Regardless of the shroud is the burial cloth of Christ or not, I am not worshiping it. I worship the Lord. Therefore there is no reason to believe that Satan faked the cloth. My faith is not in the cloth it's in Christ.
Realitybites said:I read it. It's pretty interesting. If you think that's interesting, read the book "The Face of God" by Paul Badde. While such things aren't the foundation of our faith, they strengthen it.xfrodobagginsx said:
The Shroud Of Turin, New Findings
https://www.theepochtimes.com/bright/new-questions-emerge-around-the-authenticity-of-the-shroud-of-turin-5793926?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=Social&utm_campaign=epochtimes&fbclid=IwY2xjawIApHdleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHaDGlqmzz4Sl3L6Sr0DMXFfF8JND5ymeiN7eLSCjmUMf5-kXbyWzDsIT7w_aem_-3dfbeaBGLRrQKkSwrju7w
You might find this interesting as well:
About Cold Plasma Physics and The Miracle of Easter
I have to presume that the descent of the Holy FIre occurred that first Pascha morning as well and is in some way responsible for both these images.
I'm just saying be real careful about such things.xfrodobagginsx said:
Regardless of the shroud is the burial cloth of Christ or not, I am not worshiping it. I worship the Lord. Therefore there is no reason to believe that Satan faked the cloth. My faith is not in the cloth it's in Christ.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:I'm just saying be real careful about such things.xfrodobagginsx said:
Regardless of the shroud is the burial cloth of Christ or not, I am not worshiping it. I worship the Lord. Therefore there is no reason to believe that Satan faked the cloth. My faith is not in the cloth it's in Christ.
Personally, the main reason I don't believe the Shroud is real is that the image is too clean. If you have a cloth around your body, there's gonna be folds and creases here and there, so when you stretch it all out, the image should be splayed out and distorted somewhat, not a perfect outline. The body isn't a flat surface, so the cloth isn't going to lay flat on it and get a perfect 2-D imprint. A facial cloth when opened up is going to spread the facial image out to look wider. And there'd be creases in the cloth as mentioned, which would distort the image even more.
Well, since you're so afraid to engage me in debate that you had to "block" me, I can't hash it out for you.Fre3dombear said:
Lmao. Been traveling so just getting back to some of this. I see the comment by a baylor board poster has shed light on the most scientifically studied inanimate object in human history which can in no way be replicated and, of course, said "the devil did it!" And if you believe in that miracle I guess you're going to hell
All believers will hang up and listen waiting for anyone in todays advanced technological age to reproduce it.
Some people need to introspect a bit with where they heading with their beliefs
The problem though with the radiation theory, in my mind, is that it still requires the cloth to have been completely flat for such a clean 2-dimensional image to come out, otherwise the normal creases and folds from a cloth covering a 3-dimensional body that has topography will yield a splayed out, distorted image. For example, when you have xrays done at a hospital, they put a flat, rigid plate behind the area of your body that is being imaged, and that plate is what picks up the xrays that go through your body. The plate has to be flat so you can get an image with clean outlines and normal shapes. It would have to be the same for the cloth, I would think, unless someone has a theory around this. Honestly, I don't see how there could be one.xfrodobagginsx said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:I'm just saying be real careful about such things.xfrodobagginsx said:
Regardless of the shroud is the burial cloth of Christ or not, I am not worshiping it. I worship the Lord. Therefore there is no reason to believe that Satan faked the cloth. My faith is not in the cloth it's in Christ.
Personally, the main reason I don't believe the Shroud is real is that the image is too clean. If you have a cloth around your body, there's gonna be folds and creases here and there, so when you stretch it all out, the image should be splayed out and distorted somewhat, not a perfect outline. The body isn't a flat surface, so the cloth isn't going to lay flat on it and get a perfect 2-D imprint. A facial cloth when opened up is going to spread the facial image out to look wider. And there'd be creases in the cloth as mentioned, which would distort the image even more.
Interesting points. Thanks for pointing that out. I have heard that before and there may be some truth to it. Just not sure. That may also depend on how the image was formed. Personality, I believe that when Jesus rose again, He emitted a huge amount of radiation of some sort that formed the image. Maybe XRays? They say the negatives look like XRays. That would only happen if they were genuine, not a fake.
Oldbear83 said:
The Gospel accounts never described Jesus physically, and part of that helps people to see Jesus spiritually rather than fixate on a superficial image.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:The problem though with the radiation theory, in my mind, is that it still requires the cloth to have been completely flat for such a clean 2-dimensional image to come out, otherwise the normal creases and folds from a cloth covering a 3-dimensional body that has topography will yield a splayed out, distorted image. For example, when you have xrays done at a hospital, they put a flat, rigid plate behind the area of your body that is being imaged, and that plate is what picks up the xrays that go through your body. The plate has to be flat so you can get an image with clean outlines and normal shapes. It would have to be the same for the cloth, I would think, unless someone has a theory around this. Honestly, I don't see how there could be one.xfrodobagginsx said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:I'm just saying be real careful about such things.xfrodobagginsx said:
Regardless of the shroud is the burial cloth of Christ or not, I am not worshiping it. I worship the Lord. Therefore there is no reason to believe that Satan faked the cloth. My faith is not in the cloth it's in Christ.
Personally, the main reason I don't believe the Shroud is real is that the image is too clean. If you have a cloth around your body, there's gonna be folds and creases here and there, so when you stretch it all out, the image should be splayed out and distorted somewhat, not a perfect outline. The body isn't a flat surface, so the cloth isn't going to lay flat on it and get a perfect 2-D imprint. A facial cloth when opened up is going to spread the facial image out to look wider. And there'd be creases in the cloth as mentioned, which would distort the image even more.
Interesting points. Thanks for pointing that out. I have heard that before and there may be some truth to it. Just not sure. That may also depend on how the image was formed. Personality, I believe that when Jesus rose again, He emitted a huge amount of radiation of some sort that formed the image. Maybe XRays? They say the negatives look like XRays. That would only happen if they were genuine, not a fake.
But regardless if it's tight or loose, any cloth draped over a body isn't going to be flat. Try it for yourself - put a substance over your face and cover it with a cloth, loosely or tightly. Then stretch out the cloth. The marks from your face will be spread out to make your face look wider than normal. Also the folds and bends of the cloth will create spaces on the cloth where there are no marks, and it will stretch out the image even further. It won't be a clean image. Here, do this - put a cloth over your face, and then mark with your fingers where the cloth touches your ears. Then remove the cloth and stretch it out flat, keeping your fingers where your ears were. If you imagine an imprint of your face on that cloth, you can see that your ears would be really far apart and make your face look freakishly wide.xfrodobagginsx said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:The problem though with the radiation theory, in my mind, is that it still requires the cloth to have been completely flat for such a clean 2-dimensional image to come out, otherwise the normal creases and folds from a cloth covering a 3-dimensional body that has topography will yield a splayed out, distorted image. For example, when you have xrays done at a hospital, they put a flat, rigid plate behind the area of your body that is being imaged, and that plate is what picks up the xrays that go through your body. The plate has to be flat so you can get an image with clean outlines and normal shapes. It would have to be the same for the cloth, I would think, unless someone has a theory around this. Honestly, I don't see how there could be one.xfrodobagginsx said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:I'm just saying be real careful about such things.xfrodobagginsx said:
Regardless of the shroud is the burial cloth of Christ or not, I am not worshiping it. I worship the Lord. Therefore there is no reason to believe that Satan faked the cloth. My faith is not in the cloth it's in Christ.
Personally, the main reason I don't believe the Shroud is real is that the image is too clean. If you have a cloth around your body, there's gonna be folds and creases here and there, so when you stretch it all out, the image should be splayed out and distorted somewhat, not a perfect outline. The body isn't a flat surface, so the cloth isn't going to lay flat on it and get a perfect 2-D imprint. A facial cloth when opened up is going to spread the facial image out to look wider. And there'd be creases in the cloth as mentioned, which would distort the image even more.
Interesting points. Thanks for pointing that out. I have heard that before and there may be some truth to it. Just not sure. That may also depend on how the image was formed. Personality, I believe that when Jesus rose again, He emitted a huge amount of radiation of some sort that formed the image. Maybe XRays? They say the negatives look like XRays. That would only happen if they were genuine, not a fake.
It depends on how tightly that the cloth was wrapped, the area that the cloth woukd have touched His face would have been quite small, so I am not sure how much that would have factored. If it was wrapped extremely tight, then your theory holds more weight, but if it isn't conformed to the contours of His face, then it would be more of a flat surface for the image to happen. So, it depends on how the cloth conformed to His face also.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:But regardless if it's tight or loose, any cloth draped over a body isn't going to be flat. Try it for yourself - put a substance over your face and cover it with a cloth, loosely or tightly. Then stretch out the cloth. The marks from your face will be spread out to make your face look wider than normal. Also the folds and bends of the cloth will create spaces on the cloth where there are no marks, and it will stretch out the image even further. It won't be a clean image. Here, do this - put a cloth over your face, and then mark with your fingers where the cloth touches your ears. Then remove the cloth and stretch it out flat, keeping your fingers where your ears were. If you imagine an imprint of your face on that cloth, you can see that your ears would be really far apart and make your face look freakishly wide.xfrodobagginsx said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:The problem though with the radiation theory, in my mind, is that it still requires the cloth to have been completely flat for such a clean 2-dimensional image to come out, otherwise the normal creases and folds from a cloth covering a 3-dimensional body that has topography will yield a splayed out, distorted image. For example, when you have xrays done at a hospital, they put a flat, rigid plate behind the area of your body that is being imaged, and that plate is what picks up the xrays that go through your body. The plate has to be flat so you can get an image with clean outlines and normal shapes. It would have to be the same for the cloth, I would think, unless someone has a theory around this. Honestly, I don't see how there could be one.xfrodobagginsx said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:I'm just saying be real careful about such things.xfrodobagginsx said:
Regardless of the shroud is the burial cloth of Christ or not, I am not worshiping it. I worship the Lord. Therefore there is no reason to believe that Satan faked the cloth. My faith is not in the cloth it's in Christ.
Personally, the main reason I don't believe the Shroud is real is that the image is too clean. If you have a cloth around your body, there's gonna be folds and creases here and there, so when you stretch it all out, the image should be splayed out and distorted somewhat, not a perfect outline. The body isn't a flat surface, so the cloth isn't going to lay flat on it and get a perfect 2-D imprint. A facial cloth when opened up is going to spread the facial image out to look wider. And there'd be creases in the cloth as mentioned, which would distort the image even more.
Interesting points. Thanks for pointing that out. I have heard that before and there may be some truth to it. Just not sure. That may also depend on how the image was formed. Personality, I believe that when Jesus rose again, He emitted a huge amount of radiation of some sort that formed the image. Maybe XRays? They say the negatives look like XRays. That would only happen if they were genuine, not a fake.
It depends on how tightly that the cloth was wrapped, the area that the cloth woukd have touched His face would have been quite small, so I am not sure how much that would have factored. If it was wrapped extremely tight, then your theory holds more weight, but if it isn't conformed to the contours of His face, then it would be more of a flat surface for the image to happen. So, it depends on how the cloth conformed to His face also.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
But regardless if it's tight or loose, any cloth draped over a body isn't going to be flat. Try it for yourself - put a substance over your face and cover it with a cloth, loosely or tightly. Then stretch out the cloth. The marks from your face will be spread out to make your face look wider than normal. Also the folds and bends of the cloth will create spaces on the cloth where there are no marks, and it will stretch out the image even further. It won't be a clean image. Here, do this - put a cloth over your face, and then mark with your fingers where the cloth touches your ears. Then remove the cloth and stretch it out flat, keeping your fingers where your ears were. If you imagine an imprint of your face on that cloth, you can see that your ears would be really far apart and make your face look freakishly wide.
Wow. So we are to believe in the shroud's authenticity because of the logic and reasoning behind the blood marks, scourge marks, nail location in the wrists, superficial discoloration of the fibrils, the herringbone stitching, pollen spores, the historical dating, etc.... but the facts and logical reasoning that line up against it's autheticism - "Oh, that's just too much 'scientism'. It should be disregarded - it's about faith!"Realitybites said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
But regardless if it's tight or loose, any cloth draped over a body isn't going to be flat. Try it for yourself - put a substance over your face and cover it with a cloth, loosely or tightly. Then stretch out the cloth. The marks from your face will be spread out to make your face look wider than normal. Also the folds and bends of the cloth will create spaces on the cloth where there are no marks, and it will stretch out the image even further. It won't be a clean image. Here, do this - put a cloth over your face, and then mark with your fingers where the cloth touches your ears. Then remove the cloth and stretch it out flat, keeping your fingers where your ears were. If you imagine an imprint of your face on that cloth, you can see that your ears would be really far apart and make your face look freakishly wide.
You're using this logic to try and dismiss why an image ostensibly made by God in a supernatural way in the process of supernaturally raising Jesus from the dead isn't authentic?
Too much scientism for my faith there. But since you believe in textual criticism of the Bible, that isn't shocking I guess.
Oldbear83 said:
See also Acts 16:30-34
"He then brought them out and asked, "Sirs, what must I do to be saved?"
"They replied, "Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be savedyou and your household." Then they spoke the word of the Lord to him and to all the others in his house. At that hour of the night the jailer took them and washed their wounds; then immediately he and all his household were baptized. The jailer brought them into his house and set a meal before them; he was filled with joy because he had come to believe in Godhe and his whole household."
See how belief led to Salvation, yet water baptism was an immediate action.
Realitybites said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
But regardless if it's tight or loose, any cloth draped over a body isn't going to be flat. Try it for yourself - put a substance over your face and cover it with a cloth, loosely or tightly. Then stretch out the cloth. The marks from your face will be spread out to make your face look wider than normal. Also the folds and bends of the cloth will create spaces on the cloth where there are no marks, and it will stretch out the image even further. It won't be a clean image. Here, do this - put a cloth over your face, and then mark with your fingers where the cloth touches your ears. Then remove the cloth and stretch it out flat, keeping your fingers where your ears were. If you imagine an imprint of your face on that cloth, you can see that your ears would be really far apart and make your face look freakishly wide.
You're using this logic to try and dismiss why an image ostensibly made by God in a supernatural way in the process of supernaturally raising Jesus from the dead isn't authentic?
Too much scientism for my faith there. But since you believe in textual criticism of the Bible, that isn't shocking I guess.
Brother, I don't think it's a good idea to entertain this sort of thing. Firstly, we don't know for sure if this really is the burial cloth of Jesus. Secondly, we shouldn't fix an image of Jesus' earthly physical appearance in our minds. There's probably a reason God didn't tell us anything about what Jesus looked like in Scripture. Besides, Jesus' appearance has changed since he was in his earthly form. Thirdly, Artificial Intelligence is man's humanistic goal to make something in man's own image. God created us in His image, man created AI in his own image... and AI is creating an image of God? Something really not right about that. Be really wary of AI, it really smacks of a new Tower of Babel, and a conduit through which the Beast system in Revelation comes.xfrodobagginsx said:
AI image of Christ based on the Shroud Of Turin
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Brother, I don't think it's a good idea to entertain this sort of thing. Firstly, we don't know for sure if this really is the burial cloth of Jesus. Secondly, we shouldn't fix an image of Jesus' earthly physical appearance in our minds. There's probably a reason God didn't tell us anything about what Jesus looked like in Scripture. Besides, Jesus' appearance has changed since he was in his earthly form. Thirdly, Artificial Intelligence is man's humanistic goal to make something in man's own image. God created us in His image, man created AI in his own image... and AI is creating an image of God? Something really not right about that. Be really wary of AI, it really smacks of a new Tower of Babel, and a conduit through which the Beast system in Revelation comes.xfrodobagginsx said:
AI image of Christ based on the Shroud Of Turin
Once again, you are wrong. Just as Jesus won his merit by undergoing his passion and crucifixion, and then rising from the dead, we on earth gain the merits in this treasury in our suffering and works.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
You can deny it all you want; throughout church history the Roman Catholic Church has always talked about purgatory in a temporal sense. Even if you deny this, how is that even relevant? The issue that the suffering in purgatory can be made less in some sense by obtaining merit from another departed person still remains. It's still completely unsupported biblically, and just sounds completely made up.
This is a misunderstanding again on your behalf.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
The Roman Catholic Church is clearly not protected from error. As I've repeatedly brought up, their councils have anathematized previous councils. They've introduced anathemas against that which was the prevailing, universal belief of the early church, like which books were in canon and the rejection of icon veneration. The most obvious and egregious example is the dogmas of Mary - they are completely unbiblical, are NOT based on the teachings of the original apostles and the early church, and are completely idolatrous and heretical. The psalms of Mary by St. Bonaventure is a CLEAR form of idolatry, heresy, and worship of Mary, and those psalms were officially declared by the RCC to be without error. It's obvious to everyone who read them to be blatant heresy and idolatry. Same with the Fatima message and The Glories of Mary. Even those here in this thread who can't stand me have admitted as much, even when it pains them to agree with me. That's how obvious it is.
Oh, I am awake. It is you that is blinded by your bias. You have been taught that your version of Christianity, which may only be a couple hundred years old, is correct. In actuality, it is a far deviation from the real truth that was 15 centuries before Luther, Calvin, et al, abandoned TRUE Christianity of the Catholic Church. You want to twist history to your desire and refuse to accept the reality of many doctrines that have been taught since the beginning of the Church - Baptismal Regeneration, Eucharist, etc.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
You can't admit it, because you're in a cult mindset. Your belief that the RCC is protected from error is a circular form of reasoning. Whatever teaching they produce, you followers believe to be without error, because the Church tells you they don't teach errors. There's only one way out of this cultish mindset - decide for yourself that you will seek what is TRUE, instead of what preserves the status quo of Roman Catholicism. What you're doing - with ALL your replies to me - is just a defense mechanism. Please - WAKE UP.
This is just your opinion. We're all entitled to have one. I just happen to completely disagree with yours on this topic. Some people need visual images to help them meditate on the scriptures. Why do you think churches have stained-glass windows? Originally when most of the world was illiterate, they could focus on them because the knew the stories that we're read to them at mass.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Brother, I don't think it's a good idea to entertain this sort of thing. Firstly, we don't know for sure if this really is the burial cloth of Jesus. Secondly, we shouldn't fix an image of Jesus' earthly physical appearance in our minds. There's probably a reason God didn't tell us anything about what Jesus looked like in Scripture. Besides, Jesus' appearance has changed since he was in his earthly form. Thirdly, Artificial Intelligence is man's humanistic goal to make something in man's own image. God created us in His image, man created AI in his own image... and AI is creating an image of God? Something really not right about that. Be really wary of AI, it really smacks of a new Tower of Babel, and a conduit through which the Beast system in Revelation comes.
Absolutely nowhere in Scripture is there the idea that we can withdraw from a "treasury of merit" the merits of others and apply it to ourselves, or deposit our merit for others to claim. Every verse you reference doesn't say anything of the sort. As you always do, you're reading all of this into bible verse in order to come out with the belief that you want.Coke Bear said:Once again, you are wrong. Just as Jesus won his merit by undergoing his passion and crucifixion, and then rising from the dead, we on earth gain the merits in this treasury in our suffering and works.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
You can deny it all you want; throughout church history the Roman Catholic Church has always talked about purgatory in a temporal sense. Even if you deny this, how is that even relevant? The issue that the suffering in purgatory can be made less in some sense by obtaining merit from another departed person still remains. It's still completely unsupported biblically, and just sounds completely made up.
As mentioned in a previous post, St. Paul tells us, "I make up for what is lacking in the suffering of Christ." - Col. 1:24
He also tells us in 1 Cor 12 that we are ALL part of the Mystical body of Christ, specifically in verse 26: "And whether one member suffer, all the members suffer with it; or one member be honoured, all the members rejoice with it."
We have an intrinsic unity that we possess by virtue of grace.
St Peter (2 Pet 1:4) tells us that "We are partakers in the divine nature".
Romans 2:6 - "For [God] will reward every man according to his works..."
It that time, the word for reward and merit were interchangeable.
God doesn't need my help saving anyone. He can do it all on his own. But he didn't choose to do it like that. Jesus could have fed the 5000 by snapping his finger, but he chose to allow those around him to help. Just like me allowing my kids when they were younger to help me clean up. It was faster for me to do it, but they received grace by helping me. God wants us to be part of others salvation.
After all, Paul says in 1 Cor 9:21:
"I have become all things to all people so that by all possible means I might save some."
God stores up our works in heaven that can be applied to us or others Matt 6:20:21 "But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moths and vermin do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal. 21 For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also."
The books of the canon, icon veneration, and the dogmas of Mary are all declared as infallible teaching. For reasons already explained and proven, this clearly shows the Roman Catholic Church is not without error. No misunderstanding there. I don't even know what your point that "the entire council is not infallible" is even supposed to be refuting. In fact, it's supporting my whole point.Quote:This is a misunderstanding again on your behalf.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
The Roman Catholic Church is clearly not protected from error. As I've repeatedly brought up, their councils have anathematized previous councils. They've introduced anathemas against that which was the prevailing, universal belief of the early church, like which books were in canon and the rejection of icon veneration. The most obvious and egregious example is the dogmas of Mary - they are completely unbiblical, are NOT based on the teachings of the original apostles and the early church, and are completely idolatrous and heretical. The psalms of Mary by St. Bonaventure is a CLEAR form of idolatry, heresy, and worship of Mary, and those psalms were officially declared by the RCC to be without error. It's obvious to everyone who read them to be blatant heresy and idolatry. Same with the Fatima message and The Glories of Mary. Even those here in this thread who can't stand me have admitted as much, even when it pains them to agree with me. That's how obvious it is.
The Church views those pronouncements made by the councils (and ratified by the pope) that are declared infallible teachings, along with any infallible declarations made by a pope individually (extremely rare), as infallible. The entire council is not infallible.
Virtually everyone sees through this lie.Coke Bear said:
The main messages of Fatima are to pray, repent, and convert. The messages emphasis the Blessed Trinity, the Eucharist, Penance, the Rosary, and Sacrifices for conversion of sinners. No where does it mention that we should worship Mary as God.
The psalms of Mary by St. Bonaventure, (which I've never heard of before today, but thank you, they are beautiful) are a private devotion that is not required by the Church. They are a collection of 150 psalms that are express devotion to Mary. They were written in the 1200's in a different time and I a different language with affectionate language that one might use for a beloved spouse or parent. Yes, they may seem strange for modern-day protestant ears like yours. But there is nothing heretical in them. Every single psalm ends with "Glory be to the Father". Once again, may one day you finally realize that that Mary's glory exists only because of her divine Son.Oh, I am awake. It is you that is blinded by your bias. You have been taught that your version of Christianity, which may only be a couple hundred years old, is correct. In actuality, it is a far deviation from the real truth that was 15 centuries before Luther, Calvin, et al, abandoned TRUE Christianity of the Catholic Church. You want to twist history to your desire and refuse to accept the reality of many doctrines that have been taught since the beginning of the Church - Baptismal Regeneration, Eucharist, etc.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
You can't admit it, because you're in a cult mindset. Your belief that the RCC is protected from error is a circular form of reasoning. Whatever teaching they produce, you followers believe to be without error, because the Church tells you they don't teach errors. There's only one way out of this cultish mindset - decide for yourself that you will seek what is TRUE, instead of what preserves the status quo of Roman Catholicism. What you're doing - with ALL your replies to me - is just a defense mechanism. Please - WAKE UP.
These have biblical and historical references that are irrefutable, but you still cling to YOUR personal interpretation as if it is infallible. Your beliefs spit in the face of what Christ and His Church has always taught. Your beliefs represent an exceedingly superficial knowledge of the NT based of a 20th century view with no link and understanding of the OT and NO authority to determine what is correct.
I don't use, or believe anything AI. But this is a fantastic video that overlays the face of the Veil of Manopello (aka Veil of Veronica, probably the Mandylion, and the handkerchief/facecloth of John's Gospel) over the face on the Shroud of Turin.xfrodobagginsx said:
Check that image of the shroud out. Did anyone see the AI images?
Quote:
Once again, you are wrong. Just as Jesus won his merit by undergoing his passion and crucifixion, and then rising from the dead, we on earth gain the merits in this treasury in our suffering and works.
Realitybites said:I don't use, or believe anything AI. But this is a fantastic video that overlays the face of the Veil of Manopello (aka Veil of Veronica, probably the Mandylion, and the handkerchief/facecloth of John's Gospel) over the face on the Shroud of Turin.xfrodobagginsx said:
Check that image of the shroud out. Did anyone see the AI images?
You've got to be kidding. That clearly is a drawing, and not a very good one, either. And it doesn't look anything like what's on the Shroud.Realitybites said:I don't use, or believe anything AI. But this is a fantastic video that overlays the face of the Veil of Manopello (aka Veil of Veronica, probably the Mandylion, and the handkerchief/facecloth of John's Gospel) over the face on the Shroud of Turin.xfrodobagginsx said:
Check that image of the shroud out. Did anyone see the AI images?