There was a recent programme about the Shroud (I think it was repeated on British TV last night, although I didn't see it) which suggested that it was a very early, if not the earliest example of photography. The suggestion was that the cloth was treated with a silver compound, and then suspended inside a camera-obscura while the image of a body was directed onto it from outside. Well, maybe. Possibly someone like Leonardo really did go to the trouble of using a crucified corpse (but how?), and for what purpose? To fool someone? To show the world from a non-believer's viewpoint that the faithful could be easily misled?
For me, as a non-believer, the image just doesn't seem real - it's all out of proportion for a start. And if it really was the result of some kind of reaction with aloe and myrrh, then why are there not other examples of this kind of thing coming down to us over the centuries? I can't accept that it really is the true likeness of Christ.
Sara, please don't feel for one moment that you have in some way to apologise for starting this thread, or for believing in the authenticity of the Shroud. I for one respect your faith.
Regards,
Graham
For me, as a non-believer, the image just doesn't seem real - it's all out of proportion for a start. And if it really was the result of some kind of reaction with aloe and myrrh, then why are there not other examples of this kind of thing coming down to us over the centuries? I can't accept that it really is the true likeness of Christ.
Sara, please don't feel for one moment that you have in some way to apologise for starting this thread, or for believing in the authenticity of the Shroud. I for one respect your faith.
Regards,
Graham
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