The Turin Shroud cannot be real because the “image of Christ” would be distorted if it had actually been wrapped around the ...
The many works of art across the ages originated in Poland or were brought ... This is supported by the representation of Christ's body in the consecrated host wafer at every service. The cradle ...
They become the Body and Blood of Christ whether one believe it or not ... with the Son and the Holy Spirit, art to your saints true and unfailing light, fullness and content, joy for evermore ...
I think the possibility of this having happened is very remote,” said Cicero Moraes, a Brazilian graphics expert.
Come and see the “burial bed” that Mark (the earliest of the four Gospels) narrated as the exact place where the Body of ...
Reflection on the engraving The Feast of the Dedication of the Lateran Basilica honours the dedication of the Archbasilica of ...
THE Shroud of Turin mystery continues as a bombshell study rules out the theory that the artefact was used as Jesus’ burial ...
A new study challenges the authenticity of the Shroud of Turin, suggesting it never touched Jesus but was created using ...
The building used to be a boat-assembly plant, which made the festivities oddly apt, since tattoos have always thrived on ...
When observing fine works of art, we don’t even touch ... Because we believe that Jesus Christ is truly present in the Eucharist—body, blood soul and divinity—we reserve the Eucharist ...
The Met’s new show about what happens next, “Siena: The Rise of Painting, 1300-1350,” makes clear how astonishing it is that paint, of all things, became the center of Western art.