The Providential Three Windows
By: Robert Higdon
The three windows built with the intent of honoring the Trinity |
My mother loved to shop in rural antique stores. On one of her forages she saw a picture frame that impressed her. She admired the simplicity and large size of the frame and purchased it for that reason, not for the picture displayed in it, a country scene of some sort. She wanted the frame to make a collage of family pictures. This she did and the collage hung in their home in Mississippi for many years.
The sepia 'pagan lady' is St. Barbara
My father and mother were both converted to the Catholic Faith some 15
years after my own conversion. That is another story. The point is that,
after their holy deaths, I inherited, as their only child, the collage
of pictures. My wife had always admired the collage and frame, but
wanted to remove some of the pictures and add those of our own. So this
was one of the items we brought to our home in Baton Rouge.
When we got around to working on the picture, in the process of removing
the rear access panel and fillers, we discovered this sepia type
picture of what we thought was “a beautiful pagan Roman lady.“ The
picture was used as filler in the frame. We were so attracted to the
beautiful Lady that we decided to display her in the frame and hang her
in the living room instead of the den, where we intended to hand the
family picture collage. The frame and picture is approximately 2 ft by 5
ft in size.
Ukrainian chant to St. Barbara
Our home is a split level structure and living room has a cathedral
ceiling with three large exposed beams supporting the roof. We hung the
picture of the beautiful lady on the wall opposite, facing the three
large bay windows that face the front. She hung there for several months
before the next event in my story.
One day my oldest son and family came for a visit. We naturally
gravitated to the living room and I introduced him to our beautiful
pagan Lady. He inquired, “Don't you know who she is?”
I answered, “No, do you?”
“Yes,” he replied, “that is St. Barbara.” And he pointed out the palms
she was holding, denoting her martyrdom, and also the tower with the
“three windows that led to her death.”
My son knew the whole story and told it to us:
St. Barbara was from Heliopolis of Phoenicia and lived during the reign
of Maximian in the third century. The daughter of a wealthy, pagan
idolater named Dioscorus, she was brought up in heathen polytheism.
A statue of St. Barbara holding the
tower with the three windows
tower with the three windows
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