Can A Jesus Icon Kill?
We cannot resist passing along the following odd story
that was sent to us:
The Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia, removed
an ancient icon depicting Jesus Christ from its display after it was feared that an energy field from the icon caused the
deaths of several staff members.
Professor Boris Sapunov told the London Telegraph he complained
about the effects of the icon for years and sought the removal after he thought the art piece led to the deaths of three or
four people working as facility supervisors.
"It's an inexplicable phenomenon and it started long ago,"
Sapunov said. "Three or four people died of diseases, and the coincidence began to make me wonder. When the seats (of employees)
were moved away all the trouble stopped."
The story quoted the professor as saying that the large
art work was created by several people. He said a middle section, painted by an apprentice, was the part the created the negative
energy field.
Sapunov said the display also caused minor health problems
to other workers, including high blood pressure and general malaise.
He said he first told his story to a Russian newspaper,
the Komsomolskaya Pravda. After that story appeared the museum received complaints from the public.
Not willing to believe a painting depicting the life of
Jesus would cause so much trouble, the museum brought a local doctor, Vyacheslav Gobanov to the facility to do an analysis.
Gobanov said it was his opinion that the icon had a powerful energy field, but it would not cause harm.
Here is where the story gets a bit strange.
"It is a wonderful icon, a very powerful one," Gobanov told
Pravda. "It is not guilty of making people feel bad. It produces the power, which makes the human brain vibrate at a high
frequency. Not every human being can stand that. Most likely the icon was meant for the elite, not for common people."
The doctor then expounded on his theory: "There is no mysticism
about it. Everything can be explained with physics. High frequency signals form the 'biofield' of any living or non-living
object, including icons.
"If someone comes up to it, the icon's radiation sets the
frequency of the brain's radiation. The biofield of an icon helps people find a way out of a trouble; the faithful think it
is a miracle," he said.
The controversy apparently attracted some experimentation
with the icon. Pavel Goskov, a professor from Altay State Technical University, told the London newspaper about several experiments
he conducted with icons, but not necessarily the "killer Jesus" icon.
"We put a glass of water in front of an icon just for 10
minutes," Goskov said. "Then we poured the charged and common water into two bowls filled with wheat grains. The result was
always the same. The wheat was growing a lot better in the charged water.
"According to our research, the Holy Trinity icon is the
most powerful one. Some people say they can even sense its power," Goskov said.
Then there was museum worker Alexandra Kostsova, who said
the whole story seemed to be a lot of bunk.
"Only one of the workers in contact with the icon died,
and she had cancer," Kostsova said.
Source: WorldNetDaily.com
Photo: London Telegraph