Ain't No Bones In That Grave
Donald Cantrell
Matthew 28: 5 - 8, Luke 24: 3
I - The Mighty Messenger (Matthew 28: 5)
II - The Missing Man (Matthew 28: 6)
III - The Miraculous Moment (Luke 24: 3, Matthew 28: 8)
IV - The Marvelous Message (Matthew 28: 7)
This sermon contains a fully alliterated outline with sub-points.
Theme: ''The grave of Jesus was boneless, which is why we celebrate it''
Lenin's Body Improves with Age
Russian scientists have developed experimental embalming methods to maintain the look, feel and flexibility of the Soviet Union's founder's body, which is 145 years old today.
For thousands of years humans have used embalming methods to preserve dead bodies. But nothing compares with Russia's 90-year-old experiment to preserve the body of Vladimir Lenin, communist revolutionary and founder of the Soviet Union. Generations of Russian scientists have spent almost a century fine-tuning preservation techniques that have maintained the look, feel and flexibility of Lenin's body. This year Russian officials closed the Lenin Mausoleum in Moscow's Red Square so that scientists could prepare the body for public display again in time for the Soviet leader's 145th birthday anniversary today.
The job of maintaining Lenin's corpse belongs to an institute known in post-Soviet times as the Center for Scientic Research and Teaching Methods in Biochemical Technologies in Moscow. A core group of five to six anatomists, biochemists and surgeons, known as the ''Mausoleum group,'' have primary responsibility for maintaining Lenin's remains.
''They have to substitute occasional parts of skin and flesh with plastics and other materials, so in terms of the original biological matter the body is less and less of what it used to be,'' says Alexei Yurchak, professor of social anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley. ''That makes it dramatically different from everything in the past, such as mummification, where the focus was o ...
Donald Cantrell
Matthew 28: 5 - 8, Luke 24: 3
I - The Mighty Messenger (Matthew 28: 5)
II - The Missing Man (Matthew 28: 6)
III - The Miraculous Moment (Luke 24: 3, Matthew 28: 8)
IV - The Marvelous Message (Matthew 28: 7)
This sermon contains a fully alliterated outline with sub-points.
Theme: ''The grave of Jesus was boneless, which is why we celebrate it''
Lenin's Body Improves with Age
Russian scientists have developed experimental embalming methods to maintain the look, feel and flexibility of the Soviet Union's founder's body, which is 145 years old today.
For thousands of years humans have used embalming methods to preserve dead bodies. But nothing compares with Russia's 90-year-old experiment to preserve the body of Vladimir Lenin, communist revolutionary and founder of the Soviet Union. Generations of Russian scientists have spent almost a century fine-tuning preservation techniques that have maintained the look, feel and flexibility of Lenin's body. This year Russian officials closed the Lenin Mausoleum in Moscow's Red Square so that scientists could prepare the body for public display again in time for the Soviet leader's 145th birthday anniversary today.
The job of maintaining Lenin's corpse belongs to an institute known in post-Soviet times as the Center for Scientic Research and Teaching Methods in Biochemical Technologies in Moscow. A core group of five to six anatomists, biochemists and surgeons, known as the ''Mausoleum group,'' have primary responsibility for maintaining Lenin's remains.
''They have to substitute occasional parts of skin and flesh with plastics and other materials, so in terms of the original biological matter the body is less and less of what it used to be,'' says Alexei Yurchak, professor of social anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley. ''That makes it dramatically different from everything in the past, such as mummification, where the focus was o ...
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