Thursday, October 20, 2022

VIDEO: "The Mystery Man": Is this what the crucified Jesus looked like?

Thanks to Agent 17 for pointing us in the direction of a video report on "The Mystery Man", a hyper-realistic model, based on the images on the Shroud of Turin, showing how Jesus Christ may have looked following the Crucifixion.

The Shroud, first mentioned in 1354, has baffled scholars through the ages. Many Christians (and some agnostic scientists and scholars) believe the mysterious relic is the bloodstained burial cloth of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus, after his crucifixion. Others call it an elaborate medieval fake.

The Roman Catholic Church takes no position on the genuiness of the Shroud, but has declared it an object worthy of veneration. (See "Do Catholics really worship images?" WWW, 17/10/22.)


Now, people will be able to make up their own minds. After years of research, experts have designed and created  a realistic sculpture, made of latex, silicon and real human hair, based on the Shroud. Here's the video. He who has eyes, let him see. 

  

The impressive creation went on display in Salamanca Cathedral, Spain, last Thursday. It can be seen there until December, after which it is set to go on a worldwide tour, with exhibitions scheduled on five continents. 

The sculpture weighs 165.3 pounds and is 5'10" long... or tall... and shows all the wounds Jesus suffered, including the wound inflicted on Jesus' side by the Holy Lance, the numerous scratches to his body sustained after Pontius Pilate ordered him to be scourged, and the cuts on Jesus' head and Holy Face caused by the Crown of Thorns which Roman soldiers pressed on his brow.

There are some graphic close-ups circulating on the Internet, which Ed. judges too gruesome to show here -- like watching The Passion of the Christ.

Said Most Rev. Jose Luis Retana, the Bishop of Ciudad Rodrigo y de Salamanca, "This morning in this cathedral we are going to be the protagonists of what seems to be a worldwide success." He highlighted "the great opportunity that this exhibition represents for the faith."

The prelate said that the body of the man in the Holy Shroud can represent "the concretion of God's love that becomes flesh in Jesus Christ who dies like a malefactor with a terrible sacrifice for our salvation. There is no greater love in the world."

Further reading: "Behind 'The Mystery Man' and the Shroud of Turin", The Pillar, 17/18/22.

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