In the
New Testament, Jesus prophesied the betrayal by
Peter: "Jesus answered, 'I tell you, Peter, before the rooster crows today, you will deny three times that you know me.'" Similarly, a multitude of
sarcophagi are found with the rooster and the
sacred cockfight with the understanding of striving for resurrection and eternal life in
Christianity. This sacred subject is carved on early Christian tombs, where the sepulchral carvings have an important purpose, "a
faithful wish for immortality, with the victory of the cock and his supporting genius analogous to the hope of
resurrection, the victory of the
soul over death". Reverend Dr.
Kosuke Koyama's tried to spread Christianity through the medium of cockfighting. Numerous representations of the rooster or cock as a
religious vessel can be found in
catacombs from the earliest period including a painting from the Catacomb of St. Priscilla (mentioned in all the ancient
liturgical sources and known as the "Queen of the Catacombs" in antiquity) reproduced in
Giovanni Gaetano Bottari's folio of 1754, where the
Good Shepherd is depicted as feeding the lambs, with a crowing cock on His right and left hand. depicted with the head of a chicken in
Gnostic Christianity Similar illustrations of cocks in fighting stance are found within the
Vivian Bible as well as the fighting cocks
capitals in the Basilica of St. Andoche in
Saulieu and the
Cathédrale Saint-Lazare d'Autun provides "alternate documentation" of the rooster and the religious, spiritual and
sacred cockfight. All four canonical gospels state that Jesus foretold of
Peter's denial (
Saint Peter) and that he would deny Christ three times before the cock's crow.
Augustine of Hippo,
Catholic saint and pre-eminent
Doctor of the Church understood "
a visible sign of an invisible reality" of the rooster to include that as described by
St. Augustine in DeOrdine as that which "in every motion of these animals unendowed with reason there was nothing ungraceful since, of course, another higher reason was guiding everything they did". In the sixth century, it is reputed that
Pope Gregory I declared the cock the emblem of Christianity saying the rooster was "the most suitable emblem of Christianity", being "the emblem of St Peter". Some say that it was as a result of this that the cock began to be used as a
weather vane on church steeples, and some a
Papal enactment of the ninth century ordered the figure of the cock to be placed on every church steeple.
Pope Leo IV had the figure of the cock placed on the
Old St. Peter's Basilica or old
Constantinian basilica and has served as a religious
icon and reminder of
Peter's denial of Christ since that time, with some churches still having the rooster on the steeple today. Alternative theories about the origin of weathercocks on church steeples are that it was an emblem of the vigilance of the clergy calling the people to prayer, that it was derived from the
Goths and is only possibly a
Christian symbol, and that it is an emblem of the sun. In the
Bayeux Tapestry of the 1070s, originally of the
Bayeux Cathedral and now exhibited at
Musée de la Tapisserie de Bayeux in
Bayeux,
Normandy, there is a depiction of a man installing a rooster on
Westminster Abbey. The
cornerstone is the first stone set in the construction of a masonry foundation, and over time, it became a
ceremonial stone, with the laying of the stone being generally important metaphorically in
sacred architecture. == In art and literature ==