''First will start with this, no one is sour or bitter, its just that everyone on here knows full well what you’re like, you have made your own bed on here, and I suppose so have I''
The second part of your sentence contradicts the first. If it's not personal for you, you would feel no need to lament ''everyone on here knows full well what you’re like,'' as if it's a problem and you are the self-appointed spokesman for ''everyone here.''
Again, sour grapes regardless of your denial and protests.
As for the claimed miracles. Vegetable wafers cannot spontaneously transform into flesh. If it had happened, it would transform science and change how we view the world.
From a Blogger:
''Commentary on contemporary issues of Church and State from a traditional Catholic perspective guided by the teachings of St. Thomas Aquinas.''
Dr Zugibe, is a believer. He is biased toward the supernatural, and Christianity.
I don't have time to do a thorough investigation, but here are some concerns being expressed;
''The Zugibe clip is interesting. He's a good actor. Seems to be pretending this is the first time he sees the sample.
The order of events is different from some other sources along with some details. Elsewhere, the "host" is found on the floor, here, it is found in a candle holder. Interesting that a female "Eucharistic Minister" finds it and then is the one to place it in water.
The chain of custody has holes. They don't show (from what I saw) the actual sample being extracted from the moldy dish. Speaking of mold, I am including some photos I found online of reddish mold. Notice that two of the pics were cultures grown from dirt and a toaster--look pretty similar to what we see here (dirty bread).
Also, I didn't see Dr. Zugibe exclaim that the flesh was alive.'' -
Is Dr. Zugibe the Man that NewChurch Goes to When They Want to Prove the Authenticity of The Obviously Fraudulent and the Seemingly Fraudulent? (chojnowski.me)
My concern is also 'the chain of custody' - what happened between wafers and what appears to be flesh, who had access, what was done, etc. In order to be rigorous, the process has to be repeated without interference or manipulation.