The ability to levitate was attributed to figures in
Early Christianity. The apocryphal
Acts of Peter gives a
legendary tale of
Simon Magus' death. Simon is performing
magic in the
Roman Forum, and in order to prove himself to be a
god, he flies up into the air. The apostle
Peter prays to God to stop his flying, and he stops mid-air and falls, breaking his legs, whereupon the crowd, previously non-hostile, stones him to death. The church of
Santa Francesca Romana claims to have been built on the spot in question (thus accepting the claim that Simon Magus could indeed fly), claims that
Paul was also present, and that a dented slab of marble that it contains bears the imprints of the knees of Peter and Paul during their prayer.
Orthodoxy In recent times,
John of Shanghai and San Francisco was said to be levitating while in prayer; an individual witnessed this when checking in on him while he was in prayer.
George of Drama was also seen levitating during the
Divine Liturgy.
Catholicism Francis of Assisi is recorded as having been "suspended above the earth, often to a height of three, and often to a height of four
cubits" (around 1.3 to 1.8 m).
Alphonsus Liguori, when preaching at
Foggia, was lifted before the eyes of the whole congregation several feet from the ground.
Catherine of Siena was similarly said to be levitating while in prayer, and a priest claimed to have seen the
Holy communion flying from his hand straight to Catherine's mouth. Flying or levitation was also associated with
witchcraft. When it came to female saints, there was a certain ambivalence expressed by theologians,
canon lawyers,
inquisitors, and
hagiographers towards the powers that they were purported to have. By 1500, the image of the female saint in popular imagination had become similar to that of the
witch. Both witches and female saints were suspected of flying through the air, whether in saintly levitation or bilocation, or in a
Witches' Sabbath. ==Islam==