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{{short description|Beatified German Augustinian canoness and mystic (1774–1824)}}
'''Blessed Anne Catherine Emmerich''' (], ] - ], ]) was a ] ] ] ], alleged stigmatic, and ecstatic. She was born in ], near ], in the Diocese of ], ], ] and died in ]. On ], ], ] officially ] her, giving her the title "Blessed". (It is worth noting that her writings were not considered in the beatification process, since they were all dictated to ], who may have taken liberties in his translation and recording of her words.)
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2021}}
{{Infobox saint
|honorific_prefix=]
|name= Anne Catherine Emmerich
|birth_date=8 September 1774
|death_date={{death date and age|1824|02|09|1774|09|08|df=y}}
|feast_day=9 February
|venerated_in=]
|image=Anna Katharina Emmerick - Gabriel von Max 1885.jpg
|imagesize=
|caption=Catherine Emmerich with a ] as depicted by ] (1885)
|birth_place=], ], ], ]
|death_place=], ], ]
|titles={{ubl|Christian Virgin and Penitent|Marian Visionary and Stigmatist}}
|beatified_date=3 October 2004
|beatified_place=], ]
|beatified_by=]
|canonized_date=
|canonized_place=
|canonized_by=
|attributes=Bedridden with bandaged head and holding a ]
|patronage=
|major_shrine=
|suppressed_date=
|issues=
|honorific_suffix=CRV}}


'''Anne Catherine Emmerich''', CRV (also ''Anna Katharina Emmerick''; 8 September 1774 – 9 February 1824) was a ]
== Childhood ==
] canoness of the ]. During her lifetime, she was a purported ], ] ] and ].<ref name="Vatican">{{Cite web|title=Anna Katharina Emmerick (1774-1824), biography|url=https://www.vatican.va/news_services/liturgy/saints/ns_lit_doc_20041003_emmerick_en.html|access-date=14 September 2020|website=www.vatican.va}}</ref>


Emmerich was born in ], an impoverished farming community at ], in the ], ], Germany, and died in ] (aged 49), where she had been a bedridden nun. Emmerich purportedly experienced visions on the life and ], as revealed to her by the ] under ].<ref>Emmerich, Anna Catherine: ''The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ'' {{ISBN|978-0-89555-210-5}} page viii</ref>
Her parents were very poor. At twelve she was bound out to a farmer, and later was a seamstress for several years. She was sent to study music, but finding the organist's family very poor she gave them the little she had saved to enter a convent, and waited on them as a servant for several years.


During her bedridden years, a number of well-known figures were inspired to visit her.<ref name=Vatican /> The poet ] interviewed her at length and wrote two books based on his notes of her visions.<ref name=AndrewWeeks /> The authenticity of Brentano's writings has been questioned and critics have characterized the books as "conscious elaborations by a poet".<ref name=America /><ref name=Anvil />
In her twenty-eighth year (]) she entered the Augustinian convent at ], ]. Her sisters came to believe that she had supernatural powers, mostly as a result of multiple ] she appeared to experience. When ] closed the convent in ] she found refuge in a widow's house. In ] she became bedridden.


] ] Emmerich on 3 October 2004, highlighting her personal virtues and Catholic piety.<ref name=Vatican />
Catholic Tradition states that she foresaw the downfall of ] twelve years in advance, and that she counseled in a mysterious way the successor of ].


==Early life==
As a child she had visions in which she talked with Jesus as a child; the Catholic Church later came to accept her claims as factual, i.e. that she really did have supernatural conversations with Jesus in heaven.
]
Emmerich was born into a family of poor farmers and had nine brothers and sisters. The family's surname was derived from an ancestral town. From an early age, she helped with the house and farm work. Her schooling was rather brief, but all those who knew her noticed that she felt drawn to prayer from an early age.<ref name=Vatican /> At twelve, she started to work at a large farm in the vicinity for three years and later learned to be a seamstress and worked as such for several years.<ref name="CathEnc">{{Cite web|title=CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Ven. Anne Catherine Emmerich|url=https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05406b.htm|access-date=14 September 2020|website=www.newadvent.org}}</ref>


She applied for admission to various convents, but she was rejected because she could not afford a bridal ]. Eventually, the ] in ] agreed to accept her, provided she would learn to play the musical organ. She went to the organist Söntgen in ] to study music and learn to play the organ, but the poverty of the Söntgen family prompted her to work there and to sacrifice her small savings in an effort to help them.<ref name=CathEnc /> Later, one of the Söntgen daughters entered the convent with her.<ref name=Vatican />
The sick and poor came to her for help, and according to contemporaries she supernaturally knew what their diseases were, and prescribed infallible cures. There is no documented evidence to support such claims.


==Religious life==
She prayed for the souls of those people who she believed were condemned to ]; she had many episodes in which she claimed to see the souls.
In 1802, Emmerich (aged 28) and her friend Klara Söntgen finally managed to join the ]s at the convent of Agnetenberg in ]. The following year, Emmerich took her ].<ref name=Vatican /> In the convent, she became known for her strict observance of the order's rule; but, from the beginning to 1811, she was often quite ill and had to endure great pain. At times, her zeal and strict adherence to rules disturbed some of the more tepid sisters, who were puzzled by her weak health and religious ecstasies.<ref name=CathEnc />


When the ], ] suppressed the convent in 1812, she sought and found refuge in the house of a widow.
By 1813 she was confined to bed, and ] appeared on her body.


==Stigmata==
Then followed an Episcopal commission to inquire into her life, and the claims surrounding miraculous signs. The examination was very strict. The vicar-general, the famous Overberg, and three physicians conducted the investigation with scrupulous care and became convinced of the sanctity of the "pious Beguine", as she was called, and the genuineness of the stigmata.
{{Christian mysticism}}
In early 1813, marks of the ] were reported on Emmerich's body. The parish priest called in two doctors to examine her. When word of the phenomenon spread three months later, he notified the vicar general. With the news causing considerable talk in the town, the ecclesiastical authorities conducted a lengthy investigation. Many doctors wished to examine the case, and although efforts were made to discourage the curious, there were visitors whose rank or status gained them entry.<ref name="Thurston">{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J789AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA237|title=The Month|date=1921|publisher=Simpkin, Marshall, and Company|language=en}}</ref> During this time, the poet and romanticist Clemens Brentano first visited.


At the end of 1818, the periodic bleeding of Emmerich's hands and feet had stopped and the wounds had closed. While many in the community viewed the stigmata as real, others considered Emmerich an impostor conspiring with her associates to perpetrate a fraud. In August 1819, the civil authorities intervened and moved Emmerich to a different house, where she was kept under observation for three weeks. The members of the commission could find no evidence of fraud and were divided in their opinions.<ref name=Thurston/>
At the end of ] Emmerich claimed God granted her prayer to be relieved of the stigmata, and the wounds in her hands and feet closed, but the others remained, and on Good Friday all were wont to reopen.


As the cross on her breastbone had the unusual shape of a "Y", similar to a cross in the local church of Coesfeld, English priest ] surmised that "the subjective impressions of the stigmatic exercise a preponderating influence upon the manifestations which appear exteriorly,"<ref name=Thurston/> the same pathway to stigmata described in the works of ].
In ] Emmerich was investigated again. She was forcibly removed to a large room in another house and kept under the strictest surveillance day and night for three weeks, away from all her friends except her confessor. About this time ], the famous poet, was induced to visit her; to his great amazement she recognized him, and he claimed she told him he had been pointed out to her as the man who was to enable her to fulfill God's command, namely, to write down for the good of innumerable souls the revelations made to her. He took down briefly in writing the main points, and, as she spoke the ]n dialect, he immediately rewrote them in ordinary German. He would read what he wrote to her, and made changes until she gave her complete approval. Brentano became one of Emmerich's many supporters at the time, believing her to be a "chosen bride of Christ".


==Mystical apparitions==
== The Dolorous Passion ==
As a young child, Emmerich claimed she had ] in which she talked with Jesus and saw the Souls in ]. She further described the core of the ] in the form of three concentric, interpenetrating full spheres. The largest but dimmest of the spheres represented the Father core, the medium sphere the Son core, and the smallest and brightest sphere the Holy Spirit core. Each sphere of omnipresent God is extended toward infinity beyond God's core placed in ]. The Brentano compilation tells that during an illness in Emmerich's childhood, she was visited by the ] who told her of plants she should ingest in order to heal, including Morning Glory flower juice, known to contain ].


Based on Emmerich's growing reputation, a number of figures who were influential in the renewal movement of the Church early in the 19th century came to visit her, among them ], the future ]; ], the ], since 1803 the sole surviving Elector Spiritual of the Holy Roman Empire; ] and authors ] and ].<ref name=Vatican /> Clemens von Droste, at the time still vicar‑general of the Archdiocese, called Emmerich "a special friend of God" in a letter he wrote to Stolberg.<ref name=Vatican />
In ] appeared the first-fruits of Brentano's toil, "The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ according to the Meditations of Anne Catherine Emmerich" (Sulzbach). The work has been criticized for ] depictions of ]s; however, it is uncertain whether these are due to Emmerich or Brentano. There is disagreement on the Anti-Semitism of the work as well.


===According to Clemens Maria Brentano===
Brentano prepared for publication "The Life of The Blessed Virgin Mary", but this appeared at ] only in ]. From the manuscript of Brentano, Father Schmoeger published in three volumes ''The Life of Our Lord'' (Ratisbon, 1858-80), and in 1881 a large illustrated edition of the same. The latter also wrote her life in two volumes.
], Germany]]
At the time of Emmerich's second examination in 1819, Brentano visited her. He claimed that she told him he was sent to help her fulfill God's command, to express in writing the revelations made to her. Brentano became one of Emmerich's many supporters at the time, believing her to be a "chosen Bride of Christ". Professor Andrew Weeks claims that Brentano's own ] were a factor in substituting Emmerich as a maternal figure in his own life.<ref name=AndrewWeeks />


From 1819 until Emmerich's death in 1824, Brentano filled many notebooks with accounts of her visions involving scenes from the ] and the life of the ]. Because Emmerich only spoke the ], Brentano could not transcribe her words directly, and often could not even take notes in her presence,<ref name=Corl /> so he would quickly write in ] when he returned to his own apartment a set of notes based on what he remembered of the conversations he had with Emmerich.<ref name=Corl /> Brentano edited the notes later, years after the death of Emmerich.<ref name=Corl />
Her visions go into details, often slight, which give them a vividness that strongly holds the reader's interest as one graphic scene follows another in rapid succession as if visible to the physical eye.


About ten years after Emmerich had recounted her visions, Brentano completed editing his records for publication.<ref name=Corl /> In 1833, he published his first volume, ''] According to the Meditations of Anne Catherine Emmerich''. Brentano then prepared ''The Life of the Blessed Virgin Mary from the Visions of Anna Catherine Emmerich'' for publication, but he died in 1842. The book was published posthumously in 1852 in ].
Her visions led to the discovery of the ] where Catholic Tradition says she lived until she was assumed into heaven, located on a hill near ], ].


Catholic priest Karl Schmoger edited Brentano's manuscripts and from 1858 to 1860 published the three volumes of ''The Life of Our Lord''. In 1881, a large illustrated edition followed. Schmoger also penned a biography of Anne Catherine Emmerich in two volumes from 1867 to 1870 that has been republished in English language editions.
In ] actor ] wrote and directed a movie, '']'', which raised a pre-release controversy about parts of the screenplay apparently based on Emmerich's meditations on the ].


The Vatican does not endorse the authenticity of the books written by Brentano.<ref name=CNSFeb2004 /><ref name=CNSOct2004 /> However, it views their general message as "an outstanding proclamation of the gospel in service to salvation".<ref>"Her words, which have reached innumerable people in many languages from her modest room in Dülmen through the writings of Clemens Brentano, are an outstanding proclamation of the gospel in service to salvation right up to the present day." </ref> Other critics have been less sympathetic and have characterized the books Brentano produced from his notes as "conscious elaborations of an overwrought romantic poet".<ref name=AndrewWeeks>Andrew Weeks, "Between God and Gibson: German Mystical and Romantic Sources of ''The Passion of the Christ''", '']'' Vol. 78, No. 4, Fall, 2005 </ref>
== External links ==


Brentano wrote that Emmerich said she believed that ]'s son ] was the progenitor of "the black, idolatrous, stupid nations" of the world. The "Dolorous Passion" is claimed to reveal a "clear antisemitic strain throughout",<ref>Melissa Croteau, ''Apocalyptic Shakespeare: Essays of Vision and Chaos in Recent Film Adaptations'', McFarland, 2009</ref> with Brentano writing that Emmerich believed that "Jews{{nbsp}} strangled Christian children and ] for all sorts of suspicious and diabolical practices".<ref>Paula Frederiksen, ''On the Passion of the Christ'', California, 2006, p. 203</ref>
*

* Emmerich books at ]: http://www.gutenberg.org/catalog/world/authrec?fk_authors=3730
===Allegations of partial fabrication by Brentano===
], Germany.]]
When the case for Emmerich's beatification was submitted to the Vatican in 1892, a number of experts in Germany began to compare and analyze Brentano's original notes from his personal library with the books he had written.<ref name=America /> The analysis revealed various apocryphal biblical sources, maps, and travel guides among his papers, which could have been used to exaggerate or embellish some of Emmerich's narrations.<ref name=America />

In his 1923 theological thesis, German priest Winfried Hümpfner, who had compared Brentano's original notes to the published books, wrote that Brentano had fabricated much of the material he had attributed to Emmerich.<ref name=Anvil >Emmerich, Anne Catherine, and Clemens Brentano. ''The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ''. Anvil Publishers, Georgia, 2005 pages 49–56 (Note: the hard copy of this book has a wrong ISBN printed within its front matter, but the text (and the wrong ISBN) show up on Google books as published by Anvil Press)</ref><ref name=winfrid >Winfried Hümpfner, ''Clemens Brentanos Glaubwürdigkeit in seinen Emmerick-Aufzeichnungen; Untersuchung über die Brentano-Emmerick-frage unter erstmaliger Benutzung der tagebücher Brentanos'' Würzburg, St. Rita-verlag und -druckerei, 1923 (in German)</ref>

By 1928, the experts had come to the conclusion that only a small portion of Brentano's books could be safely attributed to Emmerich.<ref name=America>{{cite web |author=John O' Malley |title=A Movie, a Mystic, a Spiritual Tradition |magazine=] |date=15 March 2004 |url=http://americamagazine.org/content/article.cfm?article_id=3481&comments=1 |access-date=2011-07-19 |url-status = live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111005193623/http://americamagazine.org/content/article.cfm?article_id=3481&comments=1 |archive-date=2011-10-05 }}</ref><ref name=Anvil />

At the time of Emmerich's beatification in 2004, the Vatican position on the authenticity of the Brentano books was elucidated by priest Peter Gumpel, who was involved in the study of the issues for the ]: "It is absolutely not certain that she ever wrote this. There is a serious problem of authenticity."<ref name=Anvil /><ref name=CNSFeb2004>{{cite web |author=John Thavis |work=Catholic News Service |date=4 February 2004 |title=Vatican confirms papal plans to beatify nun who inspired Gibson film |url=http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/20040616y.htm |url-status = dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040619064144/http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/20040616y.htm |archive-date=2004-06-19 }}</ref><ref name=CNSOct2004 /> According to Gumpel, the writings attributed to Emmerich were "absolutely discarded" by the Vatican as part of her beatification process.<ref name=America />

==Death and burial==
Emmerich began to grow weaker during the summer of 1823. She died on 9 February 1824 in ] and was buried in the graveyard outside the town, with a large number of people attending her funeral.<ref name=Vatican /> Her grave was reopened twice in the weeks following the funeral, due to a rumor that her body had been stolen, but the coffin and the body were found to be intact.<ref name=Vatican /><ref name=CathEnc />

In February 1975, Emmerich's remains were permanently moved to the Church of the Holy Cross in Dülmen.{{citation needed|date=March 2022}}

==House of the Virgin Mary==
], now a chapel in ], Turkey]]
Neither Brentano nor Emmerich had ever been to ], and indeed the city had not yet been excavated; but visions contained in ''The Life of The Blessed Virgin Mary'' were used during the discovery of the ], the Blessed Virgin's supposed home before her ], located on a hill near Ephesus, as described in the book ''Mary's House''.<ref>Mary's House by Donald Carroll (20 April 2000) Veritas, {{ISBN|0-9538188-0-2}}</ref>

Emmerich described Mary's house:<ref>https://tandfspi.org/ACE_vol_04/ACE_4_0441_out.html#ACE_4_0000325</ref>

{{blockquote|The Blessed Virgin's dwelling was not in Ephesus itself, but from three to four hours distant. It stood on a height upon which several Christians from Judea, among them some of the holy women related to her, had taken up their abode. Between this height and Ephesus glided, with many a crooked curve, a little river. The height sloped obliquely toward Ephesus}}

In 1881, a French ], ], used Emmerich's book to search for the house in Ephesus and found it based on the descriptions. He was not taken seriously at first, but sister ] persisted until two other priests followed the same path and confirmed the finding.<ref>''The Ancient Traditions of the Virgin Mary's Dormition and Assumption'' by Stephen J. Shoemaker 2006 {{ISBN|0-19-921074-8}} page 76</ref><ref>''Chronicle of the living Christ: the life and ministry of Jesus Christ'' by Robert A. Powell 1996 {{ISBN|0-88010-407-4}} page 12</ref>

] visited the shrine in 1896. ] granted a ] to the pilgrimage to the shrine in 1914 and sent his blessing to "the valiant searchers for the tomb of the Most Blessed Virgin." ] initially declared the house a "Holy Place" (1951). The former Cardinal ] visited the shrine (1935), and later as ] later made the Pian declaration permanent. ] (1967), ] (1979) and ] (2006) visited the house and current shrine.<ref>{{cite web |date=29 November 2006 |url=http://www.zenit.org/article-18317?l=english |title=Where Mary Is Believed to Have Lived |website=Zenit |url-status = dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120927161718/http://www.zenit.org/article-18317?l=english |archive-date=27 September 2012}}</ref>

==Beatification==
]

{{cquote|Her example opened the hearts of poor and rich alike, of simple and cultured persons, whom she instructed in loving dedication to Jesus Christ.|], ''Homily'', Sunday, 3 October 2004<ref></ref>}}

The process of Emmerich's ] was started in 1892 by the Bishop of ], and her cause was officially opened by the Vatican on 12 June 1899.<ref name="index">{{cite book |title=Index ac status causarum beatificationis servorum dei et canonizationis beatorum |date=January 1953 |publisher=Typis polyglottis vaticanis |page=18 |language=Latin}}</ref> The process of evaluating her spiritual writings began on 22 April 1901.<ref name="index" /> In 1928, however, the Vatican suspended the process when it was suspected that Clemens Brentano had fabricated some of the material that appeared in the books he wrote, and which he had attributed to Emmerich.<ref name=EWEM >{{cite web |url=http://www.ewtn.com/expert/answers/emmerich.htm |work=] |title=The Passion of The Christ and Anne Catherine Emmerich and Mary of Agreda |access-date=2011-08-05 |archive-date=2013-12-25 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131225110847/http://www.ewtn.com/expert/answers/emmerich.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref>

In 1973, the ] allowed the case for her beatification to be re-opened, provided it only focused on the issue of her life, without any reference to the possibly doctored material produced by Clemens Brentano.<ref name=EWEM />

In July 2003, the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints promulgated a decree of a miracle attributed to her, and that paved the way for her beatification.<ref name=EWEM /><ref>'']'' N.&nbsp;29, 16 July 2003, p.&nbsp;2.</ref>

On 3 October 2004, Anne Catherine Emmerich was beatified by Pope John Paul II.<ref>{{cite web |title=Anna Katharina Emmerick, Who Lived Her Own Passion |url=http://www.ewtn.com/library/MARY/ZANKAEM2.HTM |work=ZENIT Daily Dispatch |publisher=] |date=3 October 2004}}</ref> However, the books produced by Brentano were set aside, and her cause adjudicated solely on the basis of her own personal sanctity and virtue.<ref name=Anvil /> Peter Gumpel, who was involved in the analysis of the matter at the Vatican, told ''Catholic News Service'':

{{blockquote|Since it was impossible to distinguish what derives from Sister Emmerich and what is embroidery or additions, we could not take these writings as a criterion . Therefore, they were simply discarded completely from all the work for the cause.<ref name=CNSFeb2004 /><ref name=CNSOct2004>{{cite web |author=John Thavis |work=Catholic News Service |date=4 October 2004 |title=Pope beatifies five, including German nun who inspired Gibson film |url=http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/0405425.htm |url-status = dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041005225405/http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/0405425.htm |archive-date=2004-10-05 }}</ref>}}

==In film==
In 2003, actor and director ] used Brentano's book ''The Dolorous Passion'' as a key source for his 2004 film '']''.<ref name=Corl >''Jesus and Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ'' by Kathleen E. Corley, Robert Leslie Webb 2004 {{ISBN|0-8264-7781-X}} pages 160-161</ref><ref name=Garcia >''Mel Gibson's Passion and philosophy'' by Jorge J. E. Gracia 2004 {{ISBN|0-8126-9571-2}} page 145</ref><ref>''Movies in American History: An Encyclopedia'' edited by Philip C. DiMare 2011 {{ISBN|1-59884-296-X}} page 909</ref> Gibson stated that Scripture and "accepted visions" were the only sources he drew on, and a careful reading of Brentano's book shows the film's high level of dependence on it.<ref name=Corl /><ref name=Garcia />

In 2007 German director Dominik Graf made the movie ''The Pledge'' as a dramatization of the encounters between Emmerich (portrayed by actress {{Interlanguage link|Tanja Schleiff|de|vertical-align=sup}}) and ], based on a novel by Kai Meyer.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.variety.com/review/VE1117936335?refcatid=31&printerfriendly=true |work=] |date=27 February 2008 |title=The Pledge |author=Eddie Cockrell |url-status = dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121108200624/http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117936335?refcatid=31&printerfriendly=true |archive-date=8 November 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0965422/ |title=The Vow (2007) |publisher=IMDb}}</ref>

==Bibliography==

===Original Publications in German===

* Emmerich, Anna Catherine. The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ (1833) - Edited by Clemens Brentano, who recorded Emmerich's visions and narrations.
* Emmerich, Anna Catherine. The Life of the Blessed Virgin Mary (1852) - Edited by Clemens Brentano, who recorded Emmerich's visions and narrations. Posthumous release for Clemens Brentano.
* Emmerich, Anna Catherine. The Life of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ (1858-1860) - Edited and compiled by Carl E. Schmöger, based on Emmerich's visions and narrations recorded by Clemens Brentano.
* Schmöger, K. E. The Life of the Blessed Anna Katharina Emmerich Vol.I (1867) - Edited and written by Carl E. Schmöger, based on Emmerich's life and visions recorded by Clemens Brentano.
* Schmöger, K. E. The Life of the Blessed Anna Katharina Emmerich Vol.II (1870) - Edited and written by Carl E. Schmöger, based on Emmerich's life and visions recorded by Clemens Brentano.

===English editions of Emmerich's visions===

* Emmerich, Anna Catherine. Burns & Oates, 1899.
* Emmerich, Anna Catherine. . Edited by ], Holy Water Books, 2022.
* Emmerich, Anna Catherine. Sentinel, 1915 .
* Emmerich, Anna Catherine. ''The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ''. ]: ], 2009. {{ISBN|978-0-89555-210-5}}
* Emmerich, Anna Catherine. ''The Life of the Blessed Virgin Mary: From the Visions of Anna Catherine Emmerich'': Charlotte, NC: TAN Books, 2009. {{ISBN|978-0-89555-048-4}}
* Emmerich, Anna Catherine. ''Life of Jesus Christ and Biblical Revelations''. Charlotte, NC: TAN Books, 2008. {{ISBN|978-0-89555-791-9}}
* Emmerich, Anna Catherine. ''The Bitter Passion and the Life of Mary: From the Visions of Anna Catherine Emmerich: As Recorded in the Journals of Clemens Brentano''. Fresno, California: Academy Library Guild, 1954.

===Literature===
* Corcoran, Rev. Mgr. The American Catholic Quarterly Review, Vol. X, 1885.
* Frederickson, Paula. ed. ''On the Passion of the Christ.'' Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2006.
* Kathleen Corley and Robert Webb. ed. ''Jesus and Mel Gibson's Passion of the Christ. The Film, the Gospel and the Claims of History.'' London: Continuum, 2004. {{ISBN|0-8264-7781-X}}
* Ram, Helen. Burns and Oates, 1874.
* Schmoger, Karl. ''Life of Anna Katherina Emmerich''. Rockford, Illinois: Tan Books and Publications, 1974. {{ISBN|0-89555-061-X}} (set); {{ISBN|0-89555-059-8}} (volume 1); {{ISBN|0-89555-060-1}} (volume 2)
* Wegener, Thomas. ''Life of Sister Anna Katherina Emmerich'': New York: Benziger Brothers: 1898.

==See also==
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]

== Notes ==
{{Reflist|30em}}

== External links ==
{{Commons category|Anna Katharina Emmerick|Anne Catherine Emmerich}}
* {{Gutenberg author |id=3730| name=Anna Katharina Emmerich}}
* {{Internet Archive author |sname=Anne Catherine Emmerich}}
* {{Librivox author |id=1232}}
* {{cite web | url = https://www.vatican.va/news_services/liturgy/saints/ns_lit_doc_20041003_emmerick_en.html | title = Vatican biography of Blessed Anne Catherine Emmerich | website = vatican.va/ | language = en | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20040909222047/https://www.vatican.va/news_services/liturgy/saints/ns_lit_doc_20041003_emmerick_en.html | archive-date = 9 September 2004 |url-status = live}}
*{{cite web | url = http://www.ccel.org/ccel/emmerich/passion.pdf | title = The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ | website = ] | language = en | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20060708060634/http://www.ccel.org/ccel/emmerich/passion.pdf | archive-date = 8 July 2006 |url-status = live}}
*{{cite web | url = http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05406b.htm | title = 1911 Catholic Encyclopedia biography of Anne Catherine Emmerick | language = en | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/19991013143140/http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05406b.htm | archive-date = 13 October 1999 |url-status = live}}
* {{cite web | url = https://digilander.libero.it/rexur/inglese/index2.htm | title = The Passion of Jesus Christ God according to the revelations of Sister Anne Catherine Emmerich | website = Invisible Monastery of charity and fraternity - Christian family prayer | language = en | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170126123639/https://digilander.libero.it/rexur/inglese/index2.htm | archive-date = 26 January 2017 |url-status = live}}
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Latest revision as of 02:16, 20 December 2024

Beatified German Augustinian canoness and mystic (1774–1824)

Blessed
Anne Catherine Emmerich
CRV
Catherine Emmerich with a crucifix as depicted by Gabriel von Max (1885)
  • Christian Virgin and Penitent
  • Marian Visionary and Stigmatist
Born8 September 1774
Flamschen, Coesfeld, Prince-Bishopric of Münster, Holy Roman Empire
Died9 February 1824(1824-02-09) (aged 49)
Dülmen, Kingdom of Prussia, German Confederation
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Beatified3 October 2004, Basilica of Saint Peter, Vatican City by Pope John Paul II
Feast9 February
AttributesBedridden with bandaged head and holding a crucifix

Anne Catherine Emmerich, CRV (also Anna Katharina Emmerick; 8 September 1774 – 9 February 1824) was a Roman Catholic Augustinian canoness of the Congregation of Windesheim. During her lifetime, she was a purported mystic, Marian visionary and stigmatist.

Emmerich was born in Flamschen, an impoverished farming community at Coesfeld, in the Diocese of Münster, Westphalia, Germany, and died in Dülmen (aged 49), where she had been a bedridden nun. Emmerich purportedly experienced visions on the life and Passion of Jesus Christ, as revealed to her by the Blessed Virgin Mary under religious ecstasy.

During her bedridden years, a number of well-known figures were inspired to visit her. The poet Clemens Maria Brentano interviewed her at length and wrote two books based on his notes of her visions. The authenticity of Brentano's writings has been questioned and critics have characterized the books as "conscious elaborations by a poet".

Pope John Paul II beatified Emmerich on 3 October 2004, highlighting her personal virtues and Catholic piety.

Early life

The preserved birth house of Anne Catherine Emmerich in Coesfeld-Flamschen.

Emmerich was born into a family of poor farmers and had nine brothers and sisters. The family's surname was derived from an ancestral town. From an early age, she helped with the house and farm work. Her schooling was rather brief, but all those who knew her noticed that she felt drawn to prayer from an early age. At twelve, she started to work at a large farm in the vicinity for three years and later learned to be a seamstress and worked as such for several years.

She applied for admission to various convents, but she was rejected because she could not afford a bridal dowry. Eventually, the Order of Saint Clare in Münster agreed to accept her, provided she would learn to play the musical organ. She went to the organist Söntgen in Coesfeld to study music and learn to play the organ, but the poverty of the Söntgen family prompted her to work there and to sacrifice her small savings in an effort to help them. Later, one of the Söntgen daughters entered the convent with her.

Religious life

In 1802, Emmerich (aged 28) and her friend Klara Söntgen finally managed to join the Augustinian nuns at the convent of Agnetenberg in Dülmen. The following year, Emmerich took her religious vows. In the convent, she became known for her strict observance of the order's rule; but, from the beginning to 1811, she was often quite ill and had to endure great pain. At times, her zeal and strict adherence to rules disturbed some of the more tepid sisters, who were puzzled by her weak health and religious ecstasies.

When the King of Westphalia, Jérôme Bonaparte suppressed the convent in 1812, she sought and found refuge in the house of a widow.

Stigmata

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In early 1813, marks of the stigmata were reported on Emmerich's body. The parish priest called in two doctors to examine her. When word of the phenomenon spread three months later, he notified the vicar general. With the news causing considerable talk in the town, the ecclesiastical authorities conducted a lengthy investigation. Many doctors wished to examine the case, and although efforts were made to discourage the curious, there were visitors whose rank or status gained them entry. During this time, the poet and romanticist Clemens Brentano first visited.

At the end of 1818, the periodic bleeding of Emmerich's hands and feet had stopped and the wounds had closed. While many in the community viewed the stigmata as real, others considered Emmerich an impostor conspiring with her associates to perpetrate a fraud. In August 1819, the civil authorities intervened and moved Emmerich to a different house, where she was kept under observation for three weeks. The members of the commission could find no evidence of fraud and were divided in their opinions.

As the cross on her breastbone had the unusual shape of a "Y", similar to a cross in the local church of Coesfeld, English priest Herbert Thurston surmised that "the subjective impressions of the stigmatic exercise a preponderating influence upon the manifestations which appear exteriorly," the same pathway to stigmata described in the works of John of Ruusbroec.

Mystical apparitions

As a young child, Emmerich claimed she had visions in which she talked with Jesus and saw the Souls in Purgatory. She further described the core of the Holy Trinity in the form of three concentric, interpenetrating full spheres. The largest but dimmest of the spheres represented the Father core, the medium sphere the Son core, and the smallest and brightest sphere the Holy Spirit core. Each sphere of omnipresent God is extended toward infinity beyond God's core placed in heaven. The Brentano compilation tells that during an illness in Emmerich's childhood, she was visited by the Child Jesus who told her of plants she should ingest in order to heal, including Morning Glory flower juice, known to contain ergine.

Based on Emmerich's growing reputation, a number of figures who were influential in the renewal movement of the Church early in the 19th century came to visit her, among them Clemens August von Droste zu Vischering, the future Archbishop of Cologne; Johann Michael Sailer, the Bishop of Ratisbon, since 1803 the sole surviving Elector Spiritual of the Holy Roman Empire; Bernhard Overberg and authors Luise Hensel and Friedrich Stolberg. Clemens von Droste, at the time still vicar‑general of the Archdiocese, called Emmerich "a special friend of God" in a letter he wrote to Stolberg.

According to Clemens Maria Brentano

The reconstruction of Emmerich's room with the original furniture, at the Holy Cross church in Dülmen, Germany

At the time of Emmerich's second examination in 1819, Brentano visited her. He claimed that she told him he was sent to help her fulfill God's command, to express in writing the revelations made to her. Brentano became one of Emmerich's many supporters at the time, believing her to be a "chosen Bride of Christ". Professor Andrew Weeks claims that Brentano's own personal complexes were a factor in substituting Emmerich as a maternal figure in his own life.

From 1819 until Emmerich's death in 1824, Brentano filled many notebooks with accounts of her visions involving scenes from the New Testament and the life of the Virgin Mary. Because Emmerich only spoke the Westphalian dialect, Brentano could not transcribe her words directly, and often could not even take notes in her presence, so he would quickly write in standard German when he returned to his own apartment a set of notes based on what he remembered of the conversations he had with Emmerich. Brentano edited the notes later, years after the death of Emmerich.

About ten years after Emmerich had recounted her visions, Brentano completed editing his records for publication. In 1833, he published his first volume, The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ According to the Meditations of Anne Catherine Emmerich. Brentano then prepared The Life of the Blessed Virgin Mary from the Visions of Anna Catherine Emmerich for publication, but he died in 1842. The book was published posthumously in 1852 in Munich.

Catholic priest Karl Schmoger edited Brentano's manuscripts and from 1858 to 1860 published the three volumes of The Life of Our Lord. In 1881, a large illustrated edition followed. Schmoger also penned a biography of Anne Catherine Emmerich in two volumes from 1867 to 1870 that has been republished in English language editions.

The Vatican does not endorse the authenticity of the books written by Brentano. However, it views their general message as "an outstanding proclamation of the gospel in service to salvation". Other critics have been less sympathetic and have characterized the books Brentano produced from his notes as "conscious elaborations of an overwrought romantic poet".

Brentano wrote that Emmerich said she believed that Noah's son Ham was the progenitor of "the black, idolatrous, stupid nations" of the world. The "Dolorous Passion" is claimed to reveal a "clear antisemitic strain throughout", with Brentano writing that Emmerich believed that "Jews  strangled Christian children and used their blood for all sorts of suspicious and diabolical practices".

Allegations of partial fabrication by Brentano

The tomb of Anne Catherine at the Holy Cross church in Dülmen, Germany.

When the case for Emmerich's beatification was submitted to the Vatican in 1892, a number of experts in Germany began to compare and analyze Brentano's original notes from his personal library with the books he had written. The analysis revealed various apocryphal biblical sources, maps, and travel guides among his papers, which could have been used to exaggerate or embellish some of Emmerich's narrations.

In his 1923 theological thesis, German priest Winfried Hümpfner, who had compared Brentano's original notes to the published books, wrote that Brentano had fabricated much of the material he had attributed to Emmerich.

By 1928, the experts had come to the conclusion that only a small portion of Brentano's books could be safely attributed to Emmerich.

At the time of Emmerich's beatification in 2004, the Vatican position on the authenticity of the Brentano books was elucidated by priest Peter Gumpel, who was involved in the study of the issues for the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints: "It is absolutely not certain that she ever wrote this. There is a serious problem of authenticity." According to Gumpel, the writings attributed to Emmerich were "absolutely discarded" by the Vatican as part of her beatification process.

Death and burial

Emmerich began to grow weaker during the summer of 1823. She died on 9 February 1824 in Dülmen and was buried in the graveyard outside the town, with a large number of people attending her funeral. Her grave was reopened twice in the weeks following the funeral, due to a rumor that her body had been stolen, but the coffin and the body were found to be intact.

In February 1975, Emmerich's remains were permanently moved to the Church of the Holy Cross in Dülmen.

House of the Virgin Mary

House of the Virgin Mary, now a chapel in Ephesus, Turkey

Neither Brentano nor Emmerich had ever been to Ephesus, and indeed the city had not yet been excavated; but visions contained in The Life of The Blessed Virgin Mary were used during the discovery of the House of the Virgin Mary, the Blessed Virgin's supposed home before her Assumption, located on a hill near Ephesus, as described in the book Mary's House.

Emmerich described Mary's house:

The Blessed Virgin's dwelling was not in Ephesus itself, but from three to four hours distant. It stood on a height upon which several Christians from Judea, among them some of the holy women related to her, had taken up their abode. Between this height and Ephesus glided, with many a crooked curve, a little river. The height sloped obliquely toward Ephesus

In 1881, a French Catholic priest, Julien Gouyet, used Emmerich's book to search for the house in Ephesus and found it based on the descriptions. He was not taken seriously at first, but sister Marie de Mandat-Grancey persisted until two other priests followed the same path and confirmed the finding.

Pope Leo XIII visited the shrine in 1896. Pope Pius X granted a plenary indulgence to the pilgrimage to the shrine in 1914 and sent his blessing to "the valiant searchers for the tomb of the Most Blessed Virgin." Pope Pius XII initially declared the house a "Holy Place" (1951). The former Cardinal Angelo Roncalli visited the shrine (1935), and later as Pope John XXIII later made the Pian declaration permanent. Pope Paul VI (1967), Pope John Paul II (1979) and Pope Benedict XVI (2006) visited the house and current shrine.

Beatification

An artistic depiction of Emmerich from 1895.

Her example opened the hearts of poor and rich alike, of simple and cultured persons, whom she instructed in loving dedication to Jesus Christ.

The process of Emmerich's beatification was started in 1892 by the Bishop of Münster, and her cause was officially opened by the Vatican on 12 June 1899. The process of evaluating her spiritual writings began on 22 April 1901. In 1928, however, the Vatican suspended the process when it was suspected that Clemens Brentano had fabricated some of the material that appeared in the books he wrote, and which he had attributed to Emmerich.

In 1973, the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints allowed the case for her beatification to be re-opened, provided it only focused on the issue of her life, without any reference to the possibly doctored material produced by Clemens Brentano.

In July 2003, the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints promulgated a decree of a miracle attributed to her, and that paved the way for her beatification.

On 3 October 2004, Anne Catherine Emmerich was beatified by Pope John Paul II. However, the books produced by Brentano were set aside, and her cause adjudicated solely on the basis of her own personal sanctity and virtue. Peter Gumpel, who was involved in the analysis of the matter at the Vatican, told Catholic News Service:

Since it was impossible to distinguish what derives from Sister Emmerich and what is embroidery or additions, we could not take these writings as a criterion . Therefore, they were simply discarded completely from all the work for the cause.

In film

In 2003, actor and director Mel Gibson used Brentano's book The Dolorous Passion as a key source for his 2004 film The Passion of the Christ. Gibson stated that Scripture and "accepted visions" were the only sources he drew on, and a careful reading of Brentano's book shows the film's high level of dependence on it.

In 2007 German director Dominik Graf made the movie The Pledge as a dramatization of the encounters between Emmerich (portrayed by actress Tanja Schleiff) and Clemens Brentano, based on a novel by Kai Meyer.

Bibliography

Original Publications in German

  • Emmerich, Anna Catherine. The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ (1833) - Edited by Clemens Brentano, who recorded Emmerich's visions and narrations.
  • Emmerich, Anna Catherine. The Life of the Blessed Virgin Mary (1852) - Edited by Clemens Brentano, who recorded Emmerich's visions and narrations. Posthumous release for Clemens Brentano.
  • Emmerich, Anna Catherine. The Life of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ (1858-1860) - Edited and compiled by Carl E. Schmöger, based on Emmerich's visions and narrations recorded by Clemens Brentano.
  • Schmöger, K. E. The Life of the Blessed Anna Katharina Emmerich Vol.I (1867) - Edited and written by Carl E. Schmöger, based on Emmerich's life and visions recorded by Clemens Brentano.
  • Schmöger, K. E. The Life of the Blessed Anna Katharina Emmerich Vol.II (1870) - Edited and written by Carl E. Schmöger, based on Emmerich's life and visions recorded by Clemens Brentano.

English editions of Emmerich's visions

Literature

  • Corcoran, Rev. Mgr. "Anne Katherina Emmerich," The American Catholic Quarterly Review, Vol. X, 1885.
  • Frederickson, Paula. ed. On the Passion of the Christ. Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2006.
  • Kathleen Corley and Robert Webb. ed. Jesus and Mel Gibson's Passion of the Christ. The Film, the Gospel and the Claims of History. London: Continuum, 2004. ISBN 0-8264-7781-X
  • Ram, Helen. The Life of Anne Catharine Emmerich, Burns and Oates, 1874.
  • Schmoger, Karl. Life of Anna Katherina Emmerich. Rockford, Illinois: Tan Books and Publications, 1974. ISBN 0-89555-061-X (set); ISBN 0-89555-059-8 (volume 1); ISBN 0-89555-060-1 (volume 2)
  • Wegener, Thomas. Life of Sister Anna Katherina Emmerich: New York: Benziger Brothers: 1898.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Anna Katharina Emmerick (1774-1824), biography". www.vatican.va. Retrieved 14 September 2020.
  2. Emmerich, Anna Catherine: The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ ISBN 978-0-89555-210-5 page viii
  3. ^ Andrew Weeks, "Between God and Gibson: German Mystical and Romantic Sources of The Passion of the Christ", The German Quarterly Vol. 78, No. 4, Fall, 2005 Link to JSTOR
  4. ^ John O' Malley (15 March 2004). "A Movie, a Mystic, a Spiritual Tradition". America. Archived from the original on 5 October 2011. Retrieved 19 July 2011.
  5. ^ Emmerich, Anne Catherine, and Clemens Brentano. The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ. Anvil Publishers, Georgia, 2005 pages 49–56 (Note: the hard copy of this book has a wrong ISBN printed within its front matter, but the text (and the wrong ISBN) show up on Google books as published by Anvil Press)
  6. ^ "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Ven. Anne Catherine Emmerich". www.newadvent.org. Retrieved 14 September 2020.
  7. ^ The Month. Simpkin, Marshall, and Company. 1921.
  8. ^ Jesus and Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ by Kathleen E. Corley, Robert Leslie Webb 2004 ISBN 0-8264-7781-X pages 160-161
  9. ^ John Thavis (4 February 2004). "Vatican confirms papal plans to beatify nun who inspired Gibson film". Catholic News Service. Archived from the original on 19 June 2004.
  10. ^ John Thavis (4 October 2004). "Pope beatifies five, including German nun who inspired Gibson film". Catholic News Service. Archived from the original on 5 October 2004.
  11. "Her words, which have reached innumerable people in many languages from her modest room in Dülmen through the writings of Clemens Brentano, are an outstanding proclamation of the gospel in service to salvation right up to the present day." Quote from 18th paragraph of Vatican online biography Anna Katharina Emmerick (1774-1824)
  12. Melissa Croteau, Apocalyptic Shakespeare: Essays of Vision and Chaos in Recent Film Adaptations, McFarland, 2009
  13. Paula Frederiksen, On the Passion of the Christ, California, 2006, p. 203
  14. Winfried Hümpfner, Clemens Brentanos Glaubwürdigkeit in seinen Emmerick-Aufzeichnungen; Untersuchung über die Brentano-Emmerick-frage unter erstmaliger Benutzung der tagebücher Brentanos Würzburg, St. Rita-verlag und -druckerei, 1923 (in German)
  15. Mary's House by Donald Carroll (20 April 2000) Veritas, ISBN 0-9538188-0-2
  16. https://tandfspi.org/ACE_vol_04/ACE_4_0441_out.html#ACE_4_0000325
  17. The Ancient Traditions of the Virgin Mary's Dormition and Assumption by Stephen J. Shoemaker 2006 ISBN 0-19-921074-8 page 76
  18. Chronicle of the living Christ: the life and ministry of Jesus Christ by Robert A. Powell 1996 ISBN 0-88010-407-4 page 12
  19. "Where Mary Is Believed to Have Lived". Zenit. 29 November 2006. Archived from the original on 27 September 2012.
  20. ^ Index ac status causarum beatificationis servorum dei et canonizationis beatorum (in Latin). Typis polyglottis vaticanis. January 1953. p. 18.
  21. ^ "The Passion of The Christ and Anne Catherine Emmerich and Mary of Agreda". EWTN. Archived from the original on 25 December 2013. Retrieved 5 August 2011.
  22. L'Osservatore Romano N. 29, 16 July 2003, p. 2.
  23. "Anna Katharina Emmerick, Who Lived Her Own Passion". ZENIT Daily Dispatch. Zenit News Agency. 3 October 2004.
  24. ^ Mel Gibson's Passion and philosophy by Jorge J. E. Gracia 2004 ISBN 0-8126-9571-2 page 145
  25. Movies in American History: An Encyclopedia edited by Philip C. DiMare 2011 ISBN 1-59884-296-X page 909
  26. Eddie Cockrell (27 February 2008). "The Pledge". Variety. Archived from the original on 8 November 2012.
  27. "The Vow (2007)". IMDb.

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