No. That's the history. In Jesus' day they used two pieces, one for the head and one for the body.
Later, they used a single piece. But the one touted as the shroud of turin is a single piece, later than Jesus' day, hence is a fake.
But you believe what you will. It's immaterial. My faith is not in a piece of cloth. My faith is in Truth.
This is why God left no image of the Christ (even though they had statues of famous people aplenty), nor antiquity, etc. He did not do so because He knew people would elevate the cloth, etc, to something worthy of worship.
But like I said, believe what you will. It matters not. My faith is in the Eternal, not a cloth.
Now youre dancing. You do not know what you are talking about. What part of excavated 1st Century Jewish cemeteries in Jerusalem do you fail to grasp? That was Jesus day. Have you read the burial practices as written in the Mishnah? Those would be the rules that Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus would have followed in burying Jesus. Obviously, you have not. Does the history you know mention anything about the phylactories? How about anything his blood touched having to be buried with him? Life is in the blood. I am TALKING about the history and the Jewish cultural customs that would have been hurriedly followed. Not the myth built up around it by non-cultural Jews. Actual researched history.
I have studied this topic for over fifty years. They used more than two pieces . . . When they could afford them. The Gospels report Jesus was buried according to the ways of the Jews, but it does not list everything that was done according the ways of the Jews. But you rely on the ENGLISH translation, which refers to a napkin, mistranslated from the Greek original which dont use a term that means napkin. . . but the English CULTURAL understanding of how a smaller cloth MIGHT be used (hence calling it a napkin in translation which would be understood by people in cooler climes, is NOT the Jewish CULTURAL understanding of how it MUST be used, which was to bind the mouth closed, a required action, nor was it even the translators CULTURAL understanding. A single cloth would be used to both cover the head and the body if one of sufficient size were available.
For poor people, that may not have been possible, so theyd us what they had at hand, i.e. the common sweat cloth that almost everyone had. CLOTH of any kind up until the invention of the machine loom was expensive. . . especially large, long cloths, representing many hours or even weeks of work for several people. People who could afford one, often bought used worn out sails for shrouds. In fact, up until the industrial revolution, household linens made up a high-percentage of the value of many estates.
There were actually four to five pieces to the typical Jewish Grave Clothes when one could afford them. A syndon and three bindings, one for around the face to bind the jaw closed, one for the wrists to keep the arms across the body, and one for the ankles. A fifth could be used near the knees if necessary. These were there for when Rigor Mortis passed to prevent the body from flopping as the muscles relaxed after tetany passed and a tendency to flop occurred. Skulls with bindings around them have been discovered, but none with remnants of cloths over the faces, not one. The purpose is, as I said, to keep the jaw closed.
Jews dont change their cultural patterns. They follow the Torah, and what is written in the Mishnah, including the burial rites and practices. They would not suddenly add to their burial practices over time. The Rabbis would have to find a really compelling reason to do so. . . and frankly, after the events in 70 AD and the destruction of the second Temple, I frankly doubt thered be a movement to more expensive burials with larger single cloths in a later day as the Jews are dispersed into another exile.
The Greek words are clear. The original Greek meaning is about or around the face, not over the face. In other words, under the Jaw, behind the beard, then behind the hair, in front of the ears, then up and over the crown of the head, where it is tied snuggly, binding the mouth closed in death. Similarly, there are potsherds or coins placed on the eyelids. Skulls have been found with both in the sockets. Again, the purpose is to keep the eyes shut in death. Practicality rules.
However, the evidence on the Sudarium of Oviedo show that it did indeed cover the face of a crucified man for a period of time. It seems to have covered His head and face while He was hanging on the Cross and then while He was being taken down, then while He was laying face down on the ground, and then, again, while He was being carried, perhaps to the tomb, with a hand supporting HIs head as there is a bloody hand print on the face area, It then show signs of being twist-rolled corner-to-corner into a ~40 long kerchief like binding which would have been ideal length for the required jaw binding. After resurrecting, Jesus would have walked away from the stone shelf with the other grave cloths and then reached up and pulled it off from around his head, dropping it, still rolled up and tied, near the tomb entrance by itself.
At least you are not convinced that Jewish burials were like the Egyptian burials with the dead being swathed (wrapped) from head to foot in bandage like cloths. There are a lot of people who think that is the case. Nothing could be further from the truth. Nothing like that is written or ever been found.