Miracle Chapati

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A closeup of the Miracle Chapati. Photo credits, The BBC
A closeup of the Miracle Chapati. Photo credits, The BBC

The Miracle Chapati or Chapati Jesus is a chapati, or flat unleavened bread, roughly eight centimeters in diameter with, what believers claim, is an image of Christ miraculously burnt on it. The chapati was baked by Shella Anthony of Bangalore, India in early September 2002, enshrined in Bangalore, and visited by thousands of believers and curious onlookers.[1]

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[edit] Origin of the Miracle Chapati

The baker of the Miracle Chapati, Shella Anthony, a devout Catholic, baked dozens of chapatis daily. One day in September 2002, she had given her children some to eat. Her daughter refused to eat one, remarking that it was burnt. Anthony was on the verge of discarding it [2], but on inspection Anthony noticed that the burn mark resembled Christ, an opinion confirmed by her daughter and many of her neighbours. She handed it over to her parish priest, George Jacob, who agreed and promptly pronounced it a miracle. It was then put it in a glass case for exhibition. [3]

[edit] Publicity

Over the next few days, nearly 20,000 Christians traveling from as far as Mysore and Chennai went to the central shrine of the Retreat Centre, where the chapati was on display, to pay homage and offer prayers to this piece of bread. Apart from Christians, a number of Hindus and Muslims also visited the Centre to view the chapati. Information on the chapati was broadcast on Indian national television and reported by The Times of India, The Times of London and the British Broadcasting Corporation. [4]

[edit] Believers and skeptics

Many believers point out the strong implications of the likeness being on bread, since bread may be considered a gift of God (an interpretation of II Corinthians 9:10)[5]. Further, many believers do claim to have "different feelings" on witnessing, what they believe is a miracle.[6]

Skeptics counter that the mind often sees what it wishes to, and that the chapati does not actually resemble Jesus any more than it could resemble South America, albeit from a different angle.[7] An argument is also put forth that South Asians are especially prone to blind faith in the supernatural.[8] Furthermore, as there are no contemporary descriptions or likenesses of Jesus known, it is impossible to know what Jesus looks like.

To many believers, it is only logical that a chapati with the likeness of Christ would appear miraculously before a faithful Christian, and not to someone of any other faith. Skeptics use the same point to raise the argument that even though billions of chapatis are baked everyday, it is only someone from the Christian community, which comprises roughly 2.5 % of the population of India according to 2006 estimates, that would notice a likeness and consider it to be that of the Christ.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/2484195.stm
  2. ^ http://edinburghnews.scotsman.com/international.cfm?id=1283232002
  3. ^ http://www.alfredplacechurch.org.uk/sermons/mark8.htm
  4. ^ http://ufoinfo.com/roundup/v07/rnd0747.shtml
  5. ^ http://www.spirithome.com/defcommun.html
  6. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/2484195.stm
  7. ^ http://www.kuznetsov.uklinux.net/holy.php
  8. ^ http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=21374

[edit] External links