London Telegraph
 
 
The Turin Shroud is fake. Get over it 

 
_Tom Chivers_ (http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/author/tomchiversscience/) 
 _Science_ (http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/category/science-2/)  Last 
updated:  December 20th, 2011
 
First things first. The "authenticity" or otherwise of the Shroud of Turin  
does not have any implications for whether or not Christ was real, or 
whether He  was divine. If it was a medieval forgery, it doesn't mean the 
stories 
aren't  true; if it really was made in the first century AD, it doesn't 
mean they were.  Until we find a reliable method of linking the shroud with 
Christ Himself – a  nametag stitched in it by His mum, perhaps – the existence 
of a 2,000-year-old  cloth does not imply that a particular person who died 
around the time it was  made was the Son of God.
_
I mention this because today, we report that  a group of scientists – 
working, unexpectedly, for the Italian sustainable  energy agency ENEA – claim 
that the marks on the cloth could only have been made  by ultraviolet 
radiation_ 
(http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/religion/8966422/Italian-study-claims-Turin-Shroud-is-Christs-authentic-burial-robe.html)
 . They say that "When one 
talks about a flash of  light being able to colour a piece of linen in the 
same way as the shroud,  discussion inevitably touches on things like 
miracles and resurrection," and  that they "hope our results can open up a 
philosophical and theological debate".  They do, however, say "as scientists, 
we 
were concerned only with verifiable  scientific processes." 
The implication, of course, is that a divine light shone when Jesus's body  
was resurrected, and that this emitted a burst of high-frequency photons 
which  burned an image on the cloth around him. This possibility has been 
discounted in  the past by Raymond Rogers, a member of the Shroud of Turin 
Research Project  (Sturp) which examined the fabric in the 1970s, who said: "If 
any form of  radiation degraded the cellulose of the linen fibers to produce 
the image color,  it would have had to penetrate the entire diameter of a 
fiber in order to color  its back surface", but that the centres of the fibres 
are unmarked. There are  many hypotheses about how the images could have 
been made, and they have each  come in and out of favour. Without wanting to 
be too cocky, when the ENEA  scientists say that radiation is the "only" way 
the image could have been made,  I imagine that many of their fellow 
researchers will say it's the only way that  they managed it. 
However it was made, if – as many have claimed – the Shroud was made in 
the  13th century, then it isn't a relic of Christ, for obvious reasons. 
Radiocarbon  dating has repeatedly placed the Shroud as medieval in origin – 
specifically,  between 1260AD and 1390AD. There have been suggestions that the 
radiocarbon  process got it wrong – but this is unlikely, according to 
_Professor Christopher Ramsey of  the Oxford Radiocarbon Accelerator Unit_ 
(http://www.ox.ac.uk/media/news_releases_for_journalists/080325.html) , one of 
three labs which carried out  the research. "We're pretty confident in the 
radiocarbon dates," he told me.  "There are various hypotheses as to why the 
dates might not be correct, but none  of them stack up. 
"One is that the samples were contaminated. But that doesn't work, because 
to  make an 2,000-year-old object appear just 800 years old, about half the 
material  would have to be contaminant, and that's if it was all modern. If 
it was older,  it would have to be even more. Various tests done at the time 
of the original  measurements also suggested that the material was fairly 
pure. It's also been  hypothesised that the patch we tested was a modern 
repair, but most of us agree  that's implausible, because the weave is very 
unusual and matches the rest of  the shroud perfectly. Then there are more 
complicated notions, like  contamination with carbon monoxide, but tests have 
shown that carbon monoxide  doesn't react with the fabric under the 
circumstances that you might  expect." 
Regarding the ENEA findings, he is similarly sceptical. "Just because you 
can  create similar results using an ultraviolet laser, that doesn't mean 
it's the  only way it could have been made in the first place," he says. "There 
are  several possibilities, and it could just be a chance effect due to a 
number of  different phenomena. But in archaeological science, being able to 
reproduce  something, doesn't imply that that's the technique used; it may 
simply show that  you've got a new technique you want to try out." He adds 
that the confidence in  the medieval result is such that, were it not 
suggested to be a relic, there  would be no more discussion over its age. 
So there remain questions about how the Shroud of Turin was made, but there 
 seems to be little reason to think that it's anywhere near old enough to 
have  been Christ's. (Interestingly, John Calvin in 1543 already thought it 
was a  fake: he pointed out that according to the Gospel of St John, two 
cloths were  used to shroud Jesus, one on His body and one on His face; he also 
suggests that  it is strange that none of those recording his death in the 
Gospels mentioned a  miracle "so remarkable as the likeness of the body of 
our Lord remaining on its  wrapping sheet".) It's a fascinating and mysterious 
object, but it says nothing  about the questions of whether Christ was a 
historical figure, whether He was  the Son of God, or whether He rose from the 
dead. 
More importantly, I think, the rush to suggest that it does is a bit  
undignified. The intelligent faithful don't need trinkets like this to justify  
their belief, surely? We are constantly told that science cannot disprove 
God;  that it is a non-scientific question, that the two fields of science and  
religion are non-overlapping. But then, when something which goes the other 
way  occurs – something which might suggest that one or other given Bible 
story is  true – suddenly all that goes out of the window. The Turin Shroud 
is (almost  certainly) fake. It makes no difference to anything. Get over  it.

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