Dear Goanetters,
While dealing with the Eucharistic Miracle of Lanciano, it is tested that the 
blood belongs to AB group and it has 23 chromosomes. This cannot be refuted 
against scientific evidence found by researchers. The inference is that it is 
the blood of Jesus and that it confirms his virginal conception. Just denying 
the fact in the name of Science does not resolve the enigma. Regarding the 
Shroud of Turin, research goes on. It is probably the cloth of burial of Jesus 
of Nazareth. There is new evidence. The Catholic Church has not rejected it as 
inauthentic. There are recent books which I shall quote later on. 
Regards.
Fr.Ivo
**From The Times 
November 21, 2009

Death certificate is imprinted on the Shroud of Turin, says Vatican scholar
Richard Owen in Rome 
A Vatican scholar claims to have deciphered the "death certificate" imprinted 
on the Shroud of Turin, or Holy Shroud, a linen cloth revered by Christians and 
held by many to bear the image of the crucified Jesus. 

Dr Barbara Frale, a researcher in the Vatican secret archives, said "I think I 
have managed to read the burial certificate of Jesus the Nazarene, or Jesus of 
Nazareth." She said that she had reconstructed it from fragments of Greek, 
Hebrew and Latin writing imprinted on the cloth together with the image of the 
crucified man. 

The shroud, which is kept in the royal chapel of Turin Cathedral and is to be 
put in display next spring, is regarded by many scholars as a medieval forgery. 
A 1988 carbon dating of a fragment of the cloth dated it to the Middle Ages. 

However Dr Frale, who is to publish her findings in a new book, La Sindone di 
Gesu Nazareno (The Shroud of Jesus of Nazareth) said that the inscription 
provided "historical date consistent with the Gospels account". The letters, 
barely visible to the naked eye, were first spotted during an examination of 
the shroud in 1978, and others have since come to light. 

Some scholars have suggested that the writing is from a reliquary attached to 
the cloth in medieval times. But Dr Frale said that the text could not have 
been written by a medieval Christian because it did not refer to Jesus as 
Christ but as "the Nazarene". This would have been "heretical" in the Middle 
Ages since it defined Jesus as "only a man" rather than the Son of God. 

Like the image of the man himself the letters are in reverse and only make 
sense in negative photographs. Dr Frale told La Repubblica that under Jewish 
burial practices current at the time of Christ in a Roman colony such as 
Palestine, a body buried after a death sentence could only be returned to the 
family after a year in a common grave. 

A death certificate was therefore glued to the burial shroud to identify it for 
later retrieval, and was usually stuck to the cloth around the face. This had 
apparently been done in the case of Jesus even though he was buried not in a 
common grave but in the tomb offered by Joseph of Arimathea. 

Dr Frale said that many of the letters were missing, with Jesus for example 
referred to as "(I)esou(s) Nnazarennos" and only the "iber" of "Tiberiou" 
surviving. Her reconstruction, however, suggested that the certificate read: 
"In the year 16 of the reign of the Emperor Tiberius Jesus the Nazarene, taken 
down in the early evening after having been condemned to death by a Roman judge 
because he was found guilty by a Hebrew authority, is hereby sent for burial 
with the obligation of being consigned to his family only after one full year". 
It ends "signed by" but the signature has not survived. 

Dr Frale said that the use of three languages was consistent with the polyglot 
nature of a community of Greek-speaking Jews in a Roman colony. Best known for 
her studies of the Knights Templar, who she claims at one stage preserved the 
shroud, she said what she had deciphered was "the death sentence on a man 
called Jesus the Nazarene. If that man was also Christ the Son of God it is 
beyond my job to establish. I did not set out to demonstrate the truth of 
faith. I am a Catholic, but all my teachers have been atheists or agnostics, 
and the only believer among them was a Jew. I forced myself to work on this as 
I would have done on any other archaeological find." 

The Catholic Church has never either endorsed the Turin Shroud or rejected it 
as inauthentic. Pope John Paul II arranged for public showings in 1998 and 
2000, saying: "The Shroud is an image of God's love as well as of human sin. 
The imprint left by the tortured body of the Crucified One, which attests to 
the tremendous human capacity for causing pain and death to one's fellow man, 
stands as an icon of the suffering of the innocent in every age." Pope Benedict 
XVI is to pray before the Shroud when it is put on show again next Spring in 
Turin. 

  See http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/faith/article6925371.ece

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