STIGMATA


Meaning of STIGMATA in English

singular Stigma, in Christian mysticism, bodily marks, scars, or pains corresponding to those of the crucified Jesus Christthat is, on the hands or feet, near the heart, and sometimes on the head (from the crown of thorns) or shoulders and back (from carrying the Cross and scourging). They are often presumed to accompany religious ecstasy. In St. Francis of Assisi there occurred the first example of the alleged miraculous infliction of stigmata. While in his cell on Mount Alverno in 1224, pondering on the sufferings of Christ, he was purportedly visited by a seraph who produced upon his body the five wounds of Christ. Pope Alexander IV and others attested that they had seen these marks both before and after Francis' death. The divinely attested sanctity of its founder gave to the newly established order of Franciscans a powerful impulse. In the next century the same alleged wonder occurred to a Dominican sister, Catherine Benincasa, better known as St. Catherine of Siena. Her biographer implied that she was subject to hystero-epileptic attacks, during one of which, at the age of 23, she received her first stigma. From the 14th to the 20th century, more than 330 persons were identified as having been stigmatized; 60 were declared saints or the blessed in the Roman Catholic church.

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