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1
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- Historical references dating back to the 4th Century give clues to the
Shroud’s existence prior to the Middle Ages and centuries earlier than
C-14 Dating indicates.
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2
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- Declared at the Baths of Trajan Ecumenical Council that the mass could
not be celebrated without having a fair linen cloth on the altar
representing the Shroud.
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3
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- “When they [the deacons] bring up [the linen] they place it on the
altar for the completed representation of the passion so that we may
think of Him on the altar as if He were placed in the sepulchre after
having received the passion. This is why the [two] deacons who spread
the linens on the altar represent the figure of the linen clothes at the
burial.” (Front and back image?)
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4
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- From the sixth century
- Clarification of John 20:3-10
- “Peter ran with John to the tomb and saw the recent imprints of the
dead and risen man on the linens.”
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5
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- 6th century: “The divinely
wrought image which the hands of men did not form”
- 8th century: “The Lord impressed
an image of himself”
- 9th century: “The city of Edessa
in which there was preserved a blood stained image of the Lord, not made
by hands”
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6
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- 10th Century: “A moist secretion
without pigment or painter’s art”
- 10th Century: “He was barely able
to make out an outline”
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7
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- “The splendor has been impressed uniquely by the drops of agony sweat
sprinkled from the face…These are truly the beauties that produced the
coloring of Christ’s imprint, which has been embellished further by the
drops of blood sprinkled from his own side…blood and water there, sweat
and image here.”
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8
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- References to “blood and water” from the side and “sweat and image”
certainly sound like a description of the Shroud we know today.
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9
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- “The story is passed down from the archives of ancient authority that
the Lord prostrated himself with his entire body on the whitest linen,
and so by divine power there was impressed on the linen a most beautiful
imprint of not only the face, but the entire body of the Lord.”
- --English Raconteur, Gervase of Tilbury
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10
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- Described the church of the Blanchernae...
- “Where there was the Shroud in which our Lord had been wrapped, which
every Friday, raised itself upright, so one could see the figure of our
Lord on it.”
- Represented by “The Man of Sorrows” Icon
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11
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- “In April last year, a crusading army, having falsely set out to
liberate the Holy Land, instead laid waste the City of Constantine. During the sack, troops of Venice and
France looted even the Holy Sanctuaries.
The Venetions partitioned the the treasures of gold, silver and
ivory, while the French did the same with the relics of the saints and, most
sacred of all, the linen in which our Lord Jesus Christ was wrapped
after his death and before the resurrection.”
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12
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- Did it just disappear? Or was it kept by the Mysterious Knights Templar
who 200 years later were charged during the French Inquisition with the
heresy of “worshipping” a mysterious image?
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