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Should historians be searching for Jesus' bones?
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No, they were dematerialized before the apparent resurrection, before Jesus returned in a likeness of his former mortal body. And how would they know? While Jesus had brothers and sisters, we don't know who their descendants are to make a comparison.Should historians be searching for Jesus' bones?
Should historians be searching for Jesus' bones?
When I opened this thread the first thing I looked for was the no option.
Which do you mean?
No as in shouldn't look, or... No as in never found, ( coming to which No as in no history hints at the relics, so no leads to follow?)
Why? If they cannot locate the bones of julius Caesar, Alexander the Great, the odds of them finding the bones of some little known(in his lifetime) preacher from Galilee are infinitesimal. If there were bones to be found they could never be identified, and unlike the relics of the saints his followers had every reason to ensure this was so.Should historians be searching for Jesus' bones?
If you are talking about the Shroud of Turin that was shown to be a hoax. That does not affect the Jesus story at all. It only affects the status of what now is a glorified rag.All that is left physically of the Lord Jesus on this earth is a shroud.
The first mention of the shroud in the historical record is that of a Bishop declaring it to be a hoax.All that is left physically of the Lord Jesus on this earth is a shroud.
All that is left physically of the Lord Jesus on this earth is a shroud.
If you are talking about the Shroud of Turin that was shown to be a hoax. That does not affect the Jesus story at all. It only affects the status of what now is a glorified rag.
The first mention of the shroud in the historical record is that of a Bishop declaring it to be a hoax.
Oh I'm quite informed, that the first historical defences to the shroud date to the 14th century labelling it a hoax. Radiocarbon dating sanctioned by the Church dates it to the 14th century.Now study real evidence, not the hearsay of an annoyed bishop, who discovered pilgrims going elsewhere than his diocese!
It annoys me when illinformed people like you comment.
!
Oh I'm quite informed, that the first historical defences to the shroud date to the 14th century labelling it a hoax. Radiocarbon dating sanctioned by the Church dates it to the 14th century.
Dismissing the real evidence by hand waving does not cut it.
Oh I'm quite informed, that the first historical defences to the shroud date to the 14th century labelling it a hoax. Radiocarbon dating sanctioned by the Church dates it to the 14th century.
Dismissing the real evidence by hand waving does not cut it.
The forensic correspondence to the sudarium whose chain of custody predates it by hundreds of years is a slamdunk evidence discrediting the false RC date,.
What's this Mike? Any links?
My recommendation as a starter on this is get Janice Bennets book "sacred blood, sacred image" which focusses on the forensic correspondence between sudarium and shroud, specifically as evidence of the age of the shroud. (and references / includes the forensic lab reports). I recollect the madrid reports themselves are out there on the web as PDF, but It would take a while to dig them up.
The sudarium chain of custody , is still not back to first century, but is way way older than the shroud, many hundreds of years. And the question is, why keep a blood stained cloth (no image) , if it were not a significant historic victim? doesnt make sense.
The kicker is there are at least 50 points of correspondence, which as they note would be "beyond reasonable doubt" were this a criminal court matter.
It is also worth looking at from a point of view of describing the process of crucifixion...how the sudarium was wrapped round the head to stop post mortem nosebleed, and has fluids both pre and post mortem pathology.
There is also a book by Guscin, but it is way expensive!
The objective scientific shroud dating is in Fanti et Al. Three methods, with proper controls, and error bars. Point at around first century.
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