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232 lines
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by William Bennetta
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The Shroud of Turin is a 14-foot-long piece of linen that bears
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two full-length images - one a front view, the other a rear view
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- of a man who seems to have been flogged and crucified. The two
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images lie head to head, separated by some six inches of bare
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cloth. There are no side-view images.
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The shroud belongs to the House of Savoy but is kept (at Turin,
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Italy) by functionaries of the Roman Catholic Church. The Church
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has explicitly encouraged the veneration of the shroud and has
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palpably, if informally, promoted various beliefs about it. These
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include the idea that it is the cloth in which the corpse of
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Jesus was wrapped for burial, as well as the correlative idea
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that the images and the ostensible bloodstains on the shroud are
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direct impressions of that corpse. According to one vigorous
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advocate of those beliefs, the most recent public exposition of
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the shroud, held at Turin during the summer of 1978, drew some
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3.5 million people.
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On 14 October 1988 the [New York Times] reported that the shroud
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had been discredited by radiocarbon dating: Tests had indicated
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that the linen was no more than 750 years old. The [Times] also
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recounted the tortuous statements by which the archbishop of
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Turin, in announcing the results of the tests, had tried to
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obfuscate the Church's promotion of the shroud and had given
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assurance that the shroud, even if bogus, had "produced
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miracles."(1)
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I was in Port Chester, New York, at the time, visiting members of
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my family. When I showed the [Times] to my brother, Bob, he said
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that the Corpus Christi church - one of several Catholic churches
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in Port Chester - had a shrine entirely devoted to the shroud. I
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suggested that we go over to the church to see how the shroud was
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being promoted to the faithful.
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As Joe Nickell relates in [Inquest on the Shroud of Turin], the
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shroud was condemned, very early in its strange history, as a
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fake. In 1389 the bishop of Troyes, in France, sent a report
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about the shroud to Pope Clement VII. It began:(2)
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The case, Holy Father, stands thus. Some time since in this
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diocese of Troyes, the Dean of a certain collegiate church . . .
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falsely and deceitfully, and not from any motive of devotion but
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only of gain, procured for his church a certain cloth cunningly
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painted, upon which by a clever sleight of hand was depicted the
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twofold image of one man, . . . he falsely declaring and
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pretending that this was the actual shroud in which our Savior
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Jesus Christ was enfolded in the tomb.
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Pope Clement declined to suppress the shroud entirely, but in
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1390 he imposed restrictions on any future exhibitions of it.
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There would be no ceremonies or candles or incense or guard of
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honor, he decreed, and each exposition would have to include the
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announcement that "it is not the true Shroud of Our Lord but a
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painting or picture made in the semblance or representation of
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the shroud."
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The Pope's prudent judgment, however, was soon eclipsed. The
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Savoys acquired the shroud in 1453, and they immediately began to
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exhibit it as Jesus's burial cloth and to attribute miraculous
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powers to it. Their enterprise succeeded, and the shroud became
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widely accepted, among Catholics, as an authentic relic. It
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enjoyed that status for the next 500 years or so, even though the
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Church's central administration remained conspicuously ambiguous.
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They repeatedly provided [de facto] endorsement of the folklore
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and superstitions that adhered to the shroud, but they never said
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definitively that the shroud was the thing that believers
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believed it to be.
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The most engaging episode in the shroud's history has come in our
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own century, as it has been subjected to scientific and
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pseudoscientific examinations. The proceedings have been odd,
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sometimes Byzantine, and often absurd, because they have included
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the repeated conflation of a real question with a purely
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theatrical one. The real question, arising from some puzzling
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visual and physical properties of the images, has been: How were
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the images formed? The theatrical one, promoted by some Church
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officials and other believers, has been: Is the shroud authentic?
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In the context of this latter question, some people - committed
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to finding that the shroud is genuine - have misrepresented their
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tests or their results and have tried to explain contrary results
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by inventing supernatural forces.
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The question of the authenticity of the shroud and its images is
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a nonsense because the shroud itself declares unequivocally that
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it is a work of art. The evidence can be plainly seen and does
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not require the intercession of microscopes, spectroscopes or any
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of the other devices that have been enlisted. Let me explain.
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The shroud's devotees imagine that the people who buried Jesus
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placed His body on a part of the shroud and then drew the rest of
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the up and over, so that it enfolded the head and entirely
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covered the body's front and sides. The part of the cloth that
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was under the body, they say, acquired the rear-view image; the
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part that was laid atop acquired the front-view image.
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This is consistent with the head-to-head orientation of the two
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images, but it is irreconcilable with the geometry of the images
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themselves. That geometry is so right that it is wrong: When the
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shroud is laid flat, the images are realistic and well
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proportioned; they are not the distorted images that you would
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see if you wrapped a three-dimensional corpse in a cloth, then
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somehow transferred an impression of the corpse's surface to the
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cloth, and then laid the cloth out in two dimensions.
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In other words, the images do not conform, even crudely, to the
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explanation by which believers purport to account for them. Nor
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do they conform to any other explanation but this: The images
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were devised by an artist who did what artists - graphic artists,
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at least - always have done. He represented his three-dimensional
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subject by making planar projections, and he omitted features
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that had no projections on the two planes that he had chosen.
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This explains two stark properties of the shroud for which, as
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far as I know, the believers have no explanation at all. It tells
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why there are no images of the corpse's sides, and it tells why
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the space between the two images - which, according to a
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believers' scenario, should have acquired an impression of the
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top of the corpse's head - is bare. For me, the naive geometry of
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the images has always been conclusive. Readers who want to learn
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about other impeachments of the shroud's authenticity will find
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an abundant supply in Joe Nickell's book. I cannot even begin to
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summarize them here, but I must mention the business of the
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"bloodstains."
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The shroud shows many red marks that represent blood from the
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wounds that Jesus incurred, during a period of many hours, as He
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was flogged, crowned with thorns, nailed to a cross, and stabbed
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with a lance. And like the images of the corpse, these
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"bloodstains" are much too good to be true. Nickell says:
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The "blood" stains on the shroud are suspiciously still red,
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whereas aged blood turns black. In addition they are
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"picturelike". . . . Other questions arise: How could some of
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the "clots" or "flows" which had [dried] (for example, those on
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the arms) have transferred to the cloth at all? As to blood
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flowing onto the cloth after the body was supposedly wrapped. . .
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, how could such [wet] blood have dried without causing the cloth
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to adhere to the body? And if such blood had not dried, how could
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it fail to smear when the body was removed?
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Among those "picturelike" stains, the ones that represent flows
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from wounds induced by the crown of thorns are especially
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notable. They depict blood arranged in rivulets, outside of
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Jesus's hair, but real blood from scalp wounds does not flow in
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that way; it spreads into the hair, sticking to it and matting
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it. Various examinations of the shroud's "blood stains" have
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failed to disclose corpuscles, hemoglobin or any other materials
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that are specific to blood, but they have given evidence of
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several substances that were used by medieval artists as
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pigments.
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The reason why the Corpus Christi church has a shrine devoted to
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the shroud is that Father Peter M. Rinaldi was the church's
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pastor from 1950 to 1977. Rinaldi was a believer if there ever
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was one, and he wrote several books about the shroud.
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Copies of his [I Saw the Holy Shroud] were displayed for sale in
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the church's vestibule when Bob and I got there, and I bought
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one.3 The text - credulous, sophistic and highly distortive -
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includes a brief, sterilized version of the shroud's history and
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some commensurably bogus invocations of science. As a whole, it
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is comparable to a creationist pamphlet.
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As Bob and I walked from the vestibule into the shrine, we met a
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full-sized, fully colored statue of Jesus on His cross. It was
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meant to be both clinical and horrific; the nearby placard said
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the statue had been made by a devotee of the shroud and that it
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reflected what the shroud told about Jesus's awful death.
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The statue captivated me for several minutes - not only because
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it was wonderfully garish but also because it did indeed resonate
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with the shroud. Jesus's body bore many spots and stripes of red
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paint, representing blood from the lacerations inflicted when He
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was flogged; and even though the flogging had been administered
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well before the crucifixion, this blood was no different in color
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from the fresh blood that was flowing from newer wounds. Nor had
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the spots and stripes been smeared or smudged; nor had they been
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blurred by the sweat that Jesus had shed during His considerable
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exertions on the way to His execution. The artist who had painted
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the statue had made errors like some of the ones that had been
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made, 600 years earlier, by the artist who had painted the
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shroud.
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The shrine itself was rather dark and physically unimpressive.
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Its principal resources comprised a reduced-scale photograph of
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the shroud, some other pictures, and a number of explanatory
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placards. The placards said outright that the shroud was the
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true, miraculous shroud of Jesus, asked rhetorically what else it
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could be, and told that scientists had affirmed that its
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authenticity had resisted all scientific challenges.
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The results of the radiocarbon dating of the shroud, along with
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the announcement of those results by the archbishop of Turin,
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have been reported widely and prominently by the popular media,
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including the daily newspaper that serves Port Chester. And I am
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sure that the current pastor of Corpus Christi - even if he has
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had no particular interest in the Shroud of Turin - knows, even
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now, that his shrine needs an overhauling. Just for fun, I intend
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to visit the church again to see if any changes have been made.
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I'll let you know what I find out.
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REFERENCES:
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1. R. Suro. 14 October 1988. "Church says shroud of Turin isn't
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authentic". [New York Times].
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2. J. Nickell. 1983. [Inquest on the Shroud of Turin]. Prometheus
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Books.
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3. P.M. Rinaldi. 1983. [I Saw the Holy Shroud:A Study of the
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Shroud of Christ]. Don Bosco Publications, New Rochelle, NY.
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(William Bennetta is an advisor to Bay Area Skeptics, a consulting
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biologist, and a professional editor, and has published many signifi-
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cant works on creationism.)
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-end-
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Copywrite (C) 1988 BAY AREA SKEPTICS
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4030 Moraga
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San Francisco, CA 94122
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Reproduced from the December, 1988 BASIS. You may obtain a free sample
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issue of BASIS by writing to the above address or leaving a message on
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THE SKEPTICS BBS 415-648-8944.
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Permission to post the above article on electronic bbs' is hereby
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given as long as it is complete, unmodified and includes these tag
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lines.
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