Why are incorruptible saints put on display?

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And your point, po18guy, is well taken that God does what he does for a reason. Miracles are always done for the increase of faith. If God believed it was necessary for the increase of faith to leave a body incorrupt or to heal a saint’s stigmata after death or whatever, God will do so. If God doesn’t think it necessary, he won’t. The person might be every bit as holy as the incorrupt person.
 
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For this reason, private revelations occur. The deposit of faith is more than sufficient for all humanity for all time.

Yet, some souls just need that little extra push.
 
I was very touched by God’s thoughtfulness in having St John Newman totally decay in the grave. He had wanted so much to be buried with his friend, but the Church was determined to move him, and the gay lobby was all set to make a big fuss about that. God very nicely granted St. Newman’s wish, and removed any grounds for unpleasant contention. The fact that he was buried relatively recently made it all the more dramatic. God is good.
 
Non responsive. Are not all things possible to God?
I didn’t respond to your question because it was vaguely worded, and because I thought that Tis Bearself answered it better than I could have. I don’t really know what you want, but I’ll try.
But, if you go seeking after purely natural causes, then the entire faith is man-made. Is that your belief?
If the bodies of complete sinners can be incorrupt, then the incorruptness of saints’ bodies becomes meaningless as regards their sainthood. This does not in any way deny their sainthood; that has been established by other. If the incorruptibility of saints’ bodies were a supernatural phenomenon, their caretakers wouldn’t need to put wax masks on them; they would be truly incorrupt.

I really don’t know what you mean by “But, if you go seeking after purely natural causes, then the entire faith is man-made.” I’m not seeking after natural causes; my faith is based on other things, not whether or not a saint’s body hasn’t rotted away.

D
 
OK. I am not asking. I was clumsily responding.

IF

Huge qualifier and does it not make the entire point typothetical. Hey! I think I just coined a new word?! But not intentionally.
 
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Pitcairn17:
A fair number of pictures of “incorrupt” saints of whom I’ve seen pictures seem to have faces and hands - everything about them that is visible - covered by wax masks and wax coverings. One “incorrupt” pope, Pius X
I believe - has a silver mask. It causes me to wonder what the definition of “incorrupt” is if such coverings are necessary.
The masks have become “necessary”. They weren’t so at the time it was discovered that the individual was incorrupt.

It also stands to reason that we would want to preserve the bodies of the saints using what means we can. The Declaration of Independence is, from what I understand, kept in a temperature controlled container with humidified helium in order to preserve it. If we take such care to care for historic documents, why not human bodies?
But, if the person’s body truly is incorrupt, such means of preservation shouldn’t ever become necessary.
 
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Thom18:
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Pitcairn17:
A fair number of pictures of “incorrupt” saints of whom I’ve seen pictures seem to have faces and hands - everything about them that is visible - covered by wax masks and wax coverings. One “incorrupt” pope, Pius X
I believe - has a silver mask. It causes me to wonder what the definition of “incorrupt” is if such coverings are necessary.
The masks have become “necessary”. They weren’t so at the time it was discovered that the individual was incorrupt.

It also stands to reason that we would want to preserve the bodies of the saints using what means we can. The Declaration of Independence is, from what I understand, kept in a temperature controlled container with humidified helium in order to preserve it. If we take such care to care for historic documents, why not human bodies?
But, if the person’s body truly is incorrupt, such means of preservation shouldn’t ever become necessary.
If you have a person’s body on display, you do what you can to protect it, incorrupt, “slowly corrupting” or otherwise. I wouldn’t think such things necessary if we were just burying them, but when burying them isn’t our plan, we don’t treat their body the same as we’d treat a body to be buried.
 
Protecting from vandalism, yes. But if a body truly is incorrupt, it shouldn’t need any protection from decomposition. If it does, then it’s not really incorrupt.
 
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