Dark5 | The Secret Vatican Time Machine That Photographed Jesus: The Chronovisor @dark5tv | Uploaded 4 months ago | Updated May 12 2024
Presenting one of my favorite time travel legends...
Claims of machines and devices transcending the laws of time are not a novel concept. Such claims are often debunked as hoaxes or urban legends, yet occasionally, one gains a degree of credibility.
In the 1960s and 1970s, Benedictine monk Father Pellegrino Ernetti claimed to be in possession of a device called the Chronovisor, purportedly allowing him to view specific past events.
Ernetti was a highly-regarded figure within the church, as well as an accomplished scholar of music, a scientist, an exorcist, and the holder of various other high-profile positions. Therefore, his followers willingly believed when he announced that he had created the Chronovisor a few years before revealing it.
Ernetti's claims stood out due to the Chronovisor's alleged ability to not only show significant historical scenes but also capture them as holographic, three-dimensional images, offering tangible evidence to skeptics...
Most notably, Ernetti claimed to have used the Chronovisor to capture the crucifixion of Christ, leading to the publication of an Italian article in the early 1970s titled "A Machine That Photographs The Past Has Finally Been Invented."
Furthermore, he asserted having witnessed Cicero's famous speech in 63 BC, the birth of the Roman Empire, the Last Supper, and the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah.
Ernetti's invention suggested the possibility of validating biblical events, challenging the beliefs of atheists and skeptics worldwide.
Presenting one of my favorite time travel legends...
Claims of machines and devices transcending the laws of time are not a novel concept. Such claims are often debunked as hoaxes or urban legends, yet occasionally, one gains a degree of credibility.
In the 1960s and 1970s, Benedictine monk Father Pellegrino Ernetti claimed to be in possession of a device called the Chronovisor, purportedly allowing him to view specific past events.
Ernetti was a highly-regarded figure within the church, as well as an accomplished scholar of music, a scientist, an exorcist, and the holder of various other high-profile positions. Therefore, his followers willingly believed when he announced that he had created the Chronovisor a few years before revealing it.
Ernetti's claims stood out due to the Chronovisor's alleged ability to not only show significant historical scenes but also capture them as holographic, three-dimensional images, offering tangible evidence to skeptics...
Most notably, Ernetti claimed to have used the Chronovisor to capture the crucifixion of Christ, leading to the publication of an Italian article in the early 1970s titled "A Machine That Photographs The Past Has Finally Been Invented."
Furthermore, he asserted having witnessed Cicero's famous speech in 63 BC, the birth of the Roman Empire, the Last Supper, and the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah.
Ernetti's invention suggested the possibility of validating biblical events, challenging the beliefs of atheists and skeptics worldwide.