Monday, 9 November 2015

Eight Reasons Why You May Be Looking at the Face of Jesus


For years the Shroud of Turin has been believed by tens of millions as the very burial shroud of Jesus of Nazareth. The image you see below has graphically designed to match the face on the shroud.




It may in fact be Jesus's face, here's eight reasons why:

1.) The Shroud was made according to Jewish Law: According to Leviticus 19:19 clothes that mix two kinds of fabric should not be worn and although mixing fabrics was done in Europe (where some believe the shroud was created) the shroud stands out as Kosher.

2.) The blood (which has been proven to be human) is where you would expect if the man had worn a crown of thorns.



3.) There is a blood wound where the man was stabbed on the side; the wound matches the size of a Roman spear tip used in the first century.

4.) The man bears the wounds of lashes; the marks on his body are as one would expect if he had been wiped by Roman soldiers in the first century.

5.) The man's whose image was preserved on the shroud has Jewish facial features.

6.) The man is crucified at the ankle when the images of the medieval period showed Jesus with the nail through the front of the foot. If the image was somehow created by a scammer why would he not make the image show the crucified image as the general population and even the Roman Catholic Church believed it looked like?

(From a heel bone found in Jerusalem in the first century he know that alleged criminals were crucified though the heel; not like people came to believe after Rome fell and crucifixion fell out of use.)

6.) We have no evidence that this image was created by any manufacture as the technique was never been repeated by anyone in the medieval.

7.) To this day we still cannot recreate the shroud's image, which is most clearly seen not in normal photograph but as a negative image.

8.) The Shroud projects the man's image both upwards and downwards--something never seen before which even has a Physicist intrigued.

The Shroud in a negative photograph







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