The Shroud of Turin is a length of linen cloth that believers argue is Jesus Christ's burial shroud. The fabric appears to show the faint image of a man and wounds sustained during crucifixion. Until ...
All of this still does not prove the Shroud is authentic. The Church has made no definitive claim as such. But if you cannot ...
A cutting-edge 3D imaging study has brought fresh attention to one of the world’s most debated religious relics—the Shroud of ...
The blood, sweat and tears on these threads are still — sorta — shrouded in mystery. New findings provide more evidence on what Jesus might have been buried in after he was crucified. A recent study ...
A Belgian academic has uncovered writings by a 14th-century theologian who called the shroud a "clear" and "patent" fake. Installation view of "Tent of the Shroud" with a life-sized digital replica of ...
The Shroud of Turin — a 14-foot-long linen cloth bearing an image of a crucified man — has captivated people for centuries, stirring debate over whether the relic once wrapped the body of Jesus Christ ...
An interactive museum dedicated to the Shroud of Turin, which some say was Jesus’ burial cloth, opens its doors to the public Wednesday at the Christ Cathedral campus in Southern California.“The ...
The Vatican has never officially pronounced on the shroud’s authenticity, though popes have held it up as an object of veneration. Shroud of Turin featuring positive (left) and negative (right) ...
A La Jolla surgeon says he has made a discovery that could change Christian theology as we know it — one that could shed new light on the belief that Jesus Christ was resurrected after his death.