Satanic Temple To P. Pio - Chiesa Viva Access
: It sits adjacent to the older Sanctuary of Santa Maria delle Grazie , where Padre Pio lived and worked. Legacy of the Controversy
While the Catholic Church officially recognizes the building as a sacred site of pilgrimage, the Chiesa viva feature remains a cornerstone of sedevacantist and ultra-traditionalist critiques of modern Church architecture. To these groups, the building remains a "temple" to the very forces Padre Pio famously spent his life battling in the confessional. Expand map Modern Controversy Historical Sites THE PAPACY: AN EXPOSE - Catholic Tradition Satanic Temple to P. Pio - Chiesa viva
: The church was funded by devotees and designed to accommodate over 6,000 pilgrims with an expansive, fan-like structure that opens toward the town. : It sits adjacent to the older Sanctuary
Father Luigi Villa, who claimed to have received a mandate from Padre Pio himself to investigate Masonic infiltration in the Church, detailed several perceived "scandals" within the building's design: Expand map Modern Controversy Historical Sites THE PAPACY:
The claim that a "Satanic Temple" was built for Padre Pio is a central thesis of a long-standing controversy promoted by the traditionalist Italian magazine , founded by Father Luigi Villa . The feature explores the allegations that the contemporary Padre Pio Pilgrimage Church in San Giovanni Rotondo—designed by world-renowned architect Renzo Piano—contains hidden Masonic and occult symbolism. The Origin of the Allegation
: The magazine pointed to the use of triangles, specific floor patterns, and the "broken" cross as evidence of a hidden Masonic agenda.