No. Foreskins are cut from Jewish boys on the eighth day of their lives. That is the point of this discussion. Jesus necessarily had to leave his foreskin behind when he ascended. The same applies to his umbilical cord, which has been claimed as a relic by several churches; in particular and at present, S John Lateran in Rome.Thanks for the heads-up about the novel.
Actually, I know that in Antwerp, the cathedral has a chapel with stained glass commissioned and paid foreek
by Henry VII to house the (or a) Holy Prepuce brought back from the Crusades.
Wiki tells us
Would this count as a cult "[ . . . ]centred upon a bone, piece of skin or any internal organ of Jesus' body"?
In around 1950 Pope Pius XII reinforced an existing ban on all and any discussion of the Holy Foreskin, which had started to expose the church to ridicule. Quite recently the last known example disappeared from the church in Calcata, Lazio, where it was an object of local veneration. The local parish priest, who is suspect no. 1, refused to investigate the theft, citing the pontifical prohibition on discussion of the matter. Thus the church deals with thorny problems. But I don't think it would get off as easily if the body of Jesus (even sans foreskin) were to turn up!
I am twenty minutes or so from that cathedral in Antwerp as a write this, and I may go there, but they charge a steep entry fee to get into the cathedral at all, which I object to in the case of an active church, atheist that I am.
ETA I have just found a reasonable discussion of these matters at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calcata, which expands on, and corrects, what I have written above.
Last edited:
