Lifestyle
Miracles! Mystery! An AI Jesus! How a new exhibit near Disneyland wants to lure young Christians
On the second floor of a cultural center at Christ Cathedral in Orange County, an AI-rendered depiction of Jesus, calm and smiling, fills one side of the room. Breaking a piece of flatbread in two, he passes it to the 12 similarly enlarged men projected on all four walls around him. On the ground are images of heaping plates of food â roast lamb, vegetables, olives and dips.
âTake and eat,â the AI Jesus says. âThis is my body.â
In the center of the room, real-life visitors arrayed on 26 swivel chairs turn their heads back and forth to take in the supersized Last Supper occurring all around them. Already, they have been plunged into the sea of Galilee watching as Jesus walked on water and witnessed his transfiguration on a mountain top. It was all part of whatâs being touted as âa museum unlike any other, where faith and forensics meet.â
Visitors watch a 360-degree, AI-rendered video depicting the life of Jesus as told in the Gospels at the opening of the Shroud of Turin Experience at Christ Cathedral.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Located five miles from Disneyland on the campus that once housed televangelist Robert Schullerâs Crystal Cathedral Ministries, the Shroud of Turin Experience is Orange Countyâs newest tourist attraction with a Christian twist. The 10,000-square-foot exhibit, which opened to the public last week, uses digital projection, artificial intelligence and special effects to introduce visitors to the life of Jesus as depicted in the Gospels with a focus on the mysterious linen burial cloth that believers say wrapped his body after the crucifixion.
âItâs a little Disney-esque, but we really want you to feel like you are in these scenes,â said Pat Powers, a financial adviser who helped raise money for the exhibit. âWe want the whole experience to be visually overwhelming.â
Powered by technological advances and a consumer desire for in-person connection, immersive experiences are reinvigorating the way businesses and organizations connect with new audiences and the Catholic Church has taken note. From the viral success of Van Gogh: The Immersive Experience which arrived in L.A. in 2021 to the 360-degree entertainment at the Sphere in Las Vegas, young people in particular are seeking new and dynamic ways of interacting with their entertainment. Now, as the Catholic Church seeks to connect with a new generation of Christians who may be unfamiliar with the Biblical Jesus and the mystery of the shroud, religious and lay leaders are exploring digitally enhanced ways of bringing people to faith.
An interactive screen at the Shroud of Turin Experience allows guests to zoom in on details of the shroud of Turin, a mysterious linen cloth which some believe covered Jesus after his death.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
âWe want to speak to people the way they are used to being spoken to today and in a way they can absorb,â Powers said.
Organizers said the desire to outfit the exhibit with digital bells and whistles came directly from the top. The Diocese of Orange only agreed to sign off on the privately funded project after organizers promised it would offer interactive elements beyond text and images.
âI said no static pictures, too boring,â said Bishop Timothy Freyer, auxiliary bishop of the diocese. âPosters on the walls wasnât going to do it.â
Now, signs around the 34-acre Christ Cathedral campus where the Diocese of Orange is located advertise âThe Shroud of Turin Experienceâ as if it were a summer blockbuster: âDiscover the blood. Uncover the mystery. Encounter the light.â
Roughly 14 feet long and three feet wide, the shroud of Turin is one of the most scientifically studied and contested religious objects in the world â a holy relic to some and a medieval forgery to others. Scarred by burn marks and water stains, the narrow sheet of linen features hundreds of blood stains consistent with the wounds Jesus suffered at the time of his death. Even more mysteriously, it bares the faint image of a bearded man that some Christians believe provides physical evidence of Jesusâ resurrection. The Catholic Church has not taken an official position on the shroudâs veracity, but the exhibitâs organizers find the evidence for its divine provenance convincing and hope others will too.
A bronze statue of Jesus lies in front of an enlarged photo negative image of the face detail on the shroud of Turin.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
âOur position is that the shroud offers evidence of the resurrection, but not proof,â said Nora Creech, a shroud scholar who helped organize the exhibit. âThe goal is to lead people in and let them go on their own journey.â
Visitors will not be able to see the actual shroud of Turin. It hasnât left its long time home of St. John the Baptist Cathedral in Turin, Italy, for centuries. However, with the bishop of Turinâs blessing, organizers were able to procure a high-resolution, full-sized replica. Docents at the exhibit will show visitors how to change their iPhone camera settings to create what looks like a photo negative, making it easier to see the shadowy figure on the cloth.
âKids always think thatâs cool,â said Creech.
The exhibit costs $20 for adults, and organizers say visitors should budget at least 90 minutes to make their way through it. In the first of three immersive rooms, a dizzying 360-degree video introduces guests to the story of Jesusâ life from his baptism to the crucifixion â including that jumbo last supper. At the end of the 20-minute film, a projected rock rolls away from a door leading into a second room designed to look like Jesusâ tomb, complete with a prone figure lying on a stone altar, draped in a white cloth. There guests watch an 18-minute documentary detailing the scientific research on the shroud before moving on to a third âchapelâ room where a video animated by AI shares stories from the Bible of sightings of Jesus after his death.
Patrons view a supersized image of Christ on the cross.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
The second half of the exhibit is more traditional. Guests can examine several instruments of torture that were reportedly used to inflict pain on Jesus, including replicas of the nails used for crucifixion, the crown of thorns that adorned his head, and the double-edged blade of a Roman lance that pierced his side. Interactive features include a kiosk that digitally separates each level of the shroud so visitors can examine just the blood stains, just the burn marks or just the shadowy image. Those who want a really deep dive on the shroud can interact with a virtual Father Spitzer, president of the Magis Center on Reason and Faith and a local expert on the shroud, to hear pre-recorded answers to questions like âWhat evidence suggests a supernatural cause was necessary for the image formulation on the shroudâ and âHow do neutrons explain the shroudâs exceptional resistance to aging and solvents?â
The final room of the exhibit is designed for reflection and includes a life-sized bronze statue of Jesus created by Italian artist Luigi Enzo Matte, according to the dimensions of the image on the shroud.
Although there is a clear religious bent to the entire experience, Creech said the exhibit, expected to remain at Christ Cathedral through at least 2030, is designed to share information on the life of Jesus and the shroud, but not necessarily to convert anyone.
âI think we can convince people that the shroud is the shroud that wrapped the physical body of Jesus,â she said. âBut Jesus stresses the importance of belief. To proclaim that Jesus is our lord and savior is an act of faith that everyone has to take on their own.â
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Promo image with Phil Pritchard, Alzo Slade, and Peter Sagal
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This week, Phil Pritchard, NHL’s Keeper of the Stanley Cup, joins us to about taking the cup jet-skiing and panelists Alonzo Bodden, Adam Burke, and DulcĂ© Sloan beef with the Pope and get misdiagnosed.Â
Lifestyle
Where can I throw a party to feel like a kid again?
I have a âbigâ birthday coming up. Itâs the big 70 (gulp!). Iâd like to throw myself a party, but one that might seem more fit for a 7-year-old than a 70-year-old (except when it comes to the food). I would like for there to be activities or games such as scavenger hunts, escape rooms, billiards, pinball, karaoke, pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey â you name it. But my friends and I also appreciate gourmet-quality food like the stuff thatâs served at Providence, Crustacean and MĂ©lisse. Is there any way to combine all of that into a party for 20-30 people? â Marla Levine
Looking for things to do in L.A.? Ask us your questions and our expert guides will share highly specific recommendations.
Hereâs what we suggest:
Marla, I love that you want to celebrate your milestone birthday in a playful way that sparks your inner child. Who says you canât run around and play games with your friends just because youâre a âgrown-upâ?
Similar to you, I prefer fun activities over stuffy, formal parties. Iâve celebrated my birthday at a go-kart racing track and a bowling alley. One year, I hosted an adult field day at the park with sack races, water balloons and snow cones, so I have some fun ideas for you. While many of these spots donât offer gourmet-level cuisine â unless you consider chicken tenders and fries fancy â Iâve paired them with nearby restaurants that you can walk to. Depending on your vibe, you can do the activity first then walk to dinner, or vice versa.
One of my favorite adult-only barcades in Los Angeles is EightyTwo in the Arts District. Not only is it nestled between an array of bars, shops and restaurants, it is home to more than 50 vintage pinball and arcade machines. They have all of the classics like âDonkey Kong,â âGalaga,â âMario Bros.,â âMs. Pac-Manâ and âMortal Kombat.â On certain nights, you can catch live DJ sets as well. For a meal, consider the Michelin-recommended restaurant Manuela, which received a stamp of approval from the late Times restaurant critic Jonathan Gold. Tucked inside of the Hauser & Wirth complex, Manuela is a farm-to-table establishment with a variety of modern American bites to choose from. Whatever you do, be sure to order cream biscuits for the table.
An activity that instantly makes me feel like a kid again is singing â OK, more like belting â my favorite song into a microphone while surrounded by loved ones. One of the coolest karaoke spots in L.A. is Break Room 86, a nostalgic speakeasy hidden inside Koreatownâs Line hotel, which has private karaoke rooms, live DJs (and sometimes dancers, including a Michael Jackson impersonator) and an ice cream truck that serves boozy ice cream and Jell-O shots. Times senior food editor Danielle Dorsey says, âEntering the bar feels like youâve stepped through an â80s time machine with vintage arcade games, stacks of box TVs with static-fuzzy screens and tape cassettes decorating the walls.â Break Room 86 doesnât open until 9 p.m., so check out Openaire for a sunset dinner. Led by Michelin-starred chef Josiah Citrin (the same guy behind one of your favorites, MĂ©lisse), the rooftop restaurant offers elevated American fare such as a brick-pressed jidori chicken and grilled branzino â and itâs inside a glorious light-filled greenhouse.
Another spot that would make for an enjoyable birthday celebration is Highland Park Bowl, the oldest functioning bowling alley in L.A. Built in 1927 during the Prohibition era, the venue still has that vintage aesthetic with old pinsetters that serve as chandeliers, a revamped mural from the 1930s and eight refurbished bowling lanes. Thereâs also a billiards room and a full bar (with a tasty cocktail menu that rotates twice a year). When you get hungry, take a quick walk to Checker Hall, a neighborhood bar and restaurant that serves California-Mediterranean food such as skewers, turkish chicken and chicken schnitzel. Actor-comedian Hannah Pilkes told The Times itâs her âfavorite bar in all of L.A.â How she described it: âIt has the best cocktails and it almost feels like youâre in New Orleans when you step inside. It has a beautiful patio overlooking Highland Park. The decor is funky and kitschy yet classy; itâs magical.â Afterward, you can take another short walk to Jeniâs Splendid Ice Creams for a sweet treat (if you donât have a cake).
My colleague Todd Martens, who writes about theme parks and immersive experiences, says itâs difficult to find escape rooms that can accommodate 20 to 30 people, but if you donât mind splitting up and staggering your start times, check out Hatch Escapes near Koreatown. The venue can accommodate about 10 people at a time. Martens wrote about their room called âthe Ladder,â which he describes as a â90-minute interactive movie with puzzles, taking guests through five decades, beginning in the 1950s, in which they will play an exaggerated game of corporate life.â The room âincorporates a wide variety of games, puzzles, as well as film and animation,â he adds. If this theme doesnât spark your interest, there are three other options, including âLab Rat,â which can accommodate 12 people.
You sound like a fun person, so I have a feeling that anything you do will be a good time. I hope that these suggestions are helpful in planning your special day. If you end up visiting any of these spots, please send us a photo. Weâd love to see it. Happy birthday!
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