An inscription in marble from the 17th century describes this
Eucharistic miracle which occurred at Lanciano in 750 at the Church of
St. Francis. “A monastic priest doubted whether the Body of Our Lord was
truly present in the consecrated Host. He celebrated Mass and when he
said the words of consecration, he saw the host turn into Flesh and the
wine turn into Blood. Everything was
visible to those in attendance. The Flesh is still intact and the Blood
is divided into five unequal parts which together have the exact same
weight as each one does separately.
In 1970, the Archbishop of
Lanciano and the Provincial Superior of the Conventual Franciscans at
Abruzzo, with Rome’s approval, requested Dr. Edward Linoli, director of
the hospital in Arezzo and professor of anatomy, histology, chemistry,
and clinical microscopy, to perform a thorough scientific examination on
the relics of the miracle which had occurred twelve centuries earlier.
On March 4, 1971, the professor presented a detailed report of the
various studies carried out. Here are the basic results:
1. The “miraculous Flesh" is authentic flesh consisting of muscular striated tissue of the myocardium.
2. The “miraculous Blood" is truly blood. The chromatographic analysis indicated this with absolute and indisputable certainty.
3. The immunological study shows with certitude that the flesh and the
blood are human, and the immuno – hematological test allows us to affirm
with complete objectivity and certitude that both belong to the same
blood type AB – the same blood type as that of the man of the Shroud and
the type most characteristic of Middle Eastern populations.
4.
The proteins contained in the blood have the normal distribution, in
the identical percentage as that of the serous-proteic chart for normal
fresh blood.
5. No histological dissection has revealed any
trace of salt infiltrations or preservative substances used in antiquity
for the purpose of embalming. Professor Linoli also discarded the
hypothesis of a hoax carried out in past centuries. This report was
published in The Sclavo Notebooks in Diagnostics (Collection #3, 1971)
and aroused great interest in the scientific world. Also, in 1973, the
chief Advisory Board of the World Health Organization appointed a
scientific commission to corroborate Linoli’s findings. Their work
lasted 15 months and included 500 tests. It was verified that the
fragments taken from Lanciano could in no way be likened to embalmed
tissue. As to the nature of the fragment of flesh, the commission
declared it to be living tissue because it responded rapidly to all the
clinical reactions distinctive of living beings. Their reply fully
corroborated Professor Linoli’s conclusions. In the extract summarizing
the scientific work of the Medical Commission of the WHO and the UN,
published in Dec. 1976 in New York and Geneva, declared that science,
aware of its limits, has come to a halt, face to face with the
impossibility of giving an explanation.
The Flesh and the
Blood of Lanciano therefore are just the same as they would be if they
had been drawn that very day from a living being.
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