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STIGMATA

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"Just below my skin I'm screaming."

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Stigmata is one of the world's greatest religious mysteries along with angels and possession, but unlike the others, is seen as a result of holding deep rooted religious beliefs.

Stigmata is the phrase to describe the wounds inflicted on Christ at the time of arrest, trial and execution - this time is usually called The Passion.

Traditional beliefs states that Christ was attached to the cross by nails through the palm of his hands and through his feet. Stigmata has also been to appear on holes within the forehead made from the crown of thorns and it can also appear as a dislocated shoulder representing the burden of Christ carrying his own cross.

Stigmata differs from normal flesh wounds as they usually stay open for long periods of time and appear to resist any accepted medical practice to heal them. Usually open wounds become septic and often succumb to disease, when genuine stigmata occurs, there is no sign of infection or inflammation and clean arterial blood flows from the wounds.

The wounds come and go spontaneously and often appear on regular intervals, on most cases on Fridays. This usually heightens during religious festivals such as Lent and Easter.

The first documented stigmatic was St Francis of Assisi (1182 - 1226), the founder of the Franciscan order of monks. One Holy Cross Day, St Francis was praying devoutly in Mount Alvernia (in Italy's Apennine mountain range) comptemplating the suffering Christ endured during The Passion. He then saw a seraph - a member of the highest order of angels, often depicted as the winged head of a child - descending from Heaven. St Francis then fell to the ground in the face of this messenger from God.

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