,
Jews and agnostics about Our Lady. Often the conversation turned
to the Catholic Church and its teachings, and everyone seemed
interested, curious, supportive, or, occasionally, antagonistic.
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| Venerating
the relics of the Apostle St. Andrew, patron of
Scotland. |
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While in Edinburgh, we venerated Saint Andrew’s
relics in Saint Mary’s Cathedral. In the Middle Ages the
Scots asked the pope for a patron saint. He named Saint Andrew,
whose bones were sent to Scotland and were received amid great
enthusiasm and rejoicing. Saint Andrew’s, a cathedral
city, with Scotland’s most important university, grew
up around the relics. Sadly, during the so-called Reformation,
mobs of enraged Presbyterians ransacked the shrine and scattered
the relics. Fortunately, some fragments were saved and today
are available for veneration in Edinburgh’s cathedral.
After Edinburgh, we traveled to Dundee to visit
Arbroath Abbey, a once great monastery famous throughout Europe.
It was poignant to see this great place reduced to total ruin.
The only part still intact is the fourteenth-century sacristy,
a beautiful Gothic room with very high ceilings. We sang the
Little Office of Our Lady in the room, and the acoustics were
awesome! The Historic Scotland staff in charge of the site confirmed
this was the first time since the “Reformation”
that the Office was prayed at Arbroath Abbey.
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In
front of Dunnottar Castle, on the east coast of
Scotland. |
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It was a strange feeling to see the wheel of history
turning before our eyes. We left Dundee wondering when the magnificent
Arbroath Abbey might be restored, or when even more magnificent
places will be built in its stead. That day will come when the
Scots return to the Church. Nobody can say for sure exactly
when, but it is our hope that this modest effort to promote
devotion to Our Lady in Scotland is a small step in that direction.