Posted on 10/19/2015 6:18:36 PM PDT by EveningStar
There's a surprising new wrinkle in the story of the celebrated Shroud of Turin.
A group of Italian researchers have found that the 14-foot-long garment -- believed by some to be the burial cloth of Jesus Christ, even though science has proven that's not the case -- contains DNA from plants found all over Earth.
(Excerpt) Read more at huffingtonpost.com ...
ping
Science has proven no such thing.
I guess the Mormons and Japanese did see him...
Errrr....didn’t it go ‘on tour’ for a while?
There is no mystery that the shroud is contaminated. Early artists used to lay their cloths directly on the shroud in order to copy it. What is a mystery is that the image on the shroud is not the result of any process known to mankind. It is a negative image with 3-D information produced via a Dot-Matrix pattern of a resolution higher than most modern printers. In fact, the image is not in the cloth fibers themselves, rather on a micro-thin layer of soapwort which dries on the outside of the fibers in the manufacturing of the cloth. Absolutely facinating.
Last I heard, “Science” was still looking into it. Or does the Huffington Post consider it “settled science” like “global warming”?
Well said, and yes, fascinating. Almost like a recording of a dematerialization into pure light...
Errrr....didnt it go on tour for a while?
It was not allowed to be contaminated by anything from “all over the world”.
If you want on or off the Shroud Ping List, Freepmail me.
They usually come out with this crap right at Easter or Christmas. They’re early.
The idea of a negative image in that century was non-existent. Secondly there is no paint or oil or whatever used to produce that image. And what of that blood serum on it? There are no brush strokes on the pigment or whatever it is that produced the image. No matter how careful you are you still would see strokes either up or across.
Secondly, the image is on top of the fabric, not into the fabric.
The thing has been all around the world. Duh.
No. It has been known to have been in France, Northern Italy, and theorized to have been in Edessa (Sanliaurfa, or Urfa), Turkey, Constantinople or Istanbul, Jerusalem, and places in-between, but that is it.
I've always associated the hufandpuffington more with Halloween, so it's pretty much on schedule.
Uh, yeah, it was. In the past, it was not unusual for it to be paraded through the town where it was, being held by priests in their hands, where dirty, dusty pilgrims from everywhere were lined up along the streets quite close to it, were allowed to reach out and touch it. The streets were dusty and dirty as well. It would NOT have been washed after one of these parades and merely put away.
Robert du Clary, a knight with the fourth Crusade related how every Sunday, the Shroud would be brought up on some kind of support, out of its reliquary like a drapery in the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople so that "The Image of Our Lord stood up for all to see". . . Thus, dust and wind from a very bustling sea port with ships visiting from all over the world could have brought pollen from everywhere.
Until the 20th Century, every exposition of the Shroud was open air. . . no glass covered the Shroud as hundreds of thousands of pilgrims walked past within twenty feet or so, raising clouds of dust which would have certainly allowed some of those pollens to fall on the cloth of the Shroud during those expositions. I believe that the first glass enclosure was the 1932 exposition and that has been the practice since, because prior to that, such large panes were impractical and/or gave too much glare for the pilgrims to get a good view. Even in 1978 the scientists were aghast to learn the priests had merely displayed the Shroud on a backing of plywood using rust prone, steel, THUMB TACKS (!!) which had indeed left a ring of rust where ever they had been on the Shroud.
True.
Actually, no, it hasn't. . . but it has been visited by people from all over the world.
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