![]() ![]() That Jesus, therefore, was not God, and that it was not Jesus, that died on the cross, but someone else. Others, like Muslims, claim, that God cannot die. Others claim, that the gospel is embellished accounts of a first-century preacher, and the miracles claimed are later additions, traditions, and myths. More than ever, skeptics and unbelievers claim that Jesus was invented in the first century, for whatever reasons. Many today doubt that Jesus Christ is a historical figure. But the Shroud is a tremendous tool to do apologetics. I, for instance, worship the risen Lord, in truth and spirit. Was Jesus wrapped it in a clean linen cloth, or, as John reports, tied by strips of linen in company with the spices?Īpocryphal gospels mentioning the Shroud of Turinįirst of all, the aim to make the Shroud of Turin known is not to induce anyone to worship a linen cloth. How can you explain the existence of other revered shrouds aside from the one in Turin? Shroud, new study: there is blood of a man tortured and killed ![]() The 1988 Radiocarbon dating of the Shroud The shroud of Turin EXTRAORDINARY evidence of Christ's resurrection The message of salvation through Jesus Christ. Please share with friends, church, colleagues, family: You can use the following video in your evangelism. You can download the video as a Powerpoint presentation with 185 slides: Shroud of Turin, a forgery? Responding to the critics in regard to the most common objections PowerPoint presentation of the video above:Įxposing the last mysteries of the Shroud of Turin, the burial cloth of Jesus. Shroud of Turin: The evidence, that corroborates Jesus' historicity and biblical identity Scientists have inferred that a burst of 34 thousand billion Watts of vacuum-ultraviolet radiation produced a discoloration on the uppermost surface of the Shroud’s fibrils (without scorching it), which gave rise to a perfect three-dimensional negative image of both the frontal and dorsal parts of the body wrapped in it. They took Jesus' body, wrapped it in linen cloths with the spices, according to Jewish burial customs (John 19:38-40). The Gospel of John also mentions the burial cloth, stating that Nicodemus helped Joseph of Arimathea prepare Jesus' body for burial by bringing a mixture of myrrh and aloes. The Gospels describe Joseph of Arimathea taking Jesus' body, wrapping it in a clean linen cloth, and placing it in his own tomb (Matthew 27:57-60, Mark 15:46, Luke 23:53). The Gospels do describe the burial of Jesus in a linen cloth, which is reference to the shroud. The image on the shroud appears as a negative image ( like a negative of a photograph) and has most likely been formed by the imprint of the body that had been wrapped in the cloth after death. There is powerful evidence the shroud is the burial cloth of Jesus Christ, that bears his actual image. It is a rectangular linen cloth measuring approximately 14.3 feet by 3.7 feet, and is kept in the Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist in Turin, Italy. The Shroud of Turin is a piece of linen cloth that bears the image of a man who has been crucified. The Shroud of Turin EXTRAORDINARY evidence of Christ's resurrection ![]()
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