Bishop O’Donoghue’s Crest

On the Cathedra we can see Bishop O’Donoghue’s Crest. This incorporates five principal elements, along with his episcopal motto, Beati Pauperes, ‘Blessed are the Poor’ (Luke 6:20), expressing his earnest desire to be the servant of the dispossessed.

The eoiscopal crozier is the central emblem of any bishop’s regalia, since it indicates his commission from Christ through the Apostles to be a good pastor, a shepherd (John 21:15-17).  The pattern of Bishop O’Donoghue’s crozier in the present crest is taken from an ancient carved ivory version in elaborate Celtic design and dating from the time when the O’Donoghue clan were prominent in medieval Ireland.

The branch of the clan known as O’Donoghue ‘of the Glen’ bore arms which included the motif of the ‘pelican in her piety’.  According to the medieval literary source known as the Bestiary, the pelican, in her love for her young, willingly bled herself to death in shedding her life’s blood from her breast to feed her young.  Thus the pelican became a powerful symbol of Christ’s redeeming work on the cross and of the eucharist, the Church’s banquet (1 Corinthians 10: 1 6-17).

Blood-red is the colour of the rose of Lancashire which is displayed in the bishop’s arms because his diocese covers so much of the ancient county and his Cathedral is sited in the historic county town:
I am the rose of Sharon,
The lily of the valley
(The Song of Songs 2: 1)

Extending from the Ribble at Preston to the Eden at Carlisle and the Scottish Border, Bishop O’Donoghue’s vast diocese takes in the counties of Cumberland and Westmorland, brought together in 1974 as the county of Cumbria.  Within that county’s present borders lie the lovely ruins of the Cistercians’ Furness Abbey on the outskirts of Barrow-in-Fumess.  Founded in the twelfth century, Furness Abbey bore on its seal, which our bishop has now incorporated into his crest, the beloved image of Our Lady of Fumess, queen and mother (John 19:25).

The crest also incorporates the Book of the Gospels, supported by foxes taken from the original O’Donoghue coat of arms.  The three flames are symbolic both of the Blessed Trinity and the fire of Pentecost... ‘they were all filled with the Holy Spirit.’ (Acts 2:1-11).