Slowvehicle
Membership Drive , Co-Ordinator,, Russell's Antin
To play devil's advocate (no pun intended!) the row over the Turin shroud is complicated by the following issues:
- Mixing "genres": Theology versus Science
- Historical issues: there is a belief Jesus never existed hence ipso facto it's a fake
- Faith: those who argue from the stance it is a religious miracle
1. We know such a person existed. He is mentioned by the ancient Jewish historian, Josephus, who can be seen to have been accurate in other respects. He confirms this person was crucified.
More recent history confirms the existence of a Roman governor general named Pontius Pilate, in that part of the world as of that time.
Reality runs contrary to your assertion. How odd that you would naïvely accept the forgery-laden self-serving "work" of Josephus as "evidence", wwhil still trying to cast aspersion on what has been called the "most-scrutinized bit of 14C dating ever".
The Horatio Hornblower novels mention George III of England. Do you, perforce, accept them as evidence that Horatio himself was a real, hisotircal person?
There are two whole threads on the HJ/MJ dance. You really ought to get yourself up to speed.
2. Notwithstanding the above, even if Jesus existed historically, that is not to say he had miraculous powers. Hence, runs the argument, the idea of his image preserved on a cloth, out of the many thousands crucified throughout the ages is absurd. OTOH even if the cloth only dates back to between 900AD and 1200AD, it could be argued to be an astonishing feat for that age to design a cloth that shows a reverse negative of a crucified man when X-Rayed. Why would the hospitalier knights of the crusade have bothered preserving it as a relic.
You are missing the facts of the very nature of the image, the inherent problems with which have been dealt with myriad times in this very thread.
3. Anyone who has visited the British Museum will know 2,000 is a mere five minutes in history when compared to Egyptology artefacts which date back over five thousand years, and even Roman mummies, the Romans consistent in their copying other cultures, including the ancient Greeks and Judeo-Christianity.
There was an Ice Age exhibition with artistic sculptures estimated to be up to 48K years old.
So, the resistance to the idea of the Turin Shroud being "the Face of Jesus" comes from those resistant to religious belief, those who scorn the idea of "miracles" anyway. However, it does not rule out the Turin Shroud could be genuine, especially the paucity of carbon dating tests run on it.
Which camp are you, and why?
You have utterly failed to demonstrate any "paucity" in the 14C dating performed by three independent laboratories.
Not to mention the problems with provenance.
And with the nature of the image itself.
And with silly little bits like historical (AND scriptural) inaccuracies...
I, personally, am in the "camp" of lookin at the actual evidence. Frankie the B says, "Listen up, Y'all."