John
Ogilvie (1579-1615) performed ministry in his native Scotland for only 11
months after he returned to his homeland following 22 years abroad. He is the
only canonized Scottish martyr from the time of the Reformation, and was only
36 when he gave his life for Christ. Ogilvie was raised a Calvinist but decided
in 1596 to become a Catholic during a study tour in France, Germany and Italy.
He went to the Scots College in Louvain, Belgium, where he was reconciled to
the Catholic Church. When that college closed because of financial
difficulties, he studied with the Benedictines and then transferred to the
Jesuit college at Olomouc. He entered the Austrian province of the Jesuits at
Brno in Moravia on Nov. 5, 1599 and studied philosophy at Graz and Vienna and
theology back at Olomouc. He was ordained in Paris towards the end of 1610.
Ogilvie was eager to return home to do missionary work, but Scotland was then
too dangerous for a Catholic priest. The young Jesuit worked in Rouen, France,
for three years before he finally received word to begin his apostolate in
Scotland. He landed at Leith, Scotland in November 1613, disguised as a horse
dealer named John Watson. He gradually made his way to Edinburgh where he had
considerable success reconciling people to the Church. On Oct. 3, 1614 he went
to Glasgow where he was to receive five individuals back into the Church; one
of the five, Adam Boyd, betrayed him to the Protestant archbishop. Boyd
informed the archbishop of Ogilvie's arrival and helped plan his capture. As
Ogilvie waited at a designated spot in the market square to be taken to the
service, he was surrounded by men who led him to the archbishop in a nearby
house. The archbishop struck Ogilvie in the face; then the others beat him as
well before imprisoning him in the bishop's castle. His first interrogation
took place the next day, but Ogilvie refused to accept the king's supremacy in
religious matters. His captors then put Ogilvie into a dark, foul-smelling cell
and tortured him to make him more cooperative at the next interrogation which
took place on Dec. 12 in Edingburgh before a council
appointed by King James I. After Ogilvie refused to give up his convictions, he
was subjected to sleep deprivation torture for the following nine days. Finally
he was interrogated for a third time on Dec. 22. Although physically worn out
and mentally tired, the Jesuit refused to reveal the names of Catholics who
attended his services or helped him. Authorities returned him to Glasgow prison
where he began to write the story of his arrest and imprisonment. He managed to
smuggle the account out, page by page, through the kindness of people who came
to visit other prisoners. Ogilvie underwent a fourth interrogation Jan. 18,
1615 when he was asked to respond to questions posed by the king himself. The
questions touched on religious supremacy and were written in such a way that
the Jesuit could choose only to renounce Catholicism or to condemn himself.
Ogilvie answered unambiguously that the pope was supreme in religious matters,
and that the pope had the power not only to excommunicate the king but also to
depose him. These answers meant that he would be killed, so Ogilvie began to
prepare himself for heaven when he was returned to his cell. When James I read
Ogilvie's responses, he ordered the priest's trial to take place March 10 with the death penalty waiting if he
did not change his answers. Ogilvie's trial took place at the Tolbooth in
Glasgow's square; the Jesuit was charged not with celebrating Mass and
converting Protestants but with high treason for denying the king's spiritual
jurisdiction by upholding the pope's spiritual primacy. Two hours after the
trial began, the jury found him guilty and condemned him to be hanged and
quartered that very afternoon. Ogilvie spent three hours in prayer while the
judges and jury went to lunch. Then the sheriff came to escort him to the
public square for execution. Holding his rosary, the Jesuit mounted the
scaffold and prayed briefly before the hangman tied his hands and led him up the
final ladder. After the executioner pushed him off the ladder, Ogilvie did not
die immediately so the executioner grabbed his legs and pulled him down to end
his agony. Despite the sentence to be quartered, Ogilvie's body was buried
outside the city in a place reserved for criminals.
Originally Collected and edited by: Tom Rochford, SJ