How many people were crucified in the general area within a few years of the supposed date of crucifixion?
The Great Revolt of 66 AD was put down in 70.
I suppose the answer to your question is "all that the Romans could catch."
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How many people were crucified in the general area within a few years of the supposed date of crucifixion?
you will have to cite chapter and verse on that as i just checked all four crucifixtion accounts and not one mentions two cloths. one talks about strips of linen while the rest just say linen.the bible mentions two cloths in connection with the aftermath of the crucifixion.
i am skeptical about that but you have to ask yourself, what do these cloths proove? what benefit to faith and salvation do these cloths provide?it is my thinking these two cloths are consistent with the new testament story of the crucifixion of jesus christ
Frequent reference in early Christian writings [is made] to the use of linen clothing for the dead.In certain Apocrypha there is a strong insistence on this. These accounts at least give an indication of the mind and outlook of the period in which they were written. In the Acts of John (middle of the second century)... from the account of the burial of John... it is said "We brought a linen cloth and spread it upon him... The Acts of Thomas (third century), relate that the brethren brought beautiful robes and much fair linen. Certain Apocrypha mention that the soul was clad in linen.
check john, the morning of the appearance to mary magdalene.archaeologist wrote:you will have to cite chapter and verse on that as i just checked all four crucifixtion accounts and not one mentions two cloths. one talks about strips of linen while the rest just say linen.the bible mentions two cloths in connection with the aftermath of the crucifixion.
i am skeptical about that but you have to ask yourself, what do these cloths proove? what benefit to faith and salvation do these cloths provide?it is my thinking these two cloths are consistent with the new testament story of the crucifixion of jesus christ
okay i was only looking at the burial.check john, the morning of the appearance to mary magdalene
why would that be significant? no one knows what blood type Jesus had and anything else would just be speculation.if they both have type ab blood on them
this would only prove that it came from that area and not time period.if they both have pollen from a rare plant found only in the area where jesus christ is supposed to have lived and died
sorry but christianity came after Christ. the word Christian means 'like Christ or Christ-like' and you can't have the christian without the man to follow.perhaps the existence of christianity presupposes the existence of jesus christ.
And in 2002, during a restoration of the shroud, they had examined the area from which the samples were cut and had not found any visual evidence of mending.
But then no one else had noticed it, either. It took microscopy to see spliced threads where newer fibers were dyed to match age-yellowed fibers.
archaeologist wrote:okay i was only looking at the burial.check john, the morning of the appearance to mary magdalene
why would that be significant? no one knows what blood type Jesus had and anything else would just be speculation.if they both have type ab blood on them
this would only prove that it came from that area and not time period.if they both have pollen from a rare plant found only in the area where jesus christ is supposed to have lived and died
sorry but christianity came after Christ. the word Christian means 'like Christ or Christ-like' and you can't have the christian without the man to follow.perhaps the existence of christianity presupposes the existence of jesus christ.
that is like the mennonites were existing before menno simons was old
enough to start the sect.
Minimalist wrote:There are plenty of examples of followers without a corporeal god, though.
Um....Yahweh comes to mind. As does Zeus.
thank you, starflower.Starflower wrote:I found this when I googled sudarium
http://www.skepticalspectacle.com/discovery.htm
The same site had a list of all testing done on the shroud
http://www.skepticalspectacle.com/history04.htm
I make no claims, am only submitting info. Hope it is useful to you grunabona246.
oopsthe links are reversed.
Minimalist wrote:hmmm....
And in 2002, during a restoration of the shroud, they had examined the area from which the samples were cut and had not found any visual evidence of mending.
But then no one else had noticed it, either. It took microscopy to see spliced threads where newer fibers were dyed to match age-yellowed fibers.
That seems a tad extreme for the Near East during the Middle Ages,
doesn't it?