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The Holy Prepuce, or Holy Foreskin (Latin præputium) is one of the various relics purported to be associated with Jesus Christ. At
various points in history, a number of churches in Europe have claimed to own it, sometimes concurrently. Various miraculous powers have been ascribed to it.
Orthodox Christian belief has it that Jesus ascended bodily into Heaven at the end of his earthly life. This would
mean that his foreskin (removed at his circumcision, as with all other Jewish boys) would be one of the
few physical remainders of Jesus left behind on Earth. Indeed, there seems to have been some short-lived theological arguments as to whether Jesus can really be said to have ascended wholly into Heaven if this
part of his body was actually missing; consensus was that his foreskin was no more an obstacle to this than the hair and
fingernails that he had cut throughout his life.
The abbey of Charroux claimed to own
the Holy Foreskin during the Middle Ages. It was said to have been presented
to the monks by none other than Charlemagne, who in turn claimed (as the
legend has it) that it had been brought to him by an angel (although another version of
the story says it was a wedding gift from Empress Irene of the Byzantine Empire). In the early 12th century, it was taken in procession to Rome where it was presented
before Pope Innocent III, who was asked to rule on its
authenticity. The Pope declined the opportunity. Later, however, Pope
Clement VII declared it to be a true relic, and granted an indulgence to
pilgrims who went to visit it. At some point, however, the relic went missing, and
remained lost until 1856 when a workman repairing the abbey claimed to have found a
reliquary hidden inside a wall,
containing the missing foreskin.
The abbey church of Coulombs in the diocese of Chartres, France
was another medieval claimant. One story says that when Catherine
of Valois was pregnant in 1421, her husband, King Henry V of England, sent for the Holy Prepuce. It was believed that the sweet scent that the relic
was supposed to give off would ensure an easy and safe childbirth. According to this legend, it did its job so well that Henry
was reluctant to return it after the birth of the child (the future King Henry VI of England).
The authenticity of the Holy Foreskin claimed by St. John
Lateran in Rome is said to have been proven in 1527 when the troops of Holy
Roman Emperor Charles V sacked Rome. The relic fell into their hands for a time, and was allegedly put to the test by
bringing a virgin girl before it, whereupon the foreskin expanded!
Other claimants at various points in time have included (at least) the Cathedral of Puy en Velay, Santiago de Compostela, the city of Antwerp, and churches in Besançon, Metz, Hildesheim, and Calcata.
The last of these is worthy of special mention as the reliquary containing the Holy Foreskin was paraded through the streets
of this Italian village as recently as 1983 on the Feast of the
Circumcision (marked by the Catholic church around the world on
January 1 each year). The practice ended, however, when thieves stole the
jewel-encrusted case, contents and all.
Over the last century or so, the emphasis placed on relics by the Catholic church has declined markedly, with many relics with
long traditions being relegated to "pious legend" by the Vatican. Interest in the
Holy Foreskins has been specifically downplayed, with the observation in 1900 that these
particular relics encouraged irreverent curiosity.
Apart from its physical importance as a relic, the Holy Foreskin appears in a famous vision of Saint Catherine of Siena. In the vision, Christ mystically marries her, and
his amputated foreskin is given to her as a wedding ring. During the late 17th
century, Catholic scholar and theologian Leo Allatius in De
Praeputio Domini Nostri Jesu Christi Diatriba ("Discussion concerning the Prepuce of our Lord Jesus Christ")
speculated that the Holy Foreskin may have ascended into Heaven at the same time as Jesus himself and might have become the rings
of Saturn then-recently observed.
Assuming that it is possible that one of these foreskins is in fact Jesus Christ's, its preservation raises the possibility of
cloning when that technology is perfected for humans.
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