The Shroud of Jesus and the Sign John Ingeniously Concealed by Dr. Gilbert Lavoie
With some very up-to-date scholarship (the book was published in 2023), Doctor Gilbert Lavoie explains his investigation of the Shroud of Turin, an object thought to be the burial garment of Jesus Christ. Lavoie brings his experience as a medical doctor to the study of the image. His investigation spans forty years and is a mixture of forensics and biblical theology.
The main focus is on the forensics. As he examined the image, he came to realize that the blood marks on the Shroud were transferred to the cloth when the body was in a supine position. Lavoie goes into great detail and made many experiments to show how the blood marks would lay on a human, three-dimensional face and body. He used volunteers to help with the mapping, discovering that the blood originally flowed while the body was upright on the cross and then came to be on the cloth after the body was taken down and wrapped in the cloth.
But the image on the cloth happened separately and after the blood stains. Underneath the blood clots no discoloration like the image's is found. The coloring is on the surface of the linen fibers and what caused the coloring is unidentifiable. The image has details that show the body was upright when it was imprinted. The long hair hangs down straight and the feet are pointed down. The back is not flattened by laying on a hard surface. Lavoie accounts for the differences by studying the Gospel of John and the theology of the time of Christ.
The Jewish culture did not have graven images, so something like the Shroud would have been a great scandal. Evangelist John reports going into the tomb and seeing the cloth and believing, though he does not describe what he sees on the cloth. Several times earlier in the gospel, Jesus describe how He will be lifted up. Readers naturally assume that means being lifted up on the cross, but Jesus was also lifted up at the Ascension into Heaven, and Lavoie argues that He was lifted up in the tomb as well. The argument is fascinating and detailed and holds together very well.
The book presents a compelling narrative. Lots of pictures of the Shroud and of Lavoie's experiments reinforce what the text tells readers. The book ends with pictures of a full-size sculpture of the body seen on the Shroud. The sculpture was commissioned by Lavoie in the early 2020s.
Recommended--highly for those interested in the Shroud of Turin.








