In addition to the "Glory of the Divine Presence" window and the "Agnus Dei, the Lamb of God" window in the chapel four additional windows flank the seating areas.
Melchizedech Window
On the Left side of the chapel, there are two Old Testament windows. The one close to the door depicts Melchizedech (Genesis 14:17-20) who made an offering of bread and wine, a forshadowing of the Eucharistic bread and wine transformed into the Body and Blood of Christ.
Moses and the Passover Meal Window
The other window (toward the Penance Room) depicts Moses and the Passover Meal (Exodus 12:1-8, 11-14). The Passover was what Christ was celebrating at the Last Supper the night before He died when He instituted the Sacrament of the Holy Eucharist.
St. Thomas Aquinas Window
On the right side of the chapel, the window close to the Penance Room in the corner depicts St. Thomas Aquinas who wrote eloquently about the Holy Eucharist.
He composed the great Eucharistic Hymn Pange Lingua Gloriosi.
St. Thomas was born about the year 1225 into the family of the Count of Aquino. He first studied at the monastery of Monte Cassino and later at the University of Naples. Afterward he joined the Dominicans and completed his studies in Paris and Cologne, his instructor being St. Albert the Great.
Becoming himself a teacher, he wrote many learned volumes and was especially renowned for his philosophical and theological studies.
St. Thomas died near Terracina on March 7, 1274, but his memory is honored on January 28th, the day his body was transferred to Toulouse in 1369.
Pope St. Pius X Window
The other window on the right side depicts Pope St. Pius X.
He was born in 1835 in the village of Riese in the province of Venice. After he became a priest, he performed his duties with distinction. He became Bishop of Mantua and Patriarch of Venice, and was elected Pope in 1903.
Pope St. Pius X took as the motto of his papacy "to restore all things in Christ". He fulfilled this task in the spirit of simplicity, poverty, and courage, arousing the faithful to a Christian way of life and waging constant warfare against the errors of his age.
He restored the practice of frequent Communion and reinstated the ancient traditions and allowed children to receive the Holy Eucharist at an early age. He died August 20, 1914.