St Veronica and the Sixth Station of the Cross
The
sixth station of the Stations of the Cross is entitled: "Veronica wipes
the face of Jesus".
A meditation accompanying this station reads: "As
Jesus proceeds on his way covered with the sweat of death, a woman moved
with compassion makes her way through the crowd and wipes his face with
a towel. As a reward of her piety, the impression of his countenance is
miraculously imprinted on the towel".
History or legend?
This devotion, popularised in the nineteenth century, has made Veronica into a well known saints. She even has a statue in St Peter's Basilica in the Vatican.
But it seems
certain that she is a total legend coming from the very understandable
desire to know what Jesus actually looked like, a desire to see the face
of Jesus.
No reference is made to Veronica or the towel in the
canonical Gospels.
A relic of Jesus (a true image)
From the 8th century there existed at Rome a relic said to be a sudarium (or "sweat towel") used to wipe Jesus' face.
By the 12th century claims
were being made for a number of these that were said to have the image
of the face of Jesus imprinted on them. Disputes arose as to which of
these was the vera icon (or "true image").
Giraldus Cambrensis
(1146-1223), a clergyman from Wales who visited Rome three times, gives
evidence of this in his work Speculum Ecclesiae.
Veronica
Ordinary language turned this vera icon into veronica
(or "the veronica") and she is often identified with the woman with the
haemorrhage cured by touching the hem of Jesus's cloak (Mk 5:21-43),
whom the apocryphal Acts of Pilate call Berenike.
It
was a short step from that to Veronica's veil becoming an object of
veneration in St Peter's in the late Middle Ages. This is mentioned by
both Petrarch and Dante.
Pope Innocent III had it publicly displayed and
granted indulgences for those praying before it.
Devotion to the Holy Face
Devotion to the Holy
Face of Jesus then became so popular that the same Pope Innocent III
authorised a Mass and Office of the feast of the Holy Face in 1216.
In
1297 Pope Boniface VIII had Veronica's veil transferred to St. Peter's
and displayed as one of the mirabilia urbis ("wonders of the City") for the pilgrims who visited Rome for the Holy Year in 1300 to see.
Statue in St Peter's
In the 17th century the
veil was found hidden in a relic chamber built by Bernini into one of
the piers supporting the dome of St Peter's.
By this time a more
critical historical approach to relics had set in and St Charles
Borromeo had the Mass and Office of the Holy Face suppressed in Milan.
But the shrine and a statue of St Veronica remain in the Basilica of St
Peter's in the Vatican till this day.
The mandylion of King Agbar of Edessa and the acheiropoietos icon
Another claimant to be the true image of Jesus from the East was the mandylion
("towel" or "handkerchief") from Edessa in Syria, which was said to
have been given by Jesus to his contemporary King Agbar of Edessa.
This was at first reported to be a picture painted by the messenger who
came requesting Jesus to come and heal him.
But it later developed into
"an image not made by hands" (acheiropoietos) and in the 8th
century became the justification of Eastern Orthodox iconography.
John
of Damascus, the leading proponent of the teaching favouring icons as
opposed to the Iconoclasts, says that Jesus "is said to have taken a
piece of cloth and pressed it to his face, impressing on it the image of
his face, which it keeps to this day" (On the Divine Images I).
Conclusion
That a compassionate woman could have
wiped the face of Jesus is not to be discounted.
Christians are free to
ponder such an action and its motivation.
But St Veronica was not
mentioned in any canonical gospel nor in any of the earliest
martyrologies, nor is she named in the Roman Martyrology today.
Neither
does she currently have any liturgical celebration in the Catholic
Calendar of the Universal Church.