Posted on 03/25/2012 5:04:13 PM PDT by Coleus
For nearly two decades, a stubborn Barrie Schwortz remained skeptical about the authenticity of the Shroud of Turin, even after having seen most of the overwhelming evidence in favor up close with his own eyes. Still this lifelong Jew and official photographer for the scientific study team that investigated the shroud in 1978 kept wondering does this centuries-old burial cloth bear the actual image of the crucified Jesus, as millions believe, or does this widely venerated relic represent little more than a great medieval forgery, perpetuated by a clever artist?
I was skeptical [about the shrouds authenticity] for 18 years, the Coloradobased Schwortz told an enthusiastic audience of 300 people March 16 at St. Paul Inside the Walls: the Catholic Center for Evangelization at Bayley-Ellard here during his PowerPoint slide presentation, The Shroud of Turin: Myth or Miracle? Today, based on all the evidence, I believe that the image on the shroud is that of the historical Jesus.
In an enlightening and often funny presentation, Schwortz presented compelling evidence from decades of rigorous and peer-reviewed scientific, Scrip tural and historical research much of which he has seen with his own eyes. He also chronicled his own amazing journey from skeptic to believer in the shrouds authenticity.
It all started in 1978 after Schwortz accepted what he called the assignment of a lifetime as the official documenting photographer in Italy of the Shroud of Turin Research Project (STURP) Inc., which has its own story filled with international intrigue.
I am not an scientist. Im an ex-hippie photographer, said Schwortz, sporting a gray pony tail and laying out data that points to the shrouds authenticity, including a piece of smoking gun evidence he learned about in 1995 that blew away his skepticism. Im not trying to convince anyone of anything. Thats between you and God. You come to your own conclusion, he told the audience.
Slowly, Schwortz started coming to his own conclusions, when STURP Scientific, Scriptural evidence points to authenticity of image of Jesus on Shroud of Turin See Shroud on Page 4 beach to serve diocesan poor consisting of some of the worlds greatest scientific minds started to examine the 14½-foot long, 3½-foot wide linen cloth. The shroud which has been damaged by fire and repaired several times in its history bears the frontal and rear images of a scourged, crucified man. The team examined at the shroud under the approval of his owners at the time, the Dukes of Savoy, the former ruling family of Italy.
From Oct. 8 and Oct. 14, 1978, STURP spent 120 hours with the shroud not in a sterile laboratory but in the royal palace adjoining the Shrine of Turin, which houses the relic. Researches carefully planned out most of the examination, even designing a special steel table for the shroud that rotated. They also anticipated the ad-hoc conditions of the palace, designating a bathroom as the darkroom, which required a water source. They also ran up against interest groups that lobbied to prevent research on the shroud, now the property of the Catholic Church, said Schwortz, founder of the Shroud of Turin Education and Research Association, who lectures widely on this controversial subject.
One day, I went to see the long line of people [at the Shrine of Turin]. I was baffled. Why would they stand for hours to see this piece of cloth? Schwortz said. But then I looked into the peoples faces and saw how meaningful it was. It was then that I took my work [photographing STURPs work] more seriously, he said.
Actually, Schwortzs skepticism started to soften within minutes of casting his eyes on the shroud for the first time. Through a magnifying glass, he noticed that the marks on the cloth were not pigment. Later research showed that the blood remained red and had not turned brown with age. UV fluorescent photos showed a halo at the edge of a wound and the pattern of blood flow on the cloth, he said. This could not have been the work of an artist, said Schwortz, whose photographs over the years have been used by shroud researchers and have appeared in many books, magazines, scientific journals, films and television documentaries.
The level and quality of the science was incredible. In Turin, STURP also conducted infrared imaging and chemical analysis on the shroud. The evidence points to the Scriptural and historical accuracy of the crucifixion marks on the cloth from the bloodstains at the hands and feet to the crown of thorns smashed on his head to the scourge marks, Schwortz said.
About 18 years after STURP concluded its research, Schwortz remained troubled that the blood on the cloth stayed red. Then in 1995, a Jewish chemist explained that Jesus suffered unimaginable trauma from the beating and whippings to the crucifixion that left him in shock and dehydrated. This caused the body to produce a substance called bilirubin, which stays red forever.
Later data also debunked a major piece of evidence that pointed against the shrouds authenticity, which caused further international intrigue. In 1988, three labs claimed that radio carbon dating tests placed the age of the cloth at between 1260 and 1390. But in 2000, researchers discovered that cloth that had been tested came from a corner that had been rewoven. They found two pieces of thread spliced together with cotton not linen which violated Jewish law at the time of Jesus death, Schwortz said.
I think that the shroud bears the image of the historical Jesus, but Im not convinced that Jesus is the Messiah, said Schwortz, adding that his skepticism about Christs divinity gives him further credibility, when laying out the Scriptural, historical and scientific evidence for the shrouds historical authenticity. But I can elect [to accept Christ as Savior] at any time. Right now, I am serving God dong this, because I am a Jew, he said.
After a question-and-answer session, Father Geno Sylva, St. Pauls director and diocesan vicar for evangelization, thanked Schwortz for teaching and inspiring us. This has been a night of devotion delving into the love of the Savior and evangelization, Father Sylva told the audience. Mr. Schwortz had challenged us to share the information we learned tonight about the shroud and share it with others. We are all called to be evangelists, he said.
Afterward, Betsy Sullivan of Christ the King Parish, New Vernon, called Schwortzs presentation enriching. It [the presentation] helps us embrace Lent, said Sullivan, who came to St. Pauls with her nephew. I feel empowered in giving up something for Lent, because I saw Jesus wounds [on the cloth] and realized what he did for us.
Some do, sadly. I've never understood the search for physical things as proof of God.
They can't possibly make Faith better. God is real whether things are or not. Faith is just that - a belief that isn't proved.
It's the holiest of names, no Jew has ever spelled God completely. I'm sure some Christians do the same.
I understand the hunger for a physical connection or artifact that connects with Jesus. I understand the hunger for Jesus, it was a hunger that I didn’t even know I had (I thought it was for booze and women).
I think the shroud was used with Jaques DeMolay, the leader of the Knights Templar in France. He was tortured by crucifixion, but not killed until later. His death and torture occurred around the carbon dated age that’s currently given for the shroud. Perhaps that’s only coincidence.
The word “God” is not offensive. It’s a kind of habitual carryover from Hebrew, and really doesn’t apply to English at all, except by habit or mimicry.
http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/166899/jewish/Why-Dont-You-Spell-Out-G-ds-Name.htm
...We do not write G-d’s name in a place where it may be discarded or erased. Treating G-d’s name with reverence is a way to give respect to G-d. So even though on a computer the name is not really being erased (and perhaps is not really there in the first place), and “G-d” is only an English term used to translate G-d’s holy name, it is in keeping with this respect that I write “G-d” in my emails and on-line articles...
Shroud ping!
I’ve never understood the search for physical things as proof of God. >>
Actually, there is, God is in all of us :)
I was open to the possibility that the shroud might be a fake, but now I am convinced that it is the burial shroud of Jesus. My faith was not and is not based on the shroud, but I believe it is an interesting and important piece of historical evidence -- and more-so because honest scientists say they don't know how the image was formed.
Thanks for the ping!
I’ve never known anybody to impose their usage on non-Jews, but from what I’ve seen it is a genuine form of respect for them personally. I really appreciate the honor they show through that. And I didn’t know it either, until one of them gently explained it to me. =)
Gods little joke on you? Dont get too puffed up.he likes to remind us we are not angels. Indeed, we are better than angels, because we are more than spirit.
Jacques DeMolay was burned at the stake beneath the Pont Neuf in Paris.
If you want on or off the Shroud ping list, Freepmail me.
Thanks for the ping Swordmaker. I’ll read it later.
Please include me on your Shroud ping list, Thanks
Yeah, well, guys like you frustrate the hell out of me, in return. No matter how many times it’s said, no matter what you hear or read time and time again (e.g. it is NOT about validating your faith, it is NOT to be worshiped, etc., etc., ad nauseum), you and your ilk always just HAVE to post the same old, tired nonsense.
It’s authentic. It’s the real deal. Get over it.
ping
Include me on the ping list please.
The Shroud is not intended to offer proof of our salvation. It is a relic that has survived from the day our Lord was buried in the tomb.
DeMolay was burned at the stake. The man on the shroud hasn’t been burned, he’s been whipped and crucified.
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