Re: Pope - near miss ...
- From: Pope Pompous XVIII <knocking@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 29 Mar 2009 23:03:59 +0100
Gods of Europe (18+5) laid this down on his screen :
"Pope Pompous XVIII" <knocking@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:mn.ed5a7d93df4410a9.63262@xxxxxxxxxxxxxGods of Europe (18+5) wrote :"Pope Pompous XVIII" <knocking@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:mn.ed3c7d939428b3fe.63262@xxxxxxxxxxxxxBest team in the world explained :"WTH" <harvestthis@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:mKPzl.22106$9a.2041@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx"Blackmore" <ghlll> wrote in message news:3_idndUwb-VLXlLUnZ2dnUVZ8vSWnZ2d@xxxxxxxxx
"Mozzer" <mozzer.mozzer@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:gqofai$f3h$1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
"Gods of Europe (18+5)" <lol@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:00183bd9$0$2069$c3e8da3@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
"Mozzer" <mozzer.mozzer@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:gqoeo0$abm$1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
"Gods of Europe (18+5)" <lol@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:00182a36$0$2057$c3e8da3@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Timmy,
I don't recall seeing an answer to this..
Who put the brown wide eyes on the butterfly's wings? (c) James.
I can't see butterflies being smart enough to think that's what they
needed to be hard to spot for predators, did their cells subconsciously
form themselves in this way by fluke?
I think you'll find an answer to my question is more pressing than
yours -
answer this and it might open the floodgates? Perhaps try some peyote or
god's flesh to help you on the way - good luck!
Regards
Ted
Just Google, that's why the internet was invented,
There are numerous academic explanations for it. For example
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/fulltext/61006930/PDFSTART
This is a scientific document that fails to address the fundamental
questions.
I wish I could study and assimilate 11 page scientific journals in 5
minutes, are you sure it fails to address the question?
I am still waiting for a sensible answer.
Like a big bearded man put eyes on butterflys wings?
Who said he had a beard? You making things up?
Are you suggesting he gets up in a disguise before anyone does a painting of him? You crazy ***...
WTH
LOL
Timmy, if I may, since it appears you ask all the questions, and I never get to ask them, or at least have the few I ask, answered. So humbly I put to you this question once more, since we are on the topic of bearded divinities: how *and why* did the image of a crucified man come to appear *in negative* on a linen cloth that is at least 700 years old? Neither you, nor WTH, nor Jesper, nor Mozzer, nor any other critic of Christianity has answered this question, despite my having asked it nearly three years ago. To me that is the height of rudeness, especially given your insistence that I answer all of your questions.
Please, give it your best shot. For your convenience I provide you with a link to the original and negative image, side by side: on the left is the face on the cloth as it appears to the naked eye; on the right, the face on the cloth as it appears on a photographic negative (the first time this was seen was in 1898, by Italian lawyer/amateur photographer Socondo Pia). As you can see with your own eyes, the negative image on the right is in fact a positive image, which can only mean one thing: the original is a negative. So how? And why? Please answer this question. It is the only question I ask you to do me the courtesy of a sincere and truthful answer.
http://shroudencounter.com/bodyimages/posnegface.jpg
Da Vinci's image
Even da Vinci could not paint an image of a crucified man blood first.
Do you realise there is no image on the Shroud under those areas where there is blood, suggesting the image was imprinted on the cloth at some point after the blood? What kind of genius would paint the blood first, and then the image? And why would he paint real blood on the shroud and then go to the trouble of painting the image in negative? Seriously Ted - WHY?????
There is only one conclusion possible.
it is a shroud that was wrapped around one of the hundreds crucified by the romans?
Possibly, though I imagine very few of the hundreds crucified by the Romans wore a crown of thorns.
--
+ His Holiness Pope Pompous XVIII
"The Church is a perpetually defeated thing that always survives her conquerors" - Hilaire Belloc
.
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