
The Debate Over Incorruptibility
By Fr. Williams Saunders
Herald Columnist
(From the issue of 5/17/01)
The HERALD (March 29, 2001) reported that the remains of Pope
John XXIII were incorrupt, but there was a debate over whether this was a sign of sanctity
or simply due to regular preservation methods. Could you please explain the significance
of this further? A reader in Alexandria
On Jan. 16, 2001, Cardinal Sodano, Secretary of State of the Holy See; Cardinal Noe,
Archpriest of St. Peters Basilica; and Leonardo Sandri, opened the tomb of Blessed
Pope John XXIII, who was beatified on Sept. 3, 2000. (Blessed Pope John XXIIII died on
June 3, 1962.) The identification of the mortal remains is part of the normal canonization
process. The mortal remains of Blessed Pope John XXIII were to be transferred from their
present tomb in the crypt beneath St. Peters to a new tomb upstairs in the basilica
itself at the altar honoring St. Jerome. Pope John Paul II ordered the transferal to
affirm the holiness of the late pontiff and to enable the faithful to more easily venerate
him.
When the inner casket was opened, Cardinal Noe said that the face of Blessed Pope John
XXIII appeared "intact and serene." The official report stated, "Once freed
from the cloth that covered it, the face of the blessed appeared intact, with the eyes
closed and the mouth slightly open, and bearing the features that immediately called to
mind that familiar appearance of the venerated pontiff." The Popes hands, still
holding a cross, were also preserved.
While trying to avoid any sense of the macabre, such an investigation is integral to
the canonization process. Prospero Cardinal Lambertini (later Pope Benedict XIV,
1675-1758) wrote a five-volume work entitled De Beatificatione Servorum Dei et de
Beatorum Canonizatione in which he included two chapters, De Cadaverum
Incorruptione. This work remains the classic reference for such matters. The only
incorrupt remains considered extraordinary and thereby miraculous would be those which had
not undergone some preservation process but had retained their lifelike color, freshness
and flexibility for many years after death. Spiritually, such a sign is indicative of the
persons mortal remains being prepared for the glorious resurrection of the body.
Although the Church is very reluctant to accept incorruptibility as a miracle in itself,
it nevertheless does testify to the holiness of the person.
Coupled with incorruptibility is the sign of "sweet odor," a phenomenon in
which the body or the tomb of a saint emits a sweet odor. In the Old Testament, a sweet
smelling odor was a metaphor used to indicate a person pleasing to God and holy in His
eyes. Usually, the odor is unique and cannot be compared to any known perfume. Cardinal
Lambertini posited that while a human body may not smell bad, it is highly unlikely,
especially in the case of a dead body, for it to smell sweet. Therefore, any odor of
sweetness would have to be induced by a supernatural power and be classified as
miraculous. Note, however, that the devil too can induce the "sweet odor," so
this sign must be corroborated by the overall holiness of the life of the person.
In weighing these phenomena, other mitigating factors must be taken into account. For
instance, the body of Blessed Pope John XXIII was kept in a marble sarcophagus that
contained three caskets one of oak, one of lead and one of cypress. Although the
body had not been embalmed, it had been sprayed with some chemicals so that it could be
displayed prior to burial. Nazareno Gabrielli, a technician with the Vatican Museums,
stated, "When he died, some measures were taken for the display of the body for the
veneration of the faithful. It also should not be forgotten that the remains were kept in
three caskets, one of which was sealed lead." Therefore, probably little oxygen
penetrated the caskets and affected the remains. (After the body was officially
recognized, it was sprayed with an anti-bacterial agent, and the casket was hermetically
sealed.)
In all, incorruptibility remains a sign of the holiness of the life of the individual.
The bodies of St. Bernadette Soubirous (1844-1879) and St. Catherine Laboure (1806-1876)
remain incorrupt, even though their bodies had not been embalmed and had been exposed to
various elements for years prior to their exhumation. Therefore, one safely could see the
hand of God in the preservation of the body of Blessed Pope John XXIII, but what is more
miraculous is the holy life he lived.
Fr. Saunders is dean of the Notre Dame Graduate School of
Christendom College in Alexandria and pastor of Our Lady of Hope Parish in Potomac Falls.
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