The Banner of Resurrection Sunday by Myra Kahn Adams for Town Hall
News Flash: Rabbi Jonathan Cahn asked me to inform Townhall readers about his prophetic movie “The Harbingers of Things to Come.” Watch the trailer, and you’ll want to buy tickets for the May 12 one-night-only showing at theatres throughout the nation.
Author’s Note: Readers can find all previous volumes of this Bible series here. The first 56 volumes are compiled into a book titled “Bible Study For Those Who Don’t Read The Bible.”
“He is not here; he has risen” (Matthew 28:6).
Now is your chance to support Gospel News Network.
We love helping others and believe that’s one of the reasons we are chosen as Ambassadors of the Kingdom, to serve God’s children. We look to the Greatest Commandment as our Powering force.
Thanks for joining us on this glorious Resurrection Day that changed the course of human history.
To help us celebrate, I invited Russ Breault to be my co-writer. Russ is a nationally known speaker, writer, theologian, Shroud of Turin expert, and president of Shroud Encounter, as featured in a new video. He is also a founding board member of SignFromGod.org, our Shroud education ministry that spearheaded the effort resulting in the Museum of the Bible’s exhibition about the Shroud that opened in February and closes on July 31, 2022.
In 2019, Russ and I co-wrote “What Is the Shroud of Turin? Facts & History Everyone Should Know” — a Christianity.com primer found on Google’s first page when Shroud of Turin is searched.
We begin asking, “If the Shroud Could Speak, What Would It Say?”
Every day, but especially on Resurrection Sunday, the Shroud of Turin speaks a universal language conveying personalized messages to those contemplating its meaning. However, before discussing the messages, readers must know that the Shroud of Turin is a linen cloth measuring 14.6 ft by 3.5 ft. Globally, millions of Christians from all denominations believe it to be the authentic burial Shroud of Jesus Christ. Since 1578, the mysterious cloth has resided at the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Turin, Italy — thus the name, “Shroud of Turin.”