This book tells of the scientific investigation led by Australian lawyer Ron Tesoriero, of the Eucharistic Miracle of Buenos Aires of 1996 that happened under the watch of Pope Francis.
When a Communion host which is bread, bleeds and become living human heart, it is not just a ‘wow’ moment. It is a traumatic day for Science. Why traumatic? Because for the first time ever life has come into existence from inert non-living matter.
“It will make us Scientists rethink all our concepts …”
“The book contains a convincing argument in favour of a Creative Agency and makes Darwinian evolution an inadequate explanation of how the world and its inhabitants came to be.”
“You have given us the information we need to deal with the world’s most important unanswerable question.”Dr. Robert Lawrence, Forensic Pathologist of San Francisco, son of the famous Nobel Prize winning scientist Ernest Lawrence who invented the Cyclotron which split the atom and started the nuclear age.Part memoir, part spiritual and scrupulously scientific, My Human Heart, Where Science and Faith Collide, is a compelling narrative of an investigation with monumental consequences for believers, atheists and everyone in between. Does God exist? What is the origin of life? Can life suddenly come into being from nothing? Can bread spontaneously become living human heart tissue? Does this scientific evidence bury Darwin once and for all?
Even if you remain sceptical regarding the miraculous, Heaven and an afterlife, this powerful true story is set to shake up our considerations on faith, science, evolution and our very existence promising deep insights into the fascinating dynamic between the human and the Divine.
Ron Tesoriero, although a very successful lawyer, through a series of unusual events spent years researching and tabulating the discovery, among many other things, of the sample of holy communion host which - following an intensive investigation by top scientist, Professor Zugibe in the USA - was declared to be a section of the muscle of the left ventricle of the human heart, alive and in agony.