A museum dedicated to the Shroud of Turin has opened at the Christ Cathedral campus in Garden Grove, California.
Italian scientists say they have found evidence that the Shroud of Turin may indeed have been Jesus Christ’s burial cloth, countering controversial previous research dating the artefact to medieval ...
For centuries Christians have attributed a first-century date to the Shroud of Turin. Nuclear engineer Robert Rucker says that his latest research on the shroud verifies that. “The Shroud of Turin is ...
The Shroud of Turin is, in a way, a mirror: it shows the beholder whatever they wish to see. For devoted Christians, it’s the holiest of icons: the linen cloth that wrapped Jesus Christ’s crucified ...
The imprint of a human-like figure on the Shroud of Turin may have come from a shallow sculpture and not an actual person, according to a new study that sheds more light on the world’s most studied ...
Viral stories this week reported on a “new” study that points to scientific research confirming the Shroud of Turin, the purported burial cloth of Jesus Christ, does indeed date back 2,000 years, ...
(The Conversation) — Many believe the Shroud of Turin to be the cloth used to bury Jesus after his crucifixion. Scientists have investigated the claim and here’s what they found. (The Conversation) — ...
For centuries, devout Christians have flocked to the Italian city of Turin to pay their respects to one of the most famous relics in the world. The Shroud of Turin is a piece of linen, measuring 14ft ...
The mysterious Shroud of Turin, which is believed by many Christians to have laid atop Jesus Christ’s body after his crucifixion, may be even stranger than we previously thought. In a new study ...
The Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Turin, Italy, houses a fascinating artifact: a massive cloth shroud that bears the shadowy image of a man who appears to have been crucified. Millions of ...