It is known that the normal Jewish burial service in the time of Jesus made use of myrrh and aloes, ground into a kind of paste, which impregnated the burial shroud. Vignon showed that this ...
The entire body is then bathed and wrapped in white shrouds. It’s watched over, uninterrupted, until burial. In Jewish tradition, the white garment is meant to mimic the dress of the Jewish High ...
Jewish burial is often called chessed shel emet, a true kindness: Washing a body, purifying it and placing shrouds on the deceased is performed by the living with no ability for repayment.
Italian scientists say they have found evidence that the Shroud of Turin may indeed have been Jesus Christ’s burial cloth, ...
Artificial intelligence has recently been utilized to recreate what some believe to be the face of Jesus Christ, using the Shroud of Turin—a relic that has sparked debate for centuries.