Originally posted by VOW
To Hoonbaba:
The Shroud of Turin is considered to be the burial cloth that covered the body of Jesus as He lay in the tomb. It's a long strip of woven linen, not wound around Him like the Egyptian mummies, but laid lengthwise from His feet, up His back, over the top of His head, and then down across His body back to His feet. There is an image of a Man on the cloth, front and back, and it is evident that this Man was crucified, and suffered the same wounds attributed to Christ. The piercings on the forehead and scalp from the crown of thorns, the marks on the back and shoulders from the scourging, the bruised knees from falling, abrasions across the shoulders from carrying the Cross, and of course the piercings in the ankles and wrists, along with the wound in the side. Even the blood drips are indicative of a crucifixion, showing that the victim had to raise and lower His body to breathe.
The weave of the fabric is common to that particular era in Palestine, and there is residue from native flowering plants which bloom during Passover.
The most REMARKABLE feature, in my mind, is the actual image itself. It is not painted on, nor drawn. The bloodstains have tested to be human blood, but there is NO explanation for the image. The writers of the book "The Shroud of Turin" have made a wild supposition: at the Resurrection, Jesus was infused with an almost atomic-blast type surge of energy, which SCORCHED the image onto the cloth. Amazing! The more advanced we become in science, the more advanced the evidence is which God reveals to us!
Another point made is that the image is a PHOTO NEGATIVE. When it is photographed and the negative is viewed, it appears like a black and white picture of the body.
Also, the parts of the body which actually touched the cloth are shown as darker in color than ones further away. Using this principle, the authors had the image digitized, and then used a computer to create a three-dimensional model of the body. I held my breath at looking at the picture they took of this model, for I felt like I was gazing upon the face of my Savior! The "topo" of the model also showed an astounding detail: there was a bas-relief image of ROMAN COINS covering the eyes of the body, and old, old custom used to close the eyes of the dead.
I believe in the Shroud of Turin!
Peace be with you,
~VOW