A Misconception
The late John Shelby Spong, Episcopal Bishop, was a skeptic. He asked of the Resurrection:
Do bodies dead for 36 hours resuscitate and walk out of graves?
Do these revived bodies have working vocal cords allowing them to speak? Do they have a functioning skeletal system so that they can walk?
And how can such a body walk through walls with locked doors and barred windows?
Clearly, Bishop Spong thought the Christian claim for Resurrection meant a resuscitated corpse. And he did not believe in that.
I don’t either.
But Bishop Spong had no other concept. And I suspect many (or most) Christians share the same misconception.
A resuscitated corpse would simply put Jesus right back in the world.
Flesh and blood again—someday to die again.
Is this what you believe?
Have you ever really thought about it?
This is where the image on the Shroud of Turin becomes a vital witness.
For those who are willing to think about what they believe, the image on the Shroud presents a powerful picture.
The Shroud image records a physical event that left physical forensic evidence.
Jesus did not resuscitate. His body transformed.
It dematerialized in a quantum physics event.
It returned to the spiritual state from which it had come.
The cloth fell through the body, recording x-ray-like images of the bones in the hands and the sockets for the teeth.
A life-sized replica of the Shroud will feature in our Good Friday service two weeks from today.
Light supper at 6:15.
Worship at 7:00.
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