Stolen for Generations
The Story of St Margaret’s Chapel, Edinburgh Castle
Edinburgh is a tough, beautiful and ancient city dominated by its Castle. And the Castle, the City and their Country are dominated by the English Crown (Devolution notwithstanding). But it wasn’t always so.
Yes Edinburgh Castle is ancient, and in the heart of the Castle is a stolen Catholic Church – St. Margaret’s Chapel – the oldest building in Edinburgh.
In the early days of its independent life, King David I (A.D. 1084 – 1153) ruled Scotland. He is regarded by scholars both ancient and modern, as a truly pious King, so devoted to the Faith and to good works, that in his time he brought into being more than a dozen new monasteries. One of the greatest of these is the Cistercian Abbey of Melrose founded in A.D. 1137. Its noble ruins still inspire to Faith almost 900 years later.
The great St. Aelred of Rievaulx, in his eulogy for King David praised his justice and piety, and stated “the whole barbarity of that nation was softened…………as if, forgetting their natural fierceness, they submitted their necks to the laws which the royal gentleness dictated.”
King David’s piety no doubt flowed from the influence of his mother, the
holy Queen Margaret (1045 – 16/11/1093). She was born in Hungary and
was the niece of St. Edward the Confessor. She married King Malcolm III
of Scotland, a widower, when in her early twenties and they had six sons
and two daughters. She was canonized by Pope Innocent IV having regard
for her personal sanctity, her fidelity to the Church, her religious
reform efforts and her remarkable works of charity. A small example of
the latter was her custom of serving the poor and orphans before she
would take her own meals. Her Feast is celebrated on 16th November.
In honour of his saintly mother, in A.D. 1130, King David built on a
small eminence in the heart of Edinburgh Castle, high above the capital,
a beautifully simple Chapel. It is now, as we have said, the oldest
building in Edinburgh. It is most moving to reflect that Holy Mass was
offered in this Royal Chapel for approx 400 years until the Protestant
Deformation of the Church led to the Chapel’s desecration and use as a
gunpowder store (!) for about 200 years. It is now available as a
wedding chapel on a commercial basis!
Our December Issue spoke of the divine power of each Mass for good and the sad evil influence of each abuse to do evil. We know that the evil done by those who stole St. Margaret’s Chapel and desecrated it still goes on, but it is incomparably overmatched by the glorious good done by any ONE of the thousands of Holy Masses celebrated at that altar.
Nevertheless
it is painful to see such a beautiful, hallowed and noble place and
such a gesture of fidelity, desecrated, and its altar covered by an
alien cloth at the hands of the Deformers of the Church. St Margaret’s
Chapel has been stolen for generations.
Ironically, those who stole our churches in Scotland had their entire
Country, and Throne stolen from them by the English. But their loss of
the Faith was far greater and more significant than the loss of their
Country and self respect
TONY DIXON
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