Stigmata (Ancient Greek:στίγματα, plural ofστίγμαstigma, 'mark, spot, brand'), inCatholicism, are bodily wounds, scars and pain which appear in locations corresponding to thecrucifixionwounds ofJesus Christ: the hands, wrists, feet, near the heart, the head (from the crown of thorns), and back (from carrying the cross and scourging).[1]
St. Francis of Assisi is widely considered the first recorded stigmatic. For over fifty years, St.Padre Pio of Pietrelcina of theOrder of Friars Minor Capuchin reported stigmata which were studied by several 20th-century physicians. Stigmatics are primarily a Roman Catholic phenomenon; theEastern Orthodox Church professes no official view on them.[2]
A high percentage (probably over 80%) of all stigmatics are women.[3] In his bookStigmata: A Medieval Phenomenon in a Modern Age, Ted Harrison suggests that there is no single mechanism whereby the marks of stigmata were produced. What is important is that the marks are recognised by others as of religious significance.[4] Most cases of stigmata have been the result of trickery.[5][6] Some cases have also included reportings of a mysterious chalice in visions being given to stigmatics to drink from or the feeling of a sharp sword being driven into one's chest.[7]
Reported cases of stigmata take various forms. Many show some or allFive Sacred Wounds that were, according to theBible, inflicted on Jesus during his crucifixion: wounds in the wrists and feet, from nails; and in the side, from a lance. Some stigmatics display wounds to the forehead similar to those caused by thecrown of thorns.[3] Stigmata as crown of thorns appearing in the 20th century, e.g. onMarie Rose Ferron, have been repeatedly photographed.[11][12][13] Other reported forms include tears of blood or sweating blood, and wounds to the back as fromscourging.
Many stigmata show recurring bleeding that stops and then starts, at times after receivingHoly Communion; a significant proportion of stigmatics have shown a strong desire to receive Holy Communion frequently.[3] A relatively high percentage of stigmatics also exhibitinedia, claiming to live with minimal (or no) food or water for long periods of time, except for theHoly Eucharist. Some exhibit weight loss, and closer investigation often reveals evidence of fakery.[3]
Some stigmatics claim to feel the pain of wounds with no external marks; these are referred to as "invisible stigmata".[3] Some stigmatics' wounds do not appear to clot, and seem to stay fresh and uninfected. The blood from the wounds is said, in some cases, to have a pleasant, perfumed odor, known as theOdour of Sanctity.
Individuals who have obtained the stigmata are many times described asecstatics, overwhelmed with emotions upon receiving the stigmata.[14]
In his paperHospitality and Pain, ChristiantheologianIvan Illich states: "Compassion with Christ ... is faith so strong and so deeply incarnate that it leads to the individual embodiment of the contemplated pain." His thesis is that stigmata result from exceptional poignancy of religious faith and desire to associate oneself with the sufferingMessiah.
Differently from theFive Holy Wounds of Christ, some mystics like Francis of Assisi and father Pio of Petralcina reported a spontaneous regression and closure of their stigmata in the days following their death.[15][clarification needed] Both of them claimed to have received the divine stigmata in their hands as well as in their feet.[16]
Specific cases
Saint Ansbert of Rouen
Earlier reports of stigmatics do exist, however there is a lack of consensus on how the concept of stigmata was understood pre-Saint Francis.[17] St.Ansbert of Rouen (d. 695 AD) could be considered the earliest stigmatic due to the claims of witnesses following his death:
"When they had opened his tomb and they thought his body would stink because of the amount of time that had elapsed since it had been buried, such a sweet fragrant odor like a diversity of flowers flowed forth, and the whole church was filled with little drops of balsam. And when the brothers who had come to see him from the neighboring province... removed the clothes in which he had been buried because they wanted to change them wishing to dress him in new clothes, they found on his forearms the sign of the dominical cross, bearing the likeness of a red color. It was evident to all the faithful that this was given to be understood that while he lived he bore the arms of Christ in his heart, therefore, Christ's stigmata were revealed on the body of the dead man."[18]
St.Francis of Assisi is widely considered the first recorded stigmatic in Christian history.[19] In 1224,[20] two years before his death, he embarked on a journey toMount La Verna for a forty-day fast. The legend states that one morning, near the feast of theExaltation of the Cross, a six-winged angel appeared to Francis while he prayed. As the angel approached, Francis could see that the angel was crucified. He was humbled by the sight, and his heart was filled with elation joined by pain and suffering. When the angel departed, Francis was left with wounds in his hands, feet, and side as if caused by the same lance that pierced Christ's side. The image of nails immediately appeared in his hands and feet, and the wound in his side often seeped blood.[21]Pope Alexander IV and other witnesses declared that they had seen these marks both before and after his death.[20] In traditional artistic depictions of the incident, Francis is accompanied by a Franciscan brother.[22]
St. Francis' first biographer,Thomas of Celano, reports the event in his 1230First Life of St. Francis:
When the blessed servant of God saw these things he was filled with wonder, but he did not know what the vision meant. He rejoiced greatly in the benign and gracious expression with which he saw himself regarded by the seraph, whose beauty was indescribable; yet he was alarmed by the fact that the seraph was affixed to the cross and was suffering terribly. Thus Francis rose, one might say, sad and happy, joy and grief alternating in him. He wondered anxiously what this vision could mean, and his soul was uneasy as it searched for understanding. And as his understanding sought in vain for an explanation and his heart was filled with perplexity at the great novelty of this vision, the marks of nails began to appear in his hands and feet, just as he had seen them slightly earlier in the crucified man above him.
His wrists and feet seemed to be pierced by nails, with the heads of the nails appearing on his wrists and on the upper sides of his feet, the points appearing on the other side. The marks were round on the palm of each hand but elongated on the other side, and small pieces of flesh jutting out from the rest took on the appearance of the nail-ends, bent and driven back. In the same way the marks of nails were impressed on his feet and projected beyond the rest of the flesh. Moreover, his right side had a large wound as if it had been pierced with a spear, and it often bled so that his tunic and trousers were soaked with his sacred blood.[23]
From the records of St. Francis' physical ailments and symptoms, Edward Frederick Hartung concluded in 1935 that he knew what health problems plagued St. Francis. Hartung believed that he had an eye ailment known astrachoma andquartan malaria.[24]
Quartan malaria infects theliver,spleen, andstomach, causing the victim intense pain. One complication of quartan malaria occasionally seen around Francis' time is known aspurpura, a purple hemorrhage of blood into the skin. According to Hartung "If this were the case of St. Francis, he would have been afflicted byecchymoses, an exceedingly largepurpura. The purple spots of blood may have been punctured while in the wilderness and there appear as an open wound like that of Christ."[24][25]
A later medical hypothesis was proposed in 1987 to explain the wounds, it claimed that St. Francis may have contractedleprosy.[26]
For over fifty years, PadrePio of Pietrelcina reported stigmata which were studied by several 20th-century physicians, whose independence from the Church is not known.[27][28][29]The observations were reportedly inexplicable and the wounds never became infected.[27][28][30] His wounds healed once, but reappeared.[31] The wounds were examined by Luigi Romanelli, chief physician of the City Hospital ofBarletta, for about one year. The physician Angelo Maria Merla noted that the wounds were nottubercular in origin but could not make an official diagnosis without further tests.[32] The surgeonGiorgio Festa, a private practitioner, also examined them in 1920 and 1925.[32] ProfessorGiuseppe Bastianelli, physician toPope Benedict XV, examined the wounds, but no report of his examinations was made. PathologistAmico Bignami of theUniversity of Rome also observed the wounds, describing them as shallow. Festa, who had originally agreed with Bignami, later described the wounds as superficial when covered with a scab.[32] Giorgio Festa noted that "at the edges of the lesions, the skin is perfectly normal and does not show any sign ofedema, of penetration, or of redness, even when examined with a good magnifying glass".[32] Alberto Caserta tookX-rays of the hands in 1954 and found no abnormality in the bone structure.[32]Giuseppe Sala who worked as a physician for Pio between 1956 and 1968 commented that tests revealed his blood had no signs of abnormality.[32]
There were both religious and non-religious critics who accused Padre Pio of faking his stigmata, saying he usedcarbolic acid to make the wounds. The historian Sergio Luzzatto recounted that in 1919, Maria De Vito (the cousin of the local pharmacist Valentini Vista atFoggia) testified that the young Pio bought carbolic acid and the great quantity of four grams ofveratrine "without presenting any medical prescription whatsoever".[33][34] Pio maintained that the carbolic acid was used to sterilize syringes used for medical treatments and that after being subjected to a practical joke where veratrine was mixed with snuff tobacco, causing uncontrollable sneezing after ingestion, he decided to acquire his own quantity of the substance in order to play the same joke on his confreres.[35][36]
Amico Bignami in a report wrote that the wounds were caused by "neuroticnecrosis". He suggested they had been inflicted unconsciously bysuggestion and artificially maintained byiodine that Pio had used as a disinfectant.[32] In 1922, physicianAgostino Gemelli went to visit Padre Pio, but Gemelli was denied the right to examine the stigmata without an authorization from the Holy Office. Gemelli irritated and offended for not being allowed to examine the stigmata, wrote that Pio was a hysteric and his stigmata were self-induced, not of supernatural origin.[37][38] Gemelli also speculated that his wounds were kept open with carbolic acid.[38] Giorgio Festa, who examined the stigmata of the friar on October 28, 1919, wrote in his report that they "are not the product of a trauma of external origin, nor are they due to the application of potently irritating chemicals".[39]
Throughout his life, Pio had hidden his wounds by wearing fingerlessgloves. At death there were no wounds, only "unblemished skin".[40]
In the late nineteenth century, a French physician named Dr. An Imbert-Goubeyre began compiling a census of known stigmatics from the thirteenth century to his own time. This census includes 280 female and 41 male stigmatics, meaning women comprise a little over 87% of the list.[43] Additionally, theUniversity of Antwerp released a database of information on 244 stigmatics in April 2019. 92% of the stigmatics in the database are female.[44] In some cases, convent sisters have attempted to shield stigmatic women from public scrutiny, often out of fear of how their condition would affect the convent's reputation.[44] So, the number of women stigmatics may be even higher than historical record shows.
Despite the high number of women stigmatics throughout history, the best-known and least contested stigmatics, such as Francis of Assisi and Padre Pio, have been men.[43]
Scientific research
Stigmatization of St Catherine of Siena
Many stigmatics have been exposed for using trickery.[5][6]Magdalena de la Cruz, for example, confessed before she died that her stigmata was deliberate deception.[45]
The psychologistLeonard Zusne in his bookAnomalistic Psychology: A Study of Magical Thinking (1989) has written:
Cases of stigmatism fall into two categories: self-inflicted wounds, which may be either cases of fraud or of unconscious self-infliction, and those that are caused by emotional states ... Self-induced (through autosuggestion) itching and subsequent scratching of which the individual is unaware is likely to occur in suggestible persons if the stimulus is a mental or actual picture of the Crucifixion used during meditation and if the main motive is to receive the stigmata. The motive behind that may be unconscious conflict and a desire to escape from an intolerable situation into invalidism where one's needs are taken care of. It then becomes a case of hysterical conversion reaction. Many cases of stigmatism can be explained as fraud or unconsciously self-inflicted wounds.[56]
In hisStigmata: A Medieval Phenomenon in a Modern Age, Ted Harrison suggests that there is no single mechanism whereby the marks of stigmata were produced. Harrison found no evidence from a study of contemporary cases that the marks were supernatural in origin. He concluded, however, that marks of natural origin need not be hoaxes. Some stigmatics marked themselves in attempt to suffer with Christ as a form of piety. Others marked themselves accidentally and their marks were noted as stigmata by witnesses. Often marks of human origin produced profound and genuine religious responses.[4]
Harrison also noted that after Saint Francis of Assisi, the stigmata was "seen as a predominantly female experience" with the female-to-male ratio of stigmatics being 7 to 1. Those men that were stigmatic were non-ordained, including Saint Francis. Harrison argues that in many cases the stigmata was a consequence of the intense personal mystical ministries practiced by those excluded from the priesthood. Only in the twentieth century have cases of stigmaticpriests appeared.[4]
Skeptical investigatorJoe Nickell, who investigated recent cases of stigmata such as Katya Rivas,[61] commented that they are indistinguishable fromhoaxing.[40]
In 2002, a psychoanalytic study of stigmaticTherese Neumann suggested her stigmata resulted frompost-traumatic stress symptoms expressed in unconscious self-mutilation through abnormal autosuggestibility.[62]
According to a study of the French theologianJoachim Bouflet, in the 21st century there were 200 stigmatics all over the world. Most of them reached the third age without having particular health problems. The oldest stigmatic wasMarie-July Jahenny who died in 1941 at the age of 91. As of 1997, the stigmatics who had been declared saints by the Roman Catholic Church were only 7.[63]
Non-Christian stigmata
Among theWarao of theOrinoco Delta, a contemplator oftutelary spirits may mystically induce the development of "...(imagined) openings in the palms of his hands."[64]
Some spiritualistmediums have also produced stigmata. During the séances of German medium Maria Vollhardt, it was alleged that bleeding wounds appeared.[67] However,Albert Moll, a psychiatrist, considered her phenomena to be fraudulent.[68]
^Muessig, Carolyn (2013). "Signs of Salvation: The Evolution of Stigmatic Spirituality Before Francis of Assisi".Church History.82 (1):40–68.doi:10.1017/S000964071200251X.JSTOR23358905.
^Francis, Henry S. (1963). "Sasseta: crucifixion with St. Francis".The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art.50 (3). Cleveland Museum of Art:46–49.JSTOR25151940.
^abcdefgRuffin, Barnard. (1991).Padre Pio: The True Story. OSV Press. pp. 160–178.ISBN0-87973-673-9
^Luzzatto, Sergio.Padre Pio: Miracles and Politics in a Secular Age. Henry Holt and Company. pp. 91–92.ISBN978-1-4299-4645-2.
^Quote: Maria De Vito said, "I was an admirer of Padre Pio and I met him for the first time on July 31, 1919...he gave me personally an empty bottle, and asked if I would act as a chauffeur to transport it back from Foggia to San Giovanni Rotondo with four grams of pure carbolic acid. ... He explained that the acid was for disinfecting syringes for injections. He also asked for other things, such as Valda pastilles."Moore, Malcolm (2007-10-24)."Italy's Padre Pio 'faked his stigmata with acid'".The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved2012-04-25..
^Luzzatto, Sergio.Padre Pio: Miracles and Politics in a Secular Age. Henry Holt and Company. p. 103.ISBN978-1-4299-4645-2.
^Castelli, Francesco (2011).Padre Pio under investigation: the secret Vatican files. San Francisco: Ignatius Press. pp. 25, 114.ISBN978-1-58617-405-7.
^abHiggins, Michael W. (2006).Stalking the Holy: The Pursuit of Saint Making. Anansi Press. p. 129.ISBN0-88784-181-3
^Gaeta, Saverio; Tornielli, Andrea (2008).Padre Pio, l'ultimo sospetto: la verità sul frate delle stimmate (in Italian). Casale Monferrato (Alessandria): Piemme.
^abNickell, Joe. (2001).Real-Life X-Files: Investigating the Paranormal. University of Kentucky Press. pp. 276–288.ISBN0-8131-2210-4
^abWilson, Ian (1989).Stigmata: an investigation into the mysterious appearance of Christ's wounds in hundreds of people from medieval Italy to modern America. New York: Harper & Row. pp. 10, 62.ISBN0-06-250974-8.
^abSmeyers, Kristof (Autumn 2018). "Building the Archive of Stigmatic Women Religious".An Irish Quarterly Review.107:337–339.
^Nickell, Joe. (2001).Real-Life X-Files: Investigating the Paranormal. University of Kentucky Press. p. 281.ISBN0-8131-2210-4 "That many stigmatics were fakes is well established. For example, Magdalena de la Cruz, having become ill in 1543 and fearful of dying a sinner, confessed that her stigmata, inedia, and other phenomena were deliberate deceptions."
^Porter, Dorothy; Porter, Roy (1993).Doctors, Politics and Society: Historical Essays. Rodopi. pp. 120–121.ISBN90-5183-510-8
^Hustvedt, Asti. (2011).Medical Muses: Hysteria in Nineteenth-Century Paris. Bloomsbury. p. 279.ISBN978-1-4088-2235-7
^Mazzoni, Cristina (1996).Saint Hysteria: Neurosis, Mysticism, and Gender in European Culture. Cornell University Press. pp. 24–28, 136–140.ISBN0-8014-3229-4
^Seidl, O. (2008).Stigmatisation and Absence of Nutrition in the Case of Therese Neumann (1898–1962).Nervenarzt 79 (7): 836–843.
^Regal, Brian (2009).Pseudoscience: A Critical Encyclopedia. Greenwood. pp. 154–155.ISBN978-0-313-35507-3
^abKluger, N.; Cribier, B. (2013).Stigmata: From Saint-Francis of Assisi to Idiopathic Haematidrosis.Annales de Dermatologie et de Vénéréologie 140: 771–777.
^Keys, Ancel (1950).The Biology of Human Starvation. University of Minnesota Press.
^Zusne, Leonard; Jones, Warren H. (1989).Anomalistic Psychology: A Study of Magical Thinking. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc. pp. 54–56.ISBN978-0-805-80507-9
^Early, Loretta F; Lifschutz, Joseph E. (1974).A Case of Stigmata Loretta. Arch Gen Psychiatry 30 (2):197–200.
^Ratnoff, O. D. (1980).The psychogenic purpuras: A review of autoerythrocyte sensitization, autosensitization to DNA, "hysterical" and factitial bleeding, and the religious stigmata. Semin Hematol 17: 192–213.
^Panconesi, E., & Hautmann, G. (1995). "Stress, Stigmatization and Psychosomatic Purpuras".International Angiology 14: 130–137.
^Albright, M. (2002). "The Stigmata: The Psychological and Ethical Message of the Posttraumatic Sufferer".Psychoanalysis and Contemporary Thought.25 (3):329–358.
^Johannes Wilbert : "Warao Basketry".Occasional Papers of the Museum of Cultural History, University of California at Los Angeles, No. 3, 1975. pp. 5–6
^Keith Taylor & John Whitmore :Essays into Vietnamese Pasts. Southeast Asia Program, Cornell University, 1985. p. 278
^cited in Ing-Britt Trankell & Laura Summers :Facets of Power and Its Limitations. Department of Cultural Anthropology, Uppsala University, 1998. p. 24
^Shepard, Leslie. (1991).Encyclopedia of Occultism & Parapsychology. Gale Research Company. p. 1779