K
Kschwartz6
Guest
Practically speaking, how do you discover that a saint’s body is incorruptible?
Take Carlo Acutis for example. I assume he was never buried. How did they know not to bury him? Did coroners notice his body hadn’t decomposed like normal after his death and they decided to keep him out? Or… Did they bury him, later exhume him, and discover he was incorrupt? I read recently that John Paul II’s body is in a casket but it hasn’t been opened so it’s unknown if his body is incorrupt.
What about random saints? Like if my grandma (who is already buried) became a beatified or canonized saint, would they exhume her body for the sake of seeing if it were incorrupt?
Take Carlo Acutis for example. I assume he was never buried. How did they know not to bury him? Did coroners notice his body hadn’t decomposed like normal after his death and they decided to keep him out? Or… Did they bury him, later exhume him, and discover he was incorrupt? I read recently that John Paul II’s body is in a casket but it hasn’t been opened so it’s unknown if his body is incorrupt.
What about random saints? Like if my grandma (who is already buried) became a beatified or canonized saint, would they exhume her body for the sake of seeing if it were incorrupt?