Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Re: There is compelling evidence it is the burial cloth of Christ, or a man crucified during that time #1

Kris

Thank you for your comment to my post, Bogus: Shroud of Turin? #10: The Shroud's blood and pollen closely matches the Sudarium of Oviedo's. As per my reply comment under that post, since my answer may be of interest to others, but would be

[Right (click to enlarge): "... markings on the shroud are medically consistent with biblical accounts of the crucifixion of Christ." (Brooks, E.H., Miller, V.D. & Schwortz, B.M., "The Turin Shroud: Contemporary Insights to an Ancient Paradox," Worldwide Exhibition: Chicago, 1981, p.13]

`buried' down there in comments to an old post, I am answering it here in a separate series of posts.

Your words are bold to distinguish them from my comments.

----- Original Message -----
From: Anonymous
To: Stephen E. Jones
Sent: Wednesday, November 12, 2008 6:00 PM
Subject: [The Shroud of Turin] New comment on Bogus: Shroud of Turin? #10: The Shroud's blood an....

>Hi Mr Jones, and whomever may be able to help answer this...
>
>I just came upon your site after watching a documentary that put a lot of focus on the Shroud. I am a Christian who has drawn no real definitive conclusions about the authenticity of the Shroud. There is compelling evidence, however, that it is the burial cloth of Christ, or a man crucified during that time and in that area.

If the Shroud is of "a man crucified during that time and in that area" then it would have to be "the burial cloth of Christ". That is because the man on the Shroud has at least twenty-three (23) separate and independent features that match the gospels' description of the crucifixion of Jesus. Even a conservative estimate [mine are in square brackets below] of the proportion of Roman crucifixions that matched each of those at least 23 (or more) features, yields (as we shall see in part #3) an improbability of multi-billions to 1 that the man on the Shroud is not Jesus but another "man crucified during that time."

While I have documented these 23 different features from the Shroud of Turin literature, this list is, as far as I am aware, the first time they have all been brought together and added up to 23 (I was surprised there were so many).

This part #1 and the following parts #2 and #3 are very long due to the need to document each point by quotes from the Shroud literature. So to save some space in the hyperlinked references below, I have used a code based on the authors' initials, year, and first page:

1. His face is majestic [1 in 100] (HR1978p37; RJ1978p76; ZT1984p29);

2. He was semitic [1 in 10] (HR1978p37; S&H1990p89; WR1977p131; WI1986p15);

3. He was beaten [1 in 5] (AM2000p32; CA2002p15; GV2000p37; HR1978p37; IJ1998p64; RJ1978p76; S&H1990p89; WI1978p37);

4. He was scourged excessively with a Roman flagellum [1 in 100] (AM2000p32; CA2002p15; DR1984p27; GV2000p37; HR1978p37; HR1951p30; IJ1998p64; P&M1996p227; RJ1978p76; S&H1981p124; WI1978p37);

5. He had been `crowned' with thorns [1 in 1,000] (AM2000p32; DR1984p27; HR1978p37; GV2000p37; IJ1998p64; P&M1996p227; RG1977p67; RJ1978p76; S&H1981p124; S&H1990p89; WI1978p37; ZT1984p29);

6. He had carried his cross [1 in 5] (AM2000p32; CA2002p15; GV2000p37; HR1978p37; IJ1998p64; RJ1978p76; WI1978p37; P&M1996p227);

7. He had fallen on his face [1 in 2] (AM2000p32; IJ1998p64; WI1978p37);

8. He was crucified with nails through his wrists and feet [1 in 2] (AM2000p32; CA2002p15; GV2000p37; HR1978p37; IJ1998p64; P&M1996p227; RJ1978p76; S&H1990p89; WI1978p37; ZT1984p29);

9. His legs were not broken [1 in 10] (HR1978p37; IJ1998p64; S&H1990p89; RJ1978p76; WI1978p37; ZT1984p29);

10. He had been speared in the side by a Roman lance [1 in 10] (AM2000p32; CA2002p15; DR1984p27; HR1978p37; IJ1998p64; P&M1996p227; RJ1978p76; S&H1981p124; S&H1990p89; WI1978p37; ZT1984p29);

11. From which blood and `water' flowed [1 in 10] (AM2000p32; GV2000p37; HR1978p37; RJ1978p76; S&H1990p89);

12. He had been taken down from the cross within hours after death [1 in 100] (BJ2001p125; HR1978p37);

13. He was buried in a shroud [1 in 10] (DR1984p27; ZT1984p29);

14. Which is made of expensive, fine linen [1 in 100] (HR1978p37; HR1951p30; S&H1990p89);

15. The burial was incomplete, indicating the victim was buried in haste [1 in 100] (HR1951p30, 93-94; S&H1981p124; S&H1990p89);

16. The body had not decomposed, indicating it was separated from the shroud within 3 days [1 in 10,000] (AM2000p32; DR1984p27; P&M1996p227; RJ1978p76; S&H1981p124; HR1951p30, 93-94; RJ1978p76; VP1970p44; WJ1963p90; ZT1984p29);

17. The body was separated from the shroud without disturbing its blood clots [1 in 100,000] (AM2000p32; WE1954p51; ZT1984p29);

Continued in part #2 of "Re:There is compelling evidence it is the burial cloth of Christ, or a man crucified during that time"

Quotes below are hyperlinked to inline references above (my emphasis bold).

Stephen E. Jones, BSc. (Biology).
My other blogs: CreationEvolutionDesign & Jesus is Jehovah!


"When we compile all the information about the wounds on the man in the Shroud with the knowledge that they were inflicted over a period of several hours, we can reconstruct what happened to him with some accuracy. Most likely, he was first beaten about the head, which caused swelling, bruises, and lacerations on his head and face. The scores of scourge marks all over his body attest to a whipping. Something made of sharp, thornlike objects placed over his head caused numerous piercing wounds on the front, top, and back of the head. Some of these wounds could have occurred from being struck on the head after the thornlike objects were placed over it. Other head wounds may have resulted from falling and being struck in the head by the crossbeam often carried by victims to the execution site, or from scraping his head against the cross when he pushed himself up and down to breathe. The shoulder abrasions could also have been imposed as he carried the crossbeam or later scraped his back during the up-and-down breathing motion. If some of these injuries were suffered while the man carried the crossbar, they may have occurred at the same time the victim apparently fell, as evidenced by the dirt in the nose and knee areas, as well as the scratches and cuts detected on his nose, cheek, knee, and leg. Such dirt and scratches suggest the man had been unable to break his fall with his hands. ... The man's foot and wrist wounds were next inflicted by large nails driven through his flesh between the metatarsal and wrist or forearm bones to anchor him on the cross. .... After he was dead, a spearlike weapon thrust into his right side pierced his heart, causing blood and watery fluid to escape. All of the data gleaned from extensive study of the pathology evident on the Turin Shroud tells us this piece of linen was wrapped around the corpse of a man who was crucified and died while still nailed to a cross. We also know that the man's corpse lay inside the burial linen for no more than two or three days. Had he been there longer, decomposition stains would be present on the cloth, but the Shroud contains no signs of bodily decomposition. It is also noteworthy that the bloodstains remain unbroken and unsmeared and appear to be exact mirror images of the man's wounds. This tells us that the blood marks could not have been transferred to the Shroud through direct contact between the body and the cloth alone; instead, some other process must have been at work." (Antonacci, M., 2000, "Resurrection of the Shroud: New Scientific, Medical, and Archeological Evidence," M. Evans & Co: New York NY, pp.32-33).

"The Biblical account of the execution of Jesus agrees with the Roman method of execution, but there were, however, several concessions made because of Jewish custom: a) Jesus was given back his clothes after being scourged (Mk 15:20; Mt 27:31), b) He was given aid in carrying the cross (Mk 15:21), c) He was offered a drink of spiced wine which He refused (Mk 15:23; Mt 27:34), and d) Contrary to the Roman practice of leaving the body on the cross for days as a sign of disgrace and as a warning to others, that of Jesus was removed and buried before sunset of the same day, in accordance with Jewish law (Dt 21:23; Mk 15:42)." (Bennett, J., 2001, "Sacred Blood, Sacred Image: The Sudarium of Oviedo: New Evidence for the Authenticity of the Shroud of Turin," Ignatius Press: San Francisco CA, p.125).

"The Shroud is in the form of a cloth strip, yellowish-white in colour, 4.37 metres long, 1.11 metres wide and 1.450 kg in weight. It shows, close to each other at the head, the front and rear imprint of the body of a man. From the archaeological standpoint, the Shroud is a burial-sheet, wrapped round a corpse on the table in the tomb where the body was laid. To forensic medical examination, the image of the body seems to be stiffened by rigor mortis, and reveals a whole series of wounds and injuries corresponding to those recounted in the Gospels as being inflicted on Jesus. Signs of flagellation over the whole body, small wounds in the scalp caused by a helmet of thorns, two torn areas in the left scapula zone and the right super-scapular zone, holes in the wrists and at the feet, which could be caused by the penetration of nails, and a wide injury caused by a steel weapon in the lower right rib region." (Cassanelli, A., 2002, "The Holy Shroud," Williams, B., transl., Gracewing: Leominster UK, p.15).

"The conventional argument that the image on the Shroud is the true image of Jesus assumes that we all agree, as perhaps we may, that the image came from a dead man's body. Most reasonable investigators have firmly ruled out the possibility that the image was painted, and they are also persuaded that it could not have been effected by means of a scorch from a hot statue. In addition, experts in anatomy and forensic medicine have concluded that the image on the Shroud could only have come from a human body, and in fact from the body of a man who had died (rigor mortis is evident) the violent death indicated by the visible wounds. ... In addition to this reasonable assumption, the argument that the image came from Jesus' body assumes ... that the image was not produced by human skill, but is either miraculous (if it is Jesus' image) or `natural' (if it is someone else's image). If this second assumption is conceded, the argument quickly and inexorably narrows to the desired conclusion. Of the millions who died in antiquity, a tiny minority died of crucifixion. Of the thousands of men who were crucified, only a few hundred would have been wrapped in a linen sheet, as the Gospels say that Jesus was. Of these few hundred buried in a shroud, only a fraction would have been scourged before crucifixion, as was Jesus and as was the Man of the Shroud. And of those who suffered those tortures, how many would have been wounded across the scalp, as though by a crown of thorns? How many bodies so abused were pierced in the side by a spear? And of all the bodies that meet these requirements, how many-here the odds rise to the maximum-would have been separated from their shrouds before decomposition began? In a recent book, Verdict on the Shroud, Gary Habermas thus fixes the statistical probability that a body other than Jesus' has left its imprint on the Shroud. Others have made the attempt before, and Habermas notes their conclusions: reckonings of the chance that a body, if it leaves an imprint at all, will leave this imprint, range from 1 in 225,000,000,000, at the lower end of the scale, to 1 in 10^26 at the higher. Habermas's own estimate is a much more conservative 1 in 82,944,000." (Drews, R., 1984, "In Search of the Shroud of Turin: New Light on Its History and Origins," Rowman & Littlefield: Lanham MD, pp.27-28).

"Good Friday and the Shroud Jesus was scourged by Roman soldiers prior to His Crucifixion (Matt. 27:26; Mark 15:15; John 19:1). The Shroud shows evidence of about 120 scourge marks, some visible only under ultraviolet light. The instrument used to cause these marks was likely the Roman flagrum, which was a whip constructed from two or three leather strips with two small balls made of lead or bone tied at each end. When a flagrum was used to whip a person, it would tear off pieces of flesh. ... Jesus was struck at the head and spat upon (Matt. 26:68, 27:30; Mark 14:65, 15:19; Luke 22:63-64; John 18:22, 19:3). The image on the Shroud shows a bruised face, a broken nose and a swollen right eye that is almost closed. Jesus was crowned with thorns (Matt. 27:29; Mark 15:17; John 19:2). The head of the man on the Shroud is covered with numerous puncture holes with blood trickling downward, which suggest a cap of thorns. This covered the entire head and was not just a circlet as is often depicted on a crucifix. According to Dr. Jackson, `these puncture-type wounds are consistent with thorns from a Jerusalem plant with vicious one to three-inch spikes.' [Scott, C., "Holy Shroud Research Continues in Colorado," Sindone Press: Colorado Springs CO, 1994, p.16] ... Jesus was made to carry His Cross (John 19:17). The Shroud image shows that the man must have carried a heavy object on his shoulders, for there are bruises and cuts on his shoulders and knees ... These wounds demonstrate that the man likely carried a cross-beam or patibulum, rather than a full-length `T' cross. ... Jesus was nailed to the Cross by His hands and feet (cf. Luke 24:39-40; John 20:20-27; Col. 2:14). The image of the man on the Shroud reveals that he had been pierced through the wrists and feet. The right wrist is hidden under the left hand (in negative photo), and a blood flow can be seen coming from the base of the left hand. ... His heart was pierced, and blood and water poured forth (John 19:34). This was the final mortal blow inflicted upon the crucified man to ensure he was dead. ... The correlations between the scriptural account of the sufferings of Christ on the Cross with those depicted on the Shroud of Turin are too compelling to be considered merely coincidental." (Guerrera, V., 2000, "The Shroud of Turin: A Case for Authenticity," TAN: Rockford IL, pp.37-40).

"What evidence is there in the Shroud that could help us to identify the person it contained? ... To begin with, the stains show a perfectly proportioned man with a remarkably majestic face. ... We can see that the man was crucified. The Shroud clearly shows bloodstains from the nail-wounds in the upper wrist and the soles of the feet. .... The shoulder-length hair and beard suggest a Jew ... There are visible on the body other signs of injury which might help in identification. First, there was extensive bruising, as if the person had been buffeted around the face and body. Damage to the skin on the shoulder-blades suggests that he may have had to carry the heavy cross-beam of the cross for some way. Secondly, there are marks over almost the entire body ... indicating scourging with a Roman flagrum... Thirdly, there are streaks of blood on the hair round the head ... These marks imply that he had to wear round his head something with sharp points digging into the skin. Lastly, there is a large bloodstain on the right side, not far below the armpit, indicating a serious wound. .... Almost as significant are certain wounds which we would expect to be present but which are not. The legs, for instance, were not broken. ... the prisoner was usually put out of his agony by having his legs smashed, so that he could no longer press up to breathe. Once dead, a body would then have been thrown into a communal grave, so the existence of the Shroud is an important clue in itself. ... At once the parallels become impressive. Christ was a Jew, of course, and he was crucified. We can consider the extensive bruising, and compare it with the Gospel accounts ... A crown of thorns, followed by a beating about the head .. It certainly explains the bloodstains on the Shroud, and what are the chances of another man having been given a torture that could have left those same marks? Already the agreement between the facts as we know them and the evidence of the Shroud is astonishing. Then there is the wound in the side .. And why were the legs not broken? Because it was the eve of the Passover, the Jews were anxious that the bodies should not remain on the cross for the coming Sabbath ... so they requested Pilate to have the legs broken and the bodies taken down. ... but when they came to Jesus, they found that he was already dead, so they did not break his legs. But one of the soldiers stabbed his side with a lance, and at once there was a flow of blood and water. .. Even the use of the Shroud is explained, as there was no time for the proper burial rites .. and the surprisingly fine texture of the material used for wrapping up the crucified man's body is explained by the reported wealth of Joseph of Arimathea. In all these points there is remarkable corroboration between the two sources of evidence, so that each seems to stand as guarantor of the other. ... On these grounds, in view of the agreement of two widely different types of evidence, the written and the photographic, the historicity of Jesus and his Crucifixion may be taken as proven. ... So far as the Shroud is concerned, the evidence of the stains points with certainty towards their having been made by the body of Jesus." (Hoare, R., 1978, "Testimony of the Shroud," St. Martin's Press: New York NY, pp.37-42).

"THE time has now come to ask ourselves the question-If the body imprinted on the Shroud is not that of Christ, whose could it have been? We know indeed that, in the past, hundreds of thousands of slaves and rebels were crucified. It was the most painful and humiliating form of execution known to the days of antiquity-a death so terrible that contemporary references to it are few and brief. Those condemned to the cross were regarded as having lost their human rights, and death did not restore them. The bodies of the crucified received varying treatment: sometimes they were thrown to dogs, or left to be devoured by birds of prey: or they might be burnt or buried in some pit. In the Shroud, however, we see the imprints of a crucified body which had been wrapped in costly linen, covered with anti-putrifying aromatic mixtures. The body was evidently quite incorrupt, and could therefore have remained in the linen only a short time. It bears the marks of innumerable bruises and wounds, and of blood, shed both before and after death: also of blood serum, spreading around the dark blood stains. It is quite clear that no attempt was made to wash the body, or this blood would have been blurred or even obliterated. This applies particularly to the face and the nape of the neck, which is covered with rivulets of blood. Had the head and hair been either washed or combed-a process prescribed by almost every burial rite in the world-all this valuable evidence would have been destroyed. The inference seems a fairly clear one: that for some reason, such as the need for haste, the body was given only provisional burial, which did not include the ceremonial washing and anointing prescribed by the law of the time. Moreover, we can be sure from the lack of any sign of corruption that the body did not remain in the Shroud for long ... Let us now consider the imprints on the Shroud with an especial reference to marks of identification. In the first place, there are the clear and unmistakable marks of a crown of thorns round the forehead and temples. There is no record in history of a crown of thorns being given to anyone under sentence of death except Our Lord Himself. This is not all. Christ was crucified on Friday, the day of preparation for the Sabbath, and according to the law of Moses the body had to be in the grave before the first star appeared in the sky. He was, therefore, given provisional burial in the utmost haste. All this is in complete agreement with the findings on the Shroud. According to the Gospels, Our Lord's body lay for about thirty hours in the sepulchre, and He then rose from the dead. The imprints on the Shroud, as we have already seen, are so distinct and unsmudged that it is quite certain that the body which caused them was free of any trace of corruption. If the physico-chemical process which caused the imprints had continued, they would have become more and more indistinct, and finally merged into a dark confused mass." (Hynek, R.W., 1951, "The True Likeness," Sheed & Ward: New York NY, pp.30-31, 93-94).

"The study of the testimony of the Gospels, when matched with Roman weapons and practices of crucifixion as well as with the findings of medical pathologists studying the Shroud, shows a strong correlation of these sources. The uniqueness of the markings on the Shroud, especially when taken in their totality, with the testimony of the Gospels provides the signature or the fingerprint of the Crucifixion that identifies the Man of the Shroud with Jesus. This is especially true of the capping of thorns to mock Jesus' `kingship,' a unique event never recorded with any other crucifixion victim; the lancing of the right side to assure that Jesus was dead instead of the usual crucifragium; the nails through the wrists; the scourge marks all over his back; the marks of the crossbeam (patibulum) on the shoulders, and the swollen face from the beating of the Sanhedrin guards. In all cases, the words match the wounds which match the weapons." (Iannone, 1998, "The Mystery of the Shroud of Turin: New Scientific Evidence," St Pauls: Staten Island NY, p.64).

"As the (red ochre) dust settles briefly over Sindondom, it becomes clear there are only two choices: Either the shroud is authentic (naturally or supernaturally produced by the body of Jesus) or it is a product of human artifice. Asks Steven Schafersman: `Is there a possible third hypothesis? No, and here's why. Both Wilson [Wilson, I., "The Shroud of Turin," 1979, pp.51-53.] and Stevenson and Habermas [Stevenson, K.E. & Habermas, G.R., "Verdict on the Shroud," 1981, pp.121-129] go to great lengths to demonstrate that the man imaged on the shroud must be Jesus Christ and not someone else. After all, the man on this shroud was flogged, crucified, wore a crown of thorns, did not have his legs broken, was nailed to the cross, had his side pierced, and so on. Stevenson and Habermas [Ibid., p.128] even calculate the odds as 1 in 83 million that the man on the shroud is not Jesus Christ (and they consider this a very conservative estimate). I agree with them on all of this. If the shroud is authentic, the image is that of Jesus.' [Schafersman, S.D., "Science, the public, and the Shroud of Turin," The Skeptical Inquirer, Vol. 6, No. 3, Spring 1982, pp.37-56, p.42]" (Nickell, J., 1987, "Inquest on the Shroud of Turin," [1983], Prometheus Books: Buffalo NY, Revised, Reprinted, 2000, p.141).

"The Man of the Shroud executed by the Romans On looking closely at the Turin Shroud it is evident that the Man who was enshrouded in it had suffered injuries which resulted from a Roman crucifixion of the first century AD. The entire body is covered by wounds produced by a Roman flagrum. The scourge marks appear to exceed greatly the number of strokes that were normally give to a man condemned to a subsequent death; indeed 120 strokes can be counted. One can deduce that this scourging had originally been ordered to serve as a severe separate punishment; it shows, in any case, a particular fury on the part of the torturers. The absence of mutilations exclude an oriental type of crucifixion. The trickles of blood that cover the whole head and forehead of the Man of the Shroud, with the different morphology of veinous and arterial blood, are clear signs of a crowning with thorns, an unusual fact outside the normal procedure. As the Man was led to the place of execution, he was made to carry the beam of the cross and in doing so he fell to the ground. Very clear are the wounds on the left knee, the mark of a blow with a stick on the right cheek, the tumefaction and excoriation of the nose, and the swellings on the face. ... The wrists and the feet have been pierced with nails. In the case of the wrists, the nails have penetrated Destot's space, among the eight small bones of the carpus, causing an injury to the median nerve. As a result the thumbs have withdrawn inside the palms of the hand; they are indeed not visible on the Shroud. The feet have been nailed together, the left foot over the right, directly to the cross without a suppedaneum. The stabbing of the side made after the death of the condemned man rather than before in order to cause death, is unusual: this fact can be interpreted as a proof that death had already occurred. The burial sheet itself clearly shows that the corpse was immediately returned to the relatives; the absence of any sign of decomposition on it confirms the fact that the contact of the body with the cloth was only for a brief period of time. The presence of blood shows that the corpse was not washed, which can only be explained in the case of a burial in a Jewish cultural context before the fall of Jerusalem in AD 70. The number of coincidences between this crucifixion and that as used by the Romans is high; this is enough to rule out any other type of oriental crucifixion. Finally, one should point out also the very remarkable correspondence between the details that are observed on the Shroud and the description of Jesus's crucifixion as narrated in the four gospels; this becomes all the more surprising when one remembers that each crucifixion was `personalized' according to the victim to he executed and the crime committed."(Petrosillo, O. & Marinelli, E., 1996, "The Enigma of the Shroud: A Challenge to Science," Scerri, L.J., transl., Publishers Enterprises Group: Malta, pp.227-228).

"The Crowning with Thorns The fact of the crowning with thorns and the way in which it was done are expressed concisely but precisely by the Gospel of John: `And the soldiers plaited a crown of thorns, and put it on his head' (Jn. 19,2). Students of law may be surprised by this punishment, which was not contemplated by the penal procedure of Rome. No other crucified man in history, in fact, is known to have been crowned with thorns! ... But the way in which it was carried out is unexpectedly documented by the marks on the Shroud: the whole top of the skull, in fact, from the occiput to the bregma, is covered with trickles of blood, while the dark colour of all the same area makes one think of sweat mixed with blood, in which the mass of the hair was steeped, creating the conditions for the resulting imprint." (Ricci, G., 1977, "Historical, Medical and Physical Study of the Holy Shroud," in Stevenson, K.E., ed., "Proceedings of the 1977 United States Conference of Research on The Shroud of Turin," Holy Shroud Guild: Bronx NY, pp.67-68).

"There will never be final proof that this is the actual cloth that wrapped the body of Jesus of Nazareth. Even if all the tests proved positive there would only be a very strong possibility that it was the burial cloth of this man. If the date of the linen were to come out correct, then there is a pretty powerful concurrence of evidence that would point to this conclusion. Clearly it carries the image of a man, almost certainly a Jew, of the right age, who suffered death by crucifixion. Though most of the marks of this barbarous punishment would not point distinctively to this one man, the evidence of severe injury to the scalp by a `crown of thorns' surely cannot reasonably be posited of any usual victim: it was a mock coronation as King of the Jews. There is also the fact that, unlike any other shroud, it did not disintegrate with the corpse it covered. For some reason it became separated from its body prior to decomposition and was regarded by a long series of people in most hazardous circumstances as valuable enough to preserve. If then everything else were to prove positive, there must be a strong presumption that it belonged to this man. ... in regard to the death of Jesus, the Shroud bears out the reports in all the Gospels of multiple buffetings and Roman scourgings (far exceeding the Jewish thirty-nine strokes) and confirms how brutal these were. It supports a cap, and not merely as traditional art would have suggested, a circlet of thorns. The additional abrasions on the back of one shoulder could also bear out the tradition which John records [19.17], though not the Synoptists, that Jesus was compelled to carry his own cross at least part of the way. Again, the attachment of the body to the cross by nails, and not ropes, attested by John [20.25] and implicitly by Luke [24.39] is of course also confirmed by the Shroud. So are two important details strongly insisted upon by John on the evidence of eye-witness. The first is that the legs of Jesus were not broken, unlike those of the two crucified with him [John 19.32-3], a practice now confirmed by the mangled skeleton to which I have referred. The second is the lance-stab in the side with its effusion of blood and water which is clearly traceable on the Shroud [John 19.34]. ... Finally, though this is inevitably a subjective judgement, the image of the Shroud reveals a visage, like that of Hamlet's father, altogether `most majestical'. It is surely a face that could credibly have commanded the loyalty and faith which the Gospels describe. The image might have been terribly disillusioning. But no one, I think, since its full photographic likeness became revealed, from the agnostic Delage onwards, could say that it was out of keeping with the man of supreme inner authority whom the Gospel records present." (Robinson, J.A.T., 1978, "The Shroud and the New Testament," in Jennings, P., ed., "Face to Face with the Turin Shroud ," Mayhew-McCrimmon: Great Wakering UK, pp.69-81, p.76,78).

"Before concluding that the man of the Shroud is Jesus, we must consider the possibility that he is someone else-another Jew tortured. and crucified by Romans and buried according to Jewish customs. ... We can do this because the crucifixion and burial of Jesus differed significantly from the ordinary ways the Romans crucified criminals and the Jews buried their dead. Jesus' case was irregular. He was scourged, crowned with thorns, nailed to his cross, stabbed in the side (instead of his legs being broken), buried well but incompletely, and his body left the cloth before it decomposed. Because we know a fair amount about Roman and Jewish customs in these matters, we can assess the probability that two men were crucified and buried this way. Such a probability, in reverse, would be the probability that the Shroud of Turin is the burial garment of Jesus Christ. Several Shroud researchers and scientists have already tried to computed such a probability. One is Francis Filas, professor of theology at Loyola University and a long-time investigator of the Shroud. Fr. Filas believes that there is very little chance that the man buried in the Shroud could be someone other than Jesus. Citing the correspondence between the Shroud anti the irregularities of Jesus' crucifixion, Fr. Filas computes tho total possibility [sic] that the man in the Shroud was not Jesus as 1 in 10^26, thereby virtually identifying the Shroud as Jesus' burial garment. [Filas, F., "Inquiry Into the Shroud of Turin," CBN University, April 4, 1980] A more conservative figure was devised by Vincent J. Donovan. Donovan was also impressed by the ways irregularities in Jesus' crucifixion correspond to the Shroud, especially the crown of thorns, the fact that Jesus' ankles were not broken, the spear wound, and the incomplete burial. Donovan concludes that there is a probability of 1 chance in 282 billion that the person buried in the Shroud was someone other than Jesus. [Donovan, V.J., "The Shroud and the Laws of Probability," The Catholic Digest, April, 1980, pp.49-52] French Jesuit and engineer Paul de Gail is another scholar who attempted to compute the probability that the Shroud wrapped someone other than Jesus. De Gail arrived at a much higher figure than Donovan's 1 in 282 billion, in spite of the fact that he performed his research in 1972, before some of the most surprising discoveries about the Shroud were made. [Donovan, Ibid., p. 51; cf. Wilcox, R.K., "Shroud," Macmillan: New York 1977, p.171] The most conservative probability arrived at thus far was computed in 1978 by Professors Tino Zeuli and Bruno Barbaris, two members of the science faculty at the University of Turin. Zeuli and Barbaris combined a skeptical approach with a mastery of statistics. They still concluded that the chances were 1 in 225 billion that someone other than Jesus was buried in the Shroud. [Donovan, Ibid] Statistical analyses such as these are not meaningless guesses. They are respectable scientific tools. Scientists employ them continually to weigh the merits of alternative theories to explain observed phenomena. These previous calculations about the Shroud-ranging from 1 in 225 billion to 1 in 10^26 virtually identify the Shroud of Turin beyond any reasonable doubt as Jesus' burial garment." (Stevenson, K.E. & Habermas, G.R., 1981, "Verdict on the Shroud: Evidence for the Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ," Servant Books: Ann Arbor MI, pp.124-125).

"Why do so many researchers agree on identifying the two men? We will not reproduce here the basis for the probability we presented in Verdict, [Stevenson, K.E. & Habermas, G.R., "Verdict on the Shroud," Servant Books: Ann Arbor MI, 1981, pp.121-129] but we will briefly note the major irregularities that both the Gospels and the Shroud reveal. 1. Both the Gospels and the Shroud plainly concern cases of crucifixion. While it is true that many persons were crucified in ancient times, the number is small in comparison to those who died by all other means combined. In other words, if the Shroud belonged to some person other than Jesus, it would probably have been that of a noncrucified individual, but that is not the case. The probability of identification is increased, though only slightly, by the fact that both victims were males. Occasionally, some females were crucified-hence, a small increase in probability. 2. It is also unlikely that a random burial shroud, especially one surfacing in western Europe, would bear the image of a person of Semitic origin. Yet ... Harvard University ethnologist Carleton Coon concluded, `Whoever the individual represented may have been, he is of a physical type found in modern times among Sephardic Jews and noble Arabs.' [Wilcox, R.K., "Shroud," Macmillan: New York, 1977, pp.130-31, 136] 3. The scourging and beating of Jesus at the hands of His enemies was unusual treatment for those marked for crucifixion. We are told that Pilate hoped in vain to satisfy the mob by punishing Jesus in these other ways, but the people demanded His crucifixion, rejecting the suggestion that Jesus be set free (John 19:1-16). Therefore Jesus was both seriously beaten and crucified. This was not a common procedure. A man who was to be crucified was generally not beaten nearly to death. Yet this double punishment was inflicted on both Jesus and the man in the Shroud. In fact, some believe that the man in the Shroud eventually died from the scourging while he hung on a cross. [Sava, A., "The Holy Shroud on Trial," in Stevenson, K.E., ed., "Proceedings of the 1977 United States Conference of Research on The Shroud of Turin," Holy Shroud Guild: Bronx NY, 1977, pp.50-57] 4. One of the most unusual similarities between the two men is in the head wounds. Since the Romans were, to some extent, emperor worshipers, it is plain that they crowned Jesus with thorns to mock His claims to be the Messianic ruler or King of the Jews. But would this treatment be given to the average criminal who was to be crucified? Probably not. Yet the man in the Shroud had injuries a crown of thorns would create all over his scalp. 5. Another similarity is that both men were nailed to crosses instead of being tied to them. This is not as irregular as some of the other points, for Yohanan, the first-century crucifixion victim whose bones were discovered in 1967, was also nailed to his cross. But tying was an option. 6. The Gospel of John agrees with the Yohanan archaeological find that normal Roman crucifixion procedure involved breaking the victim's legs to hasten death. But since He was already dead, this was not done to Jesus. The man buried in the Shroud did not have broken legs. 7. Besides the crown of thorns, the piercing of Jesus' side by a Roman spear is the most intriguing parallel. Since legs were regularly broken to hasten death, lancing the victim's side would be a superfluous procedure. But while neither of the two men had broken legs, both were wounded in the chest by a spear. Furthermore, it was reported that blood and water flowed from Jesus' chest wound as are visible from the wound in the man on the Shroud. The soldiers could have done nothing when they detected that the victims were dead, or they could have struck different areas of their bodies. The fact Jesus and the man in the Shroud were similarly wounded raises the likelihood that the two men are one and the same. Moreover, the flow of blood and water would not have occurred apart from the chest wound. John's description of Jesus' death coincides with the Shroud image in that a post-death wound was inflicted, the chest area was affected, and blood and water oozed from the wound. 8. Jesus and the man in the Shroud were both given fine, individual burials in linen, not the common burials generally given to crucifixion victims. 9. Jesus was buried hastily because of the oncoming Sabbath. Therefore, the women returned with spices on Sunday morning in order to finish the burial process. There are also signs that the man in the Shroud was buried hastily .... What are the chances that two men would he crucified, receive individual burials in fine linen shrouds, and still have to be buried hastily? 10. Last, the New Testament testifies that Jesus' body did not experience corruption (Acts 2:22-32), but that He was resurrected instead. No decomposition stains are present on the Shroud. Since many of the burial garments in existence have even visible decomposition stains on them, the absence of stains on the Shroud is enigmatic, especially in light of the New Testament testimony concerning Jesus' resurrection ... These ten similar crucifixion anomalies between Jesus and the man buried in the Shroud are strong arguments for the identification of the two men." (Stevenson, K.E. & Habermas, G.R., 1990, "The Shroud and the Controversy," Thomas Nelson Publishers: Nashville TN, pp.89-92).

"The simple fact remains. No such impression on a winding-sheet has ever been found in any tomb, and we may add that it is materially impossible that such a thing should be found. Whatever may be the exact nature of the chemical process by which the impressions were produced, what concerns us now is the organic action exercised between a naked body and a prepared cloth. All such action is restricted by one essential condition, namely, that the body should have remained in contact with the cloth for too short a time to allow of putrefaction. If corruption set in, any impression previously made would be ipso facto destroyed. What indeed is found in a violated sepulchre ? A mummy or a skeleton. In either case the tomb could not have furnished a winding-sheet like the Holy Shroud. On the other hand, it is not possible for any one to have arrived at a method of producing such impressions, and this because of their altogether exceptional character." (Vignon, P., 1970, "The Shroud of Christ," [1902], University Books: New York NY, p.44).

"But in his thoroughness he [Vignon] turned, at the last, to one final hypothesis that would still deny the cloth's connection with Christ. Suppose, someone had suggested, that another man sometime in the course of the early centuries-some poor criminal-had been crowned with thorns, scourged, crucified and lanced in the side. Why couldn't the Shroud of Turin be his winding sheet? A marvelous coincidence? Yes. But who was to say it couldn't happen? Vignon didn't even bother to calculate the enormous odds against it. His answer was more direct and convincing-and its implications devastating. There was one essential condition, he said, for the production and retention of the imprint on the cloth: `The body would have remained in contact with the cloth for too short a time to allow of putrefaction. If corruption set in, any impression previously made would be, ipso facto, destroyed.' There was no sign of corruption on the linen." (Walsh, J.E., 1963, "The Shroud," Random House: New York NY, pp.90-9).

"The FBI, said Stewart, frequently asked him to identify the race of a person by bones that agents would bring in. `But we can't go beyond broad racial stocks with so little evidence. We can say, these are from a white man, a Negro, or a Mongoloid. But you really need to see a person in life to be positive. The shroud face is that of a white man. I think we can say that. But whether he was from Palestine or Greece, I don't know. I don't think you can be that specific. You'd be challenged. People would say, `How do you know? What's your proof?' Stewart suggested that I put the question to Carlton S. Coon, one of the world's most distinguished ethnologists. A former Harvard professor and ethnology curator at the University of Pennsylvania, Coon had written books on the racial classifications of people all over the world. `He'd be the man who might be able to give you some answers.' `Here are the pictures that you asked me to return,' Coon wrote back in a week's time. `Whoever the individual represented may have been, he is of a physical type found in modern times among Sephardic Jews and noble Arabs. The soft parts of the nose have shrunken a bit, which is simply a sign of death. I have seen the same thing in the mummies of Egyptian pharaohs. `For what it is worth, that is my opinion.' Coon's opinion was worth a great deal, especially in view of the fact that he had traveled widely throughout the Middle East, Asia, South America, and Africa. He was also the author of fifteen books in the area of anthropology, including The Origin of Races, published in 1962; and The Living Races of Man, published in 1965." (Wilcox, R.K., 1977, "Shroud," Macmillan: New York NY, pp.131,136).

"The evidence seems, then, to indicate that the man of the Shroud was very probably a Jew crucified under the Romans. This draws us to the inevitable question, Could it have been Jesus? To what extent does the image on the Shroud correspond to the crucifixion of Christ as recounted by the Gospels? Given the premise that the Shroud is from all other points of view genuine, this presents us with virtually no difficulty. ... 1. Jesus was scourged (Mt. 27:26, Mk. 15:15, Jn. 19:1). The body is literally covered with the wounds of a severe scourging. 2. Jesus was struck a blow to the face (Mt. 27:30, Mk. 15:19, Lk. 22:63, Jn. 19:3). There appear to be a severe swelling below the right eye and other superficial face wounds. 3. Jesus was crowned with thorns (Mt. 27:29, Mk. 15:17, Jn. 19:2). Bleeding from the scalp indicates that some form of barbed `cap' has been thrust upon the head. 4. Jesus had to carry a heavy cross (Jn. 19:17). Scourge wounds in the area of the shoulders appear to be blurred, as if by the chafing of some heavy burden. 5. Jesus' cross had to be carried for him, suggesting he repeatedly fell under the burden (Mt. 27:32, Mk. 15:21, Lk. 23:26). The knees appear severely damaged as if from repeated falls. 6. Jesus was crucified by nailing in hands and feet (Jn. 20:25). ... There are clear blood flows as from nail wounds in the wrists and at the feet. 7. Jesus' legs were not broken, but a spear was thrust into his side as a check that he was dead (Jn. 19:31-37). The legs are clearly not broken, and there is an elliptical wound in the right side. Of these seven stages, it is possible that stages one, two, and four through seven could have occurred in the case of any crucifixion victim. But the third stage, the crowning with thorns, is virtually signatory. ... If the Shroud itself is genuine, the case for it being actually Jesus' shroud is very strong, as even one of those most convinced of its fraudulence, the Jesuit historian Herbert Thurston, felt obliged to admit in 1903: `As to the identity of the body whose image is seen on the Shroud, no question is possible. The five wounds, the cruel flagellation, the punctures encircling the head, can still be clearly distinguished... If this is not the impression of the Christ, it was designed as the counterfeit of that impression. In no other person since the world began could these details be verified.' [Thurston, H., "The Holy Shroud and the Verdict of History," The Month, CI, 1903, p.19]" (Wilson, I., 1978, "The Turin Shroud," Book Club Associates: London, pp.37-38).

"As generally agreed by most observers, the visible body on the Shroud appears to be that of a thirty-to-forty-five-year-old male, quite naked, with beard and mustache and hair falling to the shoulders. At the back of the head seems to be visible a long, loose rope of hair extending down the spine to the level of the shoulder blades. Although anthropological deductions are inevitably subjective, ethnologist Carleton S. Coon has associated the man with the very pure Semitic type found today among noble Arabs and Sephardic Jews, and certainly there are at least broad hints of Jewishness in the hair styling. The seemingly unbound rope of hair at the back of the head accords with what German biblical scholar H. Gressman has referred to as one of the commonest fashions for Jewish men in antiquity, to which French scriptural authority Daniel-Rops has supportively added the information that the Jews normally wore this `plaited and rolled up under their headgear' except on public holidays." (Wilson, I., 1986, "The Evidence of the Shroud," Guild Publishing: London, pp.15-16).

"After-light of the Resurrection How did the body emerge from the Shroud at the right moment, when the two figures were perfectly formed with all their precise and varied details, and before corruption began? Vignon labored at this problem on the hypothesis that some human agent had removed the sheet. In the end he surrendered and called the attention of Science to a challenge of the Shroud: `Explain if you can how this sheet was separated from the body it had enveloped.' It was those extremely precise impressions of blood that created the difficulty. Remember, this blood had already clotted on the body. It had to be partially redissolved to be impressed on the Shroud, and it is there now entirely intact and with incredible exactness. Vignon succeeded in obtaining similar transfers of clotted blood, but never any as complete or precise as those on the Shroud. It was too difficult to time the process exactly, and he could never remove the cloth without disturbing the blood, although he worked under laboratory conditions with small quantities of blood, and with small pieces of cloth of a texture specially chosen for the purpose. Now here is a fourteen foot sheet which was originally longer, and this sheet retains complete and perfect transfers of clotted blood, varied in form, much of it extensive in area, and originally located on different parts of a human body. From his own experience Vignon was convinced that no human agent could have removed the frontal half of the sheet without destroying the extreme precision of the two trickles on the back of the left hand, the streams on the forearms, the large clot on the right side, and the clots and streams on the brow and the hair. But suppose that the frontal half of the sheet had been successfully removed-there was the body still lying on the lower half, where there are the many trickles at the back of the head, the blood on the soles of the feet, and the two intertwining streams across the loins beginning and ending with a large pool of blood and serum. Lift the body off the sheet? Turn it over and lift the sheet off the body? The thing was plainly impossible if that whole array of decalcomanias of blood was to be retained intact with the precision it has on the Shroud. So there was the challenge of the Shroud to Science: `... and if in the end you must confess that it is beyond your powers to explain how my mysterious guest departed, you will still have made a great discovery.' Christians, of course, know the answer. In fact, this and other `mysteries' of the Shroud seem natural enough to those who realize what this cloth is and whose blood it bears. For them, these `mysteries' are a confirmation of the authenticity of the Shroud for the very reason that they are inexplicable unless they be a distant afterlight of the resurrection of Christ." (Wuenschel, E.A., 1954, "Self-Portrait of Christ: The Holy Shroud of Turin," Holy Shroud Guild: Esopus NY, Third printing, 1961, pp.51-52).

"Therefore-and also to round out this argument-let us look at a more recent and more precise example of a calculation relative to the problem under examination; we are indebted to Paul de Gail, S.J., French, who is an engineer in industrial technology, and for more than fifty years a most assiduous scholar of the Shroud. In his book, Le Visage de Jesus-Christ et son Linceul (France-Empire, Paris 1972), he takes up, among other things, this question we have been discussing, and offers a more complete and more accurate analysis, based on only seven independent elements. In words that we have heard before, he states: `It is Jesus Christ; considering all that I can now evaluate, the possibility that it is not is equal to (or less than) 1 chance in 225 billions.' Paul de Gail's study is very interesting, also for its clearness. I present it here most willingly. 1) The Man of the Shroud had a burial sheet. Many persons, after being executed on the cross, were abandonned [sic] to birds of prey and wild beasts, or thrown into a pit. Let us admit-a very wide hypothesis-that 1 in 3 crucified persons had a regular burial with a shroud. Probability of this event: 1/3. 2) The Man of the Shroud remained a short time in the sheet, otherwise the intensity of the marks produced by the body would have become illegible [through decomposition]. To how many of the crucified was a burial sheet given, only to have it removed after such a short time? Let us say, with abundant largesse, that there was 1 in 20. Probability of this event: 1/20. 3) The Man of the Shroud separated perfectly from the Shroud, with a technic which has left the imprints of blood clots on the fabric without leaving smears or streaks of blood, as would have happened if the clots had been moist, and without flaking or impairing these clots as would have happened if they had been dry. In how many cases could this operation have succeeded? The fact is so surprising that one can reply: This could happen once in a hundred times, or in a thousand. Let us limit ourselves to 1 in 50. Probability of this event: 1/50. 4) The Man of the Shroud was fixed to the cross with nails. It seems that this type of crucifixion was reserved to special cases, but let us admit anyway, with ample leeway, that crucifixions with nails occurred 2 times out of 3. Probability of this event: 2/3. 5) On the Man of the Shroud are seen the wounds of a crown of thorns. Some cases have been cited of Christian martyrs who, for derision, were crowned with thorns to make them resemble their Master more closely. Let us suppose, though it is certainly unrealistic, that this could have happened 1 time in 1000. Probability of this event: 1/1000. 6) The Man of the Shroud was pierced by a lance in the right side. It was the custom to break the legs of the crucified, to hasten their death. The lance thrust and the unbroken legs constitute an unexpected fact, without any doubt a rare exception. Given the lack of precise historical data on this point, let us confine ourselves to admitting-with wide liberality-that this could have happened 1 time in 5. Probability of this event: 1/5. 7) The face of the Man of the Shroud is of incomparable splendor, which thousands of artistic efforts have never attained. This man, crucified, found himself among criminals; but criminals do not have this expressive mask of majesty ... When we reflect on all his sufferings and tortures, then contemplate this countenance of nobility and serenity, we can be well assured that we would not find one such face in a million. And for good reason! Nevertheless, we will be content with the modest estimate of 1 in 10,000. Probability of this event: 1/10,000. What, then, is the probability that all these 7 characteristics, these 7 independent events to which we have limited ourselves, would be found simultaneously in any victim of crucifixion? Very simple: we need only to multiply all the single probabilities. For the coin and die, we had 1/2 x 1/6, which is 1/12. Here we multiply all the respective probabilities: 1/3 x 1/20 x 1/50 x 2/3 x 1/1000 x 1/5 x 1/10,000, and the product of these is 1 in 225 billions. And in his own distinctively provocative style, our Paul de Gail concludes: `We see that if, in all history there had been 225 billion persons crucified-which is manifestly absurd!-in this astronomical assembly we have one chance, one only, to find a victim identical to the one that the Gospels, in their historicity, describe as bearing these seven characteristics'. Pere de Gail assures us that in all these calculations on the probability, he took only a few elements into consideration, not more than seven; and for each one he wanted to reduce to the minimum the evaluation favorable to the result. With a more extended and more precise evaluation, it would not be difficult to ascertain the probability, not as 1 in 225 billions, but 1 in 50,000 billions, or more. `If the slightest trace of doubt is not pulverized and destroyed by these astronomical figures, it must be, perhaps, that for certain minds, too mathematical-or not mathematical enough?-numbers have nothing to say.' And he concludes: `One word suffices: The crucified man in the Shroud of Turin is Jesus Christ himself.'" (Zeuli, T., 1984, "Jesus Christ is the Man of the Shroud," Shroud Spectrum International, Vol. 3, No. 10, March, pp.29-33, pp.32-33).

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