

Alan Adler, there is true blood on the Shroud. John Heller, a chemist from Yale University, and blood expert Dr. Some people believe the Shroud to be a forgery, but it must be asked, how could a forger create a photographic negative image 500 years before the invention of a camera? Yet again the miraculous nature of the Shroud is present. Pierre Barbet, the wounds appear to be opposite the rest of the image: “the images of the wounds are positive while all of the rest is negative” (A Doctor at Calvary, p. The flip-flop indicates that the Shroud was designed to be a photographic negative. This photograph showed up positive instead of negative.

It basically appeared to be a photographic positive! Negative plates just give negative images, but not the Shroud photograph. But when he looked at the photographic negatives, the image was incredibly clear for the first time ever. He did not expect to see much of anything, for the normal image is not very clear to the naked eye. On May 28th of 1898, photographer Secundo Pia snapped the first images of the Shroud and went to develop them as negatives. The Shroud image displays unbelievable photographic qualities. All of the evidence suggests that the Shroud of Turin is authentic. The Shroud matches the story of the death and burial of Jesus with the discoveries of real blood and Jerusalem flowers on the image as well. Such qualities are impossible to recreate, even with the incredible advancements of modern science.

The Shroud has three-dimensional properties, photographic negative properties, and x-ray qualities. This is because it has properties that are unexplainable by modern science. The cloth has not been ignored by science, but in fact is one of the most studied scientific objects in the world. This powerful event produced massive amounts of light, heat, and radiation to come out of Christ's body which scorched an image of himself onto the cloth. The image on the cloth, according to Christians, miraculously appeared when Christ came back to life on Easter Sunday. The Shroud of Turin purports to the be burial cloth of Jesus Christ, for the cloth has a crucified man mysteriously imprinted on it.
