Chicago Sun-Times

Vatican unveils bones said to be St. Peter’s

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4 VATICAN CITY — The Vatican publicly unveiled a handful of bone fragments purportedl­y belonging to St. Peter on Sunday, reviving the scientific debate and tantalizin­g mystery over whether the relics found in a shoe box truly belong to the first pope. The nine pieces of bone sat nestled like rings in a jewel box inside a bronze display case on the side of the altar during a Mass commemorat­ing the end of the Vatican’s yearlong celebratio­n of the Christian faith. It was the first time they had ever been exhibited in public. Pope Francis prayed before the fragments at the start of Sunday’s service and then clutched the case in his arms for several minutes after his homily. No pope has ever definitive­ly declared the fragments to belong to the Apostle Peter, but Pope Paul VI in 1968 said fragments found in the necropolis under St. Peter’s Basilica were “identified in a way that we can consider convincing.” Some archaeolog­ists dispute the finding. But last week, a top Vatican official, Archbishop Rino Fisichella, said it almost doesn’t matter if archaeolog­ists one day definitive­ly determine that the bones aren’t Peter’s, saying Christians have prayed at Peter’s tomb for two millennia and will continue to, regardless. “It’s not as if pilgrims who go to the altar [of Peter’s tomb] think that in that moment in which they profess their faith that below them are the relics of Peter, or of another or another still,” he told reporters. “They go there to profess the faith.” The relics were discovered during excavation­s begun under St. Peter’s Basilica in the years following the 1939 death of Pope Pius XI.

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| FRANCO ORIGLIA/GETTY ?? Pope Francis holds the relics during mass in St. Peter’s Square on Sunday.
IMAGES | FRANCO ORIGLIA/GETTY Pope Francis holds the relics during mass in St. Peter’s Square on Sunday.

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