GENERAL ARRANGEMENT OF WINDOWS
Note: Arabic numbers shown below in parentheses refer to key numbers on
the location diagram.
Altogether St. Timothy's has sixty-seven stained glass windows (or
thirty·five if the largest windows on the north and south walls be considered
to include the small windows beneath them) - either way, a large number for a
parish church. Nearly all the windows were crafted in Ireland by the Clark firm,
now defunct. Three newer ones (57, 58, and 59)
From casual inspection it may appear that the window subjects were chosen at
random. Actually, however, definite patterns exist:
The sixteen largest windows depict the mysteries of the rosary (1 through 15)
and the Holy Family (16). The rectangular emblems on these windows refer most
often to titles in the Litany of the Blessed Virgin; the rest symbolize other
aspects of the lives of Jesus or Mary.
Beneath these large windows, the small ones show Old Testament personages (17
through 32) on the south wall of the church and New Testament figures (33
through 46) plus two recent saints (47 and 48) on the north wall (photos by Fr.
M. Tang)
In the sanctuary, the three windows on the south show Irish saints (49
through 51); those on the north show St. Paul flanked by two of his disciples,
one being St. Timothy, patron of the parish (52 through 54).
Next, on the south wall, two windows recall the New World appearance of the
Virgin and the efforts of the Franciscan missionaries in California (55 and 56).
These windows and windows (59, 60, 64, 65) on the opposite wall honor
individuals significant to all Catholics and particularly to those of the New
World and this archdiocese.
High in the east wall of the church, the large circular rose-type window
depicts the symbols of the four evangelists (67).
Saints are often shown with personal emblems (or symbols) by which they may
be identified, such as the breast medallion for St. Jude. General symbols
include palm fronds for martyrs and lilies for virgins.
St. Timothy is represented four times in his church - once in a window (54),
once in a painting, twice in statues.
THE INDIVIDUAL WINDOWS
Note: Key numbers below refer to numbers on the location
diagram
Joyful Mysteries
- Anunciation. (Emblem: Ark of the Covenant)
- Visitation. (Emblem: Mother most pure, chaste, inviolate)
- Nativity. (Emblem: Mystical Rose)
- Presentation. (Emblem: Prophecy of Simeon - Mary's heart to be pierced by
a sword)
- Finding of Jesus in the Temple. (Emblem: the temple)
Sorrowful Mysteries:
- Agony in the Garden. (Emblem: Mother of Christ, referring to the prophecy
of Isaiah and descent from David)
- Scourging at the Pillar. (Emblem: pillar rising from a church as a tower.
Tower of Ivory.)
- Crowning with Thorns. (Emblem: crown and stole for king and priest.)
- Christ Meets the Sorrowing Women. (Emblem: Queen of Martyrs.)
- Crucifixion. (Emblem: Seat of Wisdom.)
Glorious Mysteries
- Resurrection. (Emblem: Verbum, the Word.)
- Ascension. (Emblem: Monstrance, Spiritual Vessel.)
- Descent of the Holy Spirit. (Emblem: Queen of Virgins.)
- Assumption of Mary. (Help of Christians, hope in Mary.)
- Crowning of Mary. (Emblem: Tower of David, Mary's descent from David.)
The Holy Family
16. Holy Family. (Emblem: Morning Star or Bethlehem Star.)
Old Testament Figures
- Adam - meaning "the man," which became a proper name.
- Moses - leader of the Exodus from Egypt about 1300 years before Christ. He
gave the old law, Jesus, the new law. Moses established a priesthood and
covenant with God, which are replaced by the new priesthood and new covenant
of Jesus. Moses ratified the covenant with animal sacrifice, but Jesus
ratified his by offering his own body and blood.
- Noah - supposed inventor of viniculture and hero of the deluge, whose
faith and righteousness saved him and others of his family.
- Abraham and Isaac - Abraham was the traditional ancestor of the Israelites
to whom God revealed himself some 1600 years before Christ. Faith in God is
symbolized by his willingness to sacrifice his son Isaac at God's command.
This account perhaps was originally intended to discourage the ancient evil
of human sacrifice.
- Micheas - the genuine prophet of God who opposed Jezebel and Ahab and the
400 false prophets of the cult of Baal.
- Jacob - son of Isaac and twin of Esau. He worked for Laban for 14 years in
order to marry his daughters, Leah and Rachel. Jacob is the eponymous
ancestor of the twelve tribes.
- Isaiah - this great prophet lived some 700 years before Christ and is the
one most cited in the New Testament because he foresaw ultimate salvation
through a Messiah.
- Solomon - son of David and Bathsheba. He personifies wisdom. During his
long and prosperous reign he built the Temple.
- David - reputed ancestor of Christ. He succeeded Saul and was the ideal
king. This Goliath-killer and harpist defeated the Philistines and united
Israel.
- Melchizedek - king and priest of Salem, identified with Jerusalem. He was
honored and tithed by Abraham and symbolizes Christ as both Priest and King.
- Daniel - semi-historic young nobleman of Judah. Taken into the household
of Nebuchadnezzar, he offered encouragement to Jews in their Babylonian
exile. Thrown into a lion's den for praying to God, he was preserved from
harm.
- Ezekiel - Hebrew prophet deported to Babylon in 597 B.C. He stressed moral
responsibility and a new heart and spirit as essential in every Jew for the
restoration of Jewish institutions.
- Zacharias - his name identifies a Biblical book. A later Zacharias
fathered John the Baptist, and the Benedictus prayer is attributed to
him.
- Jeremiah - prophet born about 650 years before Christ. He predicted the
fall of Jerusalem to the Babylonians, claiming that the people of Jerusalem
at that time did not have the law of God written on their hearts but only on
tablets of stone.
- Job - personifies patience and trust in God during adversity. Despite the
jeers of others he refused to blame God for his many misfortunes.
- Joshua - military leader of the wandering Israelites and guardian of the
tabernacle. He succeeded Moses and perhaps completed the conquest of the
Promised Land.
New Testament Figures
- Stephen - preacher in Jerusalem to Creek-speaking peoples; the first
Christian martyr.
- John the Baptist - Jesus declared that nobody born of woman was greater
than John, whose ministry ended the era of the old law and the prophets and
ushered in the Kingdom of God and the Messiaship of Jesus. Jesus added that
even the least person in the new dispensation is greater than John.
- Paul - at first a persecutor of the Church, he became, after being struck
temporarily blind by a vision of Christ while on the road to Damascus, its
greatest evangelist and first Christian theologian.
- Peter - leader of the Apostles and rock of the early Church. He carried
Christianity to Rome where he died a martyr. His tomb in St. Peter's is the
only verified resting-place of an Apostle.
- Andrew - an Apostle and brother of Peter. Originally a disciple of John
the Baptist. According to one tradition he was crucified at Patras on a
cross in the shape of an X.
- James the Greater - son of Zebedee and brother of John the Evangelist.
Only he, John, and Peter were present at several important episodes in
Christ's life. The first Apostle to die, he was martyred by Herod.
- Philip - Apostle from Bethsaida in Galilee. Reputedly he had four virgin
daughters who had the gift of prophecy.
- John - the "beloved disciple," brother of James and the most
theological of the four evangelists. He stressed the Word made flesh,
the divinity of Christ.
- Bartholomew - one of the Twelve. Identified with Nathaniel. Supposedly
martyred in India.
- Thomas - another of the Twelve, who was chided by Jesus for his reluctance
to believe. One tradition places him later in India.
- Matthew - Apostle usually identified with Levi the mx collector. His was
the first written gospel. He stressed Christ as the Messianic King.
- James the Less - probably a cousin of Jesus. First bishop of Jerusalem,
martyred in his old age.
- Jude - Apostle and perhaps the same Jude who wrote the epistle to refute
false teachers who denied Christ.
- Simon - Apostle known as the Zealot because he probably had belonged to a
nationalist anti-Roman party.
Recent Saints
- Dominic Savio - a modern Italian aspirant to the priesthood. He practiced
the "little way" of St. Therese, died at 15.
- Maria Goretti - canonized in 1950. Maria chose death over unchastity and
died from many knife wounds at age 12.
Irish Saints
- Finbar - founded a monastery at Cork (Cobh) in the 6th century. His
cathedral is at Cork city.
- Patrick - through prayer and personal austerity he evangelized the pagan
Irish, firmly establishing the Church on the Island of Saints. Irish
missionaries founded many cities of continental Europe. More recently Irish
priests staffed many parishes of this archdiocese.
- Fachtna - 6th century Irish bishop who founded the famed monastic school
of Ross in County Cork, which flourished for 300 years. Brendan was one of
his teachers. When this window subject was chosen Fr. Fachtna Collins was
assistant pastor.
- Luke - Syrian physician, companion of Paul, author of the Acts of the
Apostles and of a gospel with its unique account of Christ's infancy
St. Paul and His Disciples
- Paul - the sword symbolizes Paul as a soldier of Christ. Excerpts from his
letters are read at most masses. (See also window 35)
- Timothy - patron of the parish. A native of Lystra and the son of a Greek
father and a Jewish mother, he like Luke and Paul was a Roman citizen. He
became an intimate disciple and companion of Paul and evangelized in
Corinth, Philippi, Thessalonica and elsewhere. The crown and palm symbolize
his presumed martyrdom
Saints
- Our Lady of Guadalupe - patron of the Americas. In the year 1531 the
Virgin appeared to a poor Mexican peon, Juan Diego, asking him to tell the
bishop to erect a sanctuary at Guadalupe. When the doubting bishop asked for
a sign, the Virgin told Juan Diego to pick roses from a barren hillside
where none had grown before and to carry them in his large mantle to the
bishop. Juan did this, and when he lowered his mantle the image of the
Virgin was seen thereon.
- A Franciscan - this priest could represent any Franciscan saint or Fr.
Junipero Serra, the native of Majorca who established the chain of
California missions.
- Michael - the archangel with flaming sword. In Christian liturgy he is
guardian of the Church; also the patron of policemen.
- Helen - or Helena, an innkeeper's daughter whose son Constantine became a
Christian Roman emperor. About 326 A.D. while on a pilgrimage to the Holy
Land she found what many believe to have been the true cross. She built
churches on the Mount of Olives and in Bethlehem.
- Vibiana - a young Roman virgin, pictured with the martyr's palm. Her
relics repose in the cathedral of the archdiocese.
- Rose of Lima - a Dominican nun, born in 1586 in Peru. She was the first
canonized saint of the new world.
- Jude - Apostle and patron of desperate cases.
- Cecilia - a Roman patrician who converted her young husband, who shared
her martyrdom. She is the patron of musicians.
- Augustine - shown holding his famous "Confessionsl' A Roman born in
North Africa, he abandoned a life of immorality and eventually became Bishop
of Hippo. He laid the foundations for much of Catholic theology and social
teaching.
- Frances Xavier Cabrini - although born in Italy in 1850, she became the
first United States citizen saint. A woman of drive and business acumen as
well as holiness, she founded the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart.
She established hospitals in New York and Chicago and foundations in
numerous cities, including Los Angeles, as well as in Central and South
America.
- John N. Neumann - 1812-1860. A native of Bohemia, he arrived in the United
States in 1836 with only one dollar and the clothes on his back. After
ordination he ministered to German-speaking farmers near Buffalo, joined the
Redemptorists of which he soon became superior, and in 1852 became the
unwilling Bishop of Philadelphia. For a time he built churches at the rate
of one a month and numerous schools. Three persons cured through his
miracles were present at his 1977 canonization.
- Elizabeth Ann Seton (nee Bayley) - this fun-loving yet sometimes moody and
always compassionate woman with five children was left a penniless widow,
whose relations turned against her when she converted to Catholicism. She
called herself Mother Goose whose cupboard was bare. Nothing daunted, she
founded an order of nuns and established schools and hospitals. She was the
first United States native-born saint.
The Four Evangelists
- Winged Symbols of the Four Evangelists - the ox for Luke, the eagle for
John, the lion for Mark, and seraph for Matthew.
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