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Shroud of Turin supports Resurrection, expert affirms
cna ^ | May 7, 2010

Posted on 05/08/2010 4:33:54 AM PDT by NYer

Rome, Italy, May 7, 2010 / 03:57 pm (CNA/Europa Press).- Professor Paolo Di Lazzaro, who is head of a group of researchers from the National Agency for New Technologies, Energy and Development in Italy, noted this week that the latest discoveries on the Shroud of Turin “are not in contradiction with the theory of the Resurrection” of Christ.

In an interview with Europa Press, Di Lazzaro explained the results of their study, which lasted four years and focused on how the image came to appear on the cloth. According to tradition, the shroud was used to wrap the body of Jesus after the crucifixion.

Di Lazzaro said that scientists have not been able to reproduce an image, similar to the one on the shroud, with any kind of contact technique.  While from far away, differences in the replications may appear unnoticeable, under a microscope they appear drastically different, he added.

The peculiarity of the original image lies in the “depth of coloration,” which on Shroud does not go beyond the first layer of strands in the fabric, Di Lazzaro said.  Upon observation, his team came to the conclusion that “the image on the Shroud is similar to those some textile manufactures create through the use of laser.”

After years of experimentation, for the first time the team was able to color the outermost strands of a fabric similarly to how the image is present on the Shroud by using “extremely brief but intense ultraviolet light impulses emitted by a special laser.”

Even so, the researchers were only able to reproduce a small portion of the Shroud, as “in order to color the entire image you would need 14,000 lasers, something which for now is impossible,” he said.

Nevertheless, Di Lazzaro said the discovery at least points to a possible physical mechanism that may have resulted in the creation of the image. This mechanism “does not contradict the religious theory of the miracle or the resurrection,” he said, as it could have been the cause of the release of energy that created the image, although “this is an area outside our competence as scientists.”

Recently, Di Lazzaro organized a seminar in Frascati, Italy, during which 48 experts from around the world gathered together to discuss images called Acheiropoietos, that is, “not made by hands.”  They also examined the image of Our Lady of Guadalupe and the Manopello Veil, which, according to tradition, is the veil used by Veronica to wipe the face of Jesus.


TOPICS: Catholic; History; Religion & Science
KEYWORDS: catholic; medievalfake; medievalforgery; medievalfraud; resurrection; shroud; shroudofturin
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To: aruanan
By the way, do you know that you can have a hole in a suit and have it rewoven so that the former hole is undetectable?

:) My grandmother's aunt had a reweaving business that died due to the invention and too much use of polyester. One of her weavers rewove a silverfish hole for me after she retired. The other night I was really wishing we had saved one of the magnifying arms that they used to be able to see the weave.

21 posted on 05/08/2010 8:51:59 AM PDT by Desdemona
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To: Desdemona

Thanks for the previous link, when I asked, and the “puppet” dig wasn’t meant to be directed your way. Sorry if you’re feeling what Bush and Obama both call collateral damage. You’ve gone an made another fairly weighty claim, though, that “Modern science also tells us that the same man’s blood is on each of these” relics; wonder if you can tell me which modern scientist(s) tell us so?


22 posted on 05/08/2010 9:58:02 AM PDT by flowerplough ( Pennsylvania today - New New Jersey meets North West Virginia.)
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To: flowerplough; Swordmaker
“Modern science also tells us that the same man’s blood is on each of these” relics; wonder if you can tell me which modern scientist(s) tell us so?

At this point, I've read so much on this, it all runs together. I know the blood type is AB- and that the wounds match. There's multiple references for this. Swordmaker has the big list of references. It might be in that stash. I don't have time right this second to look.

23 posted on 05/08/2010 10:02:43 AM PDT by Desdemona
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To: NYer

I believe the purpose of the Shroud is to trickle out scientific evidence during these modern times as a tool to reach those who will only believe through technology and science.

As technology progresses, it will become more and more apparent to these modern Thomases that the Shroud is authentic. Then they will have to rethink their doubts about Christ.

I see it as another gift from God, who always considers His children’s needs. He left this as a gift for His children far in the future.

Personally, I wouldn’t be surprised if Mary had not taken possession of the Shroud at first and then given it to Church leaders to protect— and to continue Her son’s work. It makes sense to me that a loving mother would gather up the linens she’d buried her son in, especially if they were soaked in his blood.


24 posted on 05/08/2010 10:15:30 AM PDT by Melian (The two most common elements in the world are hydrogen and stupidity.)
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To: Alamo-Girl; albee; AnalogReigns; AnAmericanMother; Angelas; AniGrrl; annalex; annyokie; ...
Shroud of Turin PING!

If you want on or off the Shroud of Turin Ping List, Freepmail me.


25 posted on 05/08/2010 10:15:50 AM PDT by Swordmaker (Remember, the proper pronunciation of IE isAAAAIIIIIEEEEEEE!)
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To: NYer
This bit of cloth can be made to support whatever the viewer wishes it to.

As to any kind of hard, factual, evidence....nope.

26 posted on 05/08/2010 10:17:43 AM PDT by Logic n' Reason (Buzzard's gotta eat; same as worms.)
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To: zot

Ping.


27 posted on 05/08/2010 10:19:44 AM PDT by Interesting Times (For the truth about "swift boating" see ToSetTheRecordStraight.com)
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To: flowerplough

you can’t GOOGLE for yourself?


28 posted on 05/08/2010 11:13:05 AM PDT by maine-iac7 (google)
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To: flowerplough; Desdemona
Um, are you Desdemona? Is she(?) your puppet? Why didn’t you jump in, all “Do my work for me” when blackpacific asked sonic109 for specifics on the churches’ many, many previous false relics and hoaxes? Shoe on the other foot now? And are you ignoring the last sentence of my first post?

You appear to be in the habit (no pun intended) of overlooking things. I was responding to a single post I saw under "recent posts." I wasn't reading through the entire thread to get to that post and, therefore, aware of everything everybody had said in response to everything else everyone else had said up to that point.
29 posted on 05/08/2010 11:20:08 AM PDT by aruanan
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To: All

This post is from another thread on the same subject. It wasn’t answered there and it probably won’t be answered here either.

First, let me assure everyone that I do believe the Shroud to be authentic.

**************************************************

Second, let me ask those who doubt: Who benefits from faking such a thing? Someone, somewhere had to make something off such a monumental forgery, otherwise there’s no reason to do it. If some talented painter faked it, who paid him, and why? Even if some medieval artist painted it (which I doubt) why would he do it and why not take credit for his work?

Once the doubters answer those questions I’ll entertain suggestions that the Shroud is a fake - not before.

****************************************

Anyone?


30 posted on 05/08/2010 11:31:42 AM PDT by oldfart (Obama nation = abomination. Think about it!)
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To: Interesting Times

Thanks for the ping. Scripture indicates that the body was dematerialized in the tomb and re-materialized in the upper room (and elsewhere), but science still doesn’t know how that might happen.


31 posted on 05/08/2010 12:11:31 PM PDT by zot
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To: aruanan

Right, you don’t always read the thread, got it. You were responding to a single post you saw under “recent posts”, but I should have known that. My fault. I’m apparently in the habit of overlooking things like that, eh? And are you also still overlooking the last sentence of my first post?

Doubledown throwdown, yo. C-14 Retest,

Winner

Takes

All.

Too bad Turin Cathedral, once bitten, twice shy, won’t risk their precious Shroud again.


32 posted on 05/08/2010 1:04:26 PM PDT by flowerplough ( Pennsylvania today - New New Jersey meets North West Virginia.)
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To: oldfart
The more interesting question involving forgery would ask why one would fake this relic and for approximately 600 years wait for the forgery to be discovery as a forgery. If one had a motive to create a forgery to deceive, then one would logically expect to present it to the world as authentic during one’s lifetime not wait for hundreds of years for the imprint to be discovered. How did the forger know in the 13th or 14th century that photography would be invented in the 19th century thus allowing for the discovery of his forgery which had laid hidden for hundreds of years ?

The circumstantial evidence surrounding this relic is so fraught with informed scientific testimony, blood types, wounds matching , pollen spores only found in Judea, that one must question the competence of the custodians of the shroud who allowed the medieval patch to be taken as a representative sample. However, even more perplexing is explaining the ability of a painter in the 16th century to reflect those present in a room looking at an inanimate imprint of the Virgin of Guadalupe. Scientists again are at a loss to explain the methodology employed to effect this fact.

33 posted on 05/08/2010 1:45:33 PM PDT by bronx2
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To: NYer

Nothing new here whatsoever.....but glad to see more scientists getting onboard.


34 posted on 05/08/2010 2:15:29 PM PDT by RightOnline
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To: aruanan
do you know that you can have a hole in a suit and have it rewoven so that the former hole is undetectable?

Quote, link, source??

Just kidding. I hate when people ask for a link on something they can get as easily themselves, or which is something everyone else already knows. Believe me or don't, I don't care, but don't assign me your homework. By the way, I have a few suits that could use some repair of holes. The moths got into the closet not too long ago. Is there a good way to fix them, or should I throw them out?

35 posted on 05/08/2010 3:28:42 PM PDT by Defiant (At what point will average Democrats say their leaders have gone too far? Is there any limit?)
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To: sonic109
Then by your logic, most of the money in your wallet is likely fake (due to the prevalence of counterfeiting).

Why don't you rid yourself of the worry and send it to me?

Cheers!

36 posted on 05/08/2010 5:52:48 PM PDT by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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Comment #37 Removed by Moderator

To: Swordmaker

Thanks for the ping!


38 posted on 05/08/2010 7:42:14 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: oldfart
Who benefits from faking such a thing? Serious question? Seriously? Ain't it blatantly, blindingly obvious that the Shroudholder makes money off the Shroud? Pilgrimage, religious tourism, place-name recognition... that's why all those medieval and renaissance-era churches all over Europe had all those fake relics like the vials of Mary's milk, dessicated saints' body parts, "true cross" splinters, and the like.
The relics collected and worshipped by medieval Europeans ranged from the mundane to the truly bizarre. Bones or body parts of saints and martyrs were always in high demand. One church proudly displayed the brain of St. Peter until the relic was accidentally moved and revealed to be a piece of pumice stone.

Relics of Christ or the Virgin Mary were considered to be extremely valuable and included items such as the milk of the Virgin Mary, the teeth, hair, and blood of Christ, pieces of the Cross, and samples of the linen Christ was wrapped in as an infant. Numerous churches even claimed to possess Christ's foreskin, cut off during his circumcision. The Shroud of Turin, believed to be the funeral shroud in which Christ was buried, is perhaps the most famous medieval relic of all.

The biggest clue that the relics were fake was that there was often more than one... many more than one... of the same relic. The sixteenth-century protestant reformer John Calvin, who believed the veneration of relics to be a form of false worship, commented that if all the relics were brought together in one place "it would be made manifest that every Apostle has more than four bodies, and every Saint two or three."

The real value of relics lay in their ability to perform miracles. A relic that was an acknowledged fake could become 'real' if it performed a miracle. The European faithful regularly made pilgrimages over hundreds of miles to visit the most powerful relics. This pilgrimage traffic had an enormous impact on local economies, leading towns to go to extreme lengths to obtain the relics that would draw the most pilgrims.

Some of the lengths to which towns would go in their quest to obtain the most popular relics have been documented by Patrick Geary in his book Furta Sacra: Thefts of Relics in the Central Middle Ages. He notes that towns were usually reluctant to simply buy or trade relics. After all, why would anyone willingly sell or part with a miracle-performing relic? Presumably they would only do so it if it no longer possessed its powers, meaning that the relic was worthless. Instead, towns often stole the relics they desired, or surreptitiously bought them while publicly claiming to have stolen them. Relic thefts were highly organized affairs, and the successful thieves were treated as local heroes. Geary tells the story of the Italian town of Bari which in 1087 commissioned a team of thieves to obtain the remains of Saint Nicolas (known more popularly today as Santa Claus) from the Turkish town of Myra. The expedition was a success, and for decades Bari basked in the glory of being the town that owned the stolen bones of Santa Claus. http://www.museumofhoaxes.com/hoax/archive/permalink/the_medieval_relic_trade/

39 posted on 05/08/2010 9:54:21 PM PDT by flowerplough ( Pennsylvania today - New New Jersey meets North West Virginia.)
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To: flowerplough

Okay, I’ll stipulate that money can be made from religious relics. I don’t neccesarily believe that the Church is involved in any sort of campaign to commercialize the shroud though but that could be because of my faith. If so, I’m probably ill equipped to argue the point.

Still, there were other questions which you haven’t addressed. Let me refresh your mrmory:
**************************************
If some talented painter faked it, who paid him, and why? Even if some medieval artist painted it (which I doubt) why would he do it and why not take credit for his work?
**************************************
While I’m open to reasonable arguements I have to warn you that I try hard to stay away from mud-slinging and if this degenerates into an electronic pissing contest I’ll merely stop responding. I don’t believe you normally do that sort of thing but I think it’s fair to establish ground rules before the game.


40 posted on 05/08/2010 10:11:38 PM PDT by oldfart (Obama nation = abomination. Think about it!)
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