New research: Shroud of Turin bears blood of a torture victim
Shroud of Turin featuring positive (L) and negative (R) digital filters. Credit: Dianelos Georgoudis via Wikimedia Commons. |
Turin, Italy, Jul 14, 2017 / 02:30 am (CNA/EWTN News).-
New research indicates that the Shroud of Turin shows signs of blood from a
torture victim, and undermines arguments that the reputed burial shroud of
Jesus Christ was painted.
Very small particles attached to the linen fibers of the
shroud “have recorded a scenario of great suffering, whose victim was wrapped
up in the funeral cloth,” said Elvio Carlino, a researcher at the Institute of
Crystallography.
These particles, called “nanoparticles,” had a “peculiar
structure, size and distribution,” said University of Padua professor Giulio
Fanti.
And the nanoparticles are not typical of the blood of a
healthy person. Rather, they show high levels of substances called creatinine
and ferritin, found in patients who suffer forceful multiple traumas like
torture.
“Hence, the presence of these biological nanoparticles found
during our experiments point to a violent death for the man wrapped in the
Turin Shroud,” Fanti said.
The shroud’s latest researchers published their findings and
measurements in the U.S. open-access peer-reviewed journal PlosOne, in an
article titled “New Biological Evidence from Atomic Resolution Studies on the
Turin Shroud,” the Turin-based newspaper La Stampa’s Vatican Insider reports.
The findings contradict claims that the shroud is a painted
object – claims which are common among those who suggest it is a medieval
forgery. The characteristics of these particles “cannot be artifacts made over
the centuries on the fabric of the Shroud,” Fanti said.
Among the most well-known relics believed to be connected
with Jesus Christ’s Passion, the Shroud of Turin has been venerated for
centuries by Christians as the burial shroud of Jesus. It has been subject to
intense scientific study to ascertain its authenticity, and the origins of the
image.
Appearing on the 14-foot long, three-and-a-half foot wide
cloth a faintly stained postmortem image of a man – front and back – who has
been brutally tortured and crucified. The image becomes clear in a haunting
photo negative.
The study of particles took place on the nanoscale – ranging
from one to 100 nanometers. A nanometer is one billionth the length of a meter.
“These findings could only be revealed by the methods
recently developed in the field of electron microscopy,” said Carlino. He said
the research marked the first study of “the nanoscale properties of a pristine
fiber taken from the Turin Shroud.”
Researchers drew on experimental evidence of atomic
resolution studies and recent medical studies on patients who suffered multiple
acts of trauma and torture.
The research was carried out by the Instituo Officia dei
Materiali in Trieste and the Institute of Crystallography in Bari, both under
Italy’s National Research Council, as well as the University of Padua’s
Department of Industrial Engineering.
Vatican Insider said the research confirms the hypotheses of
previous investigations, like that of biochemist Alan Adler in the 1990s.
The Catholic Church has not taken an official position on
the relic’s authenticity. The shroud is presently housed at Turin’s St. John
the Baptist Cathedral. During his June 21, 2015 visit to the cathedral, Pope
Francis prayed before it.
“The Shroud attracts (us) toward the martyred face and body
of Jesus,” he said in a noontime Angelus address at a Turin plaza. “At the same
time, it pushes (us) toward the face of every suffering and unjustly persecuted
person. It pushes us in the same direction as the gift of Jesus’ love.”
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