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John Ray in Highland Dress
Below is a photo of me taken a few years ago which shows me wearing the kilt. I wear it only on special occasions of course. It's a lot less boring than a dinner jacket but takes a heck of a lot longer to get into. The tartan of the kilt is in fact the McRae tartan (appropriate to my surname) and the kilt was made for me in Scotland. The name "Ray" is found throughout the British Isles (generally spelt Rae in Scotland, Rea or Reay in Ireland and Ray or Wray in England) so would seem to be an old Celtic name and is probably derived from the Gaelic "rath", meaning red. "roth" in German also means red. So the Rays were originally the redheads! And guess what? My own father was a redhead (so was generally called "Bluey" in the jocular Australian way).
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I in fact have only a small amount of Scottish ancestry but Scottish traditions are strong and they certainly were in my family. So I was baptised into the Presbyterian Church of Australia and was sent off to Presbyterian Sunday School. I still have a treasured letter of recommendation written for me by the (Scottish) minister of the last Presbyterian Church of which I was a communicant member (many years ago). I reproduce the text of that letter below.
Presbyterianism is the most democratic form of Christianity so when a congregation needs a new minister, it "calls" (employs) one rather than having one imposed on it. I remember attending a church meeting at which the calling of a new minister was being discussed and someone asked: "Have enquiries been made in Scotland?" The reply was: "Yes. Mr Ralph is over there now looking into it". So the Scottish connection was still alive and well then.
These days however the selfsame church (Brisbane's Ann St. Presbyterian Church, founded in 1849) seems to give most of its services in Korean! It is an inner-city church and the British-origin congregation is smaller than it once was. But there are now more Presbyterians in Korea than there are in Scotland so I am completely delighted that the life of the church continues to be vigorous thanks in part to our Korean immigrants. I am sure, however, that the Scotsmen who originally built the church would be struck dumb with amazement!
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I attended an anniversary service there in December, 2005 -- for the English-speaking congregation -- and was completely delighted to note that the Minister (Rev. MacNicol) had a strong Scottish accent. It seemed very fitting. After the service I expressed my pleasure at hearing his accent and he told me he was from Edinburgh.
I have written a bit about Scotland. See here or here
Ann Street Presbyterian Church