A HUMAN forearm touted as ''the most significant Jesuit relic to
ever visit Australia'' has arrived in Melbourne as part of a national
tour.
Safely secured in its own custom-built glass case, what's
claimed to be the 506-year-old right forearm of St Francis Xavier will
be taken to Catholic churches across the state for the next six days.
The mummified relic, which still has flesh and all fingers
intact, was given its own seat on the plane for the long flight from
Rome to Australia last month.
It was accompanied by New South Wales
Bishop Peter Comensoli, who gained permission from Rome's Church of the
Gesu, to take the relic on a 23-city tour of Australia to mark the
Catholic Church's Year of Grace.
Father Robin Koning, a Jesuit priest and theology lecturer at
MCD University of Divinity in Kew, said he believed the saint's forearm
had left the Church of the Gesu only four times and ''certainly never
been to this side of the world.
In Rome, it's kept at some distance so
people can't get as close to it as they can here and they will be
allowed to touch the glass reliquary.
A large part of St Francis
Xavier's work was baptising, so [when alive] he would have used [the
arm] for blessing people, writing letters and tending the sick,'' he
said.