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4/8 Eclipse

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4/8 Eclipse Empty Re: 4/8 Eclipse

Post  Admin Sun 7 Apr 2024 - 21:17

Judaism and the Solar Eclips
The Increasing Threat of Deepfakes and AI Images – And How You Can Spot Them
Elevator Pitches for God
by Rabbi Mordechai Becher
March 4, 2024
What is the deeper meaning behind this natural phenomenon?
Eclipse fever is growing as many people anticipate the “Great American Eclipse” on April 8th 2024. A total solar eclipse will turn day into night across North America in a path from the southwest to the northeast.

Many Jews are even more excited, thanks to being connected historically and spiritually to the upcoming event. Judaism has always had a fascination with astronomy, because of the necessity of that science for computing the Jewish calendar and because it serves as a gateway to getting a glimpse of the wondrous nature of God, as King David wrote in Psalms, the “heavens speak of the honor of God.”1

You may be surprised to find out that there are three craters on the moon named after medieval Rabbis. Zagut, is named after Rabbi Avraham Zaccutto,2 whose astronomical charts were used by Christopher Columbus.

Rabbi Levi,3 is named after Rabbi Levi ben Gershom (Gersonides) a Biblical commentator, philosopher and astronomer. Gersonides is believed to have invented an instrument to measure the azimuth of stars, called Jacob’s Staff,4 and describes it in one of his books.5 He also personally observed a solar eclipse in Portugal on March 3rd 1337.6

Rabbi Levi crater

The crater, Abenezra, is named after the commentator, poet and grammarian, Abraham ibn Ezra.7

Maimonides, the great 12th century Jewish scholar and physician of Cairo, wrote his first book at the age of about 18, on the subject of astronomy and mathematics,8 and the Talmudic Sage, Samuel, was known by the monicker, Samuel of the Moon,9 because of his interest in, and knowledge of astronomy. The ancient astronomical instrument, the astrolabe,10 gets a mention in the Code of Jewish Law,11 in a discussion about the permissibility of its use on the Sabbath, and there is a possible reference to a very early telescope prototype in the Talmud (circa 500 CE). “Rabban Gamliel had a special tube through which he would look and see a distance of two thousand cubits on land, and also determine a corresponding distance of two thousand cubits at sea.”12

The Jewish Calendar
The fascination of Rabbis with astronomy can be attributed, at least in part, to the Jewish calendar. The Bible references the festivals by their dates in the lunar month, but also relates the festivals to the seasons of the solar year. “And God spoke to Moses and Aaron in the land of Egypt, saying, This month shall be to you the beginning of months; it shall be the first month of the year to you.”13 This means that although Judaism uses a lunar calendar, where the beginning of the month is the new moon and the middle of the month a full moon, it adjusts (“intercalates”) the calendar to synchronize both lunar and solar cycles. All this requires knowledge of astronomy and mathematics, both of which take on a religious significance in Jewish thought.14

In addition, the Rabbis of the Talmud encouraged the study of astronomy and the performance of astronomical calculations as being a mitzvah, a religious precept. “Anyone who knows how to calculate astronomical times and constellations and does not do so, the verse says about him: “They do not take notice of the work of God, and they do not see His handiwork” (Isaiah 5:12)…. From where is it derived that there is a mitzvah incumbent upon a person to calculate astronomical seasons and constellations? As it was stated: “And you shall guard and perform, for it is your wisdom and understanding in the eyes of the nations” (Deuteronomy 4:6).15

A Comprehensible Universe
Some explain that the religious duty of performing astronomical calculations is based on these calculations indicate that the world is rational and understandable to the human mind which is a strong argument for a rational and purposeful Creator, who is interested in a relationship with the human being.16 The very fact that the world can be described in logical terms, using mathematical algorithms indicates that the world is not haphazard or random. As Albert Einstein put it in a letter to a friend, “You find it surprising that I think of the comprehensibility of the world… as a miracle or eternal mystery. But surely, a priori, one should expect the world to be chaotic, not to be grasped by thought in any way.”17

The most incomprehensible thing about the universe is its comprehensibility.

The pithy way to paraphrase this is, “The most incomprehensible thing about the universe is its comprehensibility.” Mathematics, deductive logic and the scientific method are incredibly effective in understanding the universe. As the mathematician Morris Kline writes:

A study of mathematics and its contribution to the sciences exposes a deep question. The concepts, the broad ideas, the logical standards and method of reasoning… were fashioned by human beings. Yet with the product of his fallible mind, man has surveyed spaces too vast for his imagination to encompass; he has predicted and shown how to control radio waves which none of our senses can perceive; and he has discovered particles too small to be seen by the most powerful microscope… Some explanation of this marvelous power is called for.18”

So the prediction of the eclipse with complete accuracy and the plotting of its path of visibility are, in the words of the Talmud, a religious precept, a mitzvah, and in the words of Einstein, “a miracle, or eternal mystery.

The total solar eclipse on May 29, 1919 actually proved Einstein’s theory that the mass of objects curves space and hence affects light’s path through space.19 In a famous paper, three scientists, Arthur Eddington, Frank Watson Dyson, and Charles Davidson, concluded, “Thus the results of the expeditions to Sobral and Príncipe can leave little doubt that a deflection of light takes place in the neighborhood of the sun and that it is of the amount demanded by Einstein’s generalized theory of relativity, as attributable to the sun’s gravitational field.”20

Eclipse and the Bible
A possible reference to the phenomenon of the eclipse is found in a famous Biblical passage in Genesis, “God said, ‘Let there be lights in the expanse of the sky to separate day from night; they shall serve as signs for the set times—the days and the years; and they serve as lights in the expanse of the sky to shine upon the earth.’ And it was so. God made the two great lights, the greater light to dominate the day and the lesser light to dominate the night, and the stars.”21 Rashi,22 the Biblical commentor, notes that the verse refers to the sun and moon as “the great luminaries” implying that they are equal in size, yet in the same verse refers to “the greater light” and “the lesser light.”23 We know that although the moon is about 400 times smaller than the sun, it appears to us to be same size because it is also about 400 times closer to the earth, hence its apparent size is the same as the sun, thus enabling a total eclipse of the sun by the moon.24 Given these facts, some suggest that the statement, “the great luminaries” refers to the apparent size of the sun and moon, and the statements “the greater” and “the lesser” refer to the actual sizes of the sun and moon.25



Eclipses have always been somewhat frightening and awe-inspiring. As William Shakespeare wrote, “These late eclipses of the sun and moon portend no good to us.”26 In a similar vein the Talmud states, “The Sages taught: When the sun is eclipsed it is a bad omen for the entire world. To what is this matter comparable? It is comparable to a king of flesh and blood who prepared a feast for his servants and placed a lantern before them to illuminate the hall. He became angry at them and said to his servant: Take the lantern from before them and seat them in darkness.”27

Many commentaries on the Talmud find this statement perplexing. Since an eclipse is a natural and predictable phenomenon, how could it be a “bad omen” or an indication of sin, as the Talmud28 suggests?

One scholar concluded that the Talmud is not referring to an eclipse but rather the phrase in the Talmud “eclipse of the sun” literally, “blemish or affliction of the sun” refers to sunspots.29 Most commentaries reject this approach and understand the Talmud as referring to a solar eclipse. If so, how do they explain the idea that the natural, predictable eclipse is somehow a “bad omen”?

A Bad Omen?
The Maharal of Prague,30 the great 16th century thinker Rabbi Yehuda Loew, maintains that the Sages understood that the phenomenon is natural, but the Talmud is explaining the “reason of the reason,” that is, why God created the orbits in such a way as to produce occasional eclipses. He explains that light symbolizes reality and existence, and darkness symbolizes chaos and illusion. Because God gave humanity freedom of will, He knew that sin would be inevitable and that people would often choose chaos over order, and illusion over reality. He created a system that would remind us regularly that our choices can create darkness, even at times when there should be light, and that our free will choices can create a barrier between us and the Divine light, but can also allow Divine light to be seen here.31

A note of caution; it is extremely dangerous to look directly at the sun at any time, however, usually we instinctively look away because of its brightness. During an eclipse when the moon covers most or all of the sun, the lower brightness makes it easier to look at and it is also more interesting than usual. Care should therefore be taken to use appropriate eye protection, and ideally to only view the eclipse using projection.32

However, make sure you don’t miss this incredible event, something that is linked to the creation of the universe, to the Jewish calendar, to Jewish monotheism, and to Jewish history. Most importantly the eclipse is a demonstration of the power of light and darkness and a reminder of the ultimate power of human free will to obscure light but also to reveal light.

Psalms 19:2
Andersson, L. E.; Whitaker, E. A. (1982). NASA Catalogue of Lunar Nomenclature. NASA RP-1097.
Ibid.
http://www.surveyhistory.org/jacob's_staff1.htm
Feldman, Seymour. The Wars of the Lord (3 volumes). Jewish Publication Society.
A History of Solar Eclipses. By: Bakich, Michael, E., Discover, 02747529, Mar/Apr2024, Vol. 45, Issue 2
For a full discussion of lunar craters named after Jewish scholars, see the article Jews on the Moon by Adina Hershberg on Aish.com - https://aish.com/jews-on-the-moon/
Maamar Haibur - Treatise on the Jewish Calendar (1158) - Astronomy, Halachah, and mathematics clearly and concisely explained.
Babylonian Talmud, Bava Metzia 85b, Rashi ad loc.
https://www.britannica.com/science/astrolabe-instrument
Code of Jewish Law, Orach Chaim 307:17
Babylonian Talmud, Eiruvin 43b, see Rashi ad loc.
Exodus 12:1-2
Mordechai Becher, Gateway to Judaism, Shaar Press, NY, 2007. pp. 81-85
Babylonian Talmud, Shabbat 75a
Hear from Rabbi Dr. Moshe Dovid Tendler OBM
Albert Einstein, Lettres a Maurice Solovine, Paris, Gauthier Villars, 1956, p. 102
Morris Kline, Mathematics and the Physical World, New York, Dover, 1980, ix
David Levy, David Levy’s Guide to Eclipses, Transits and Occultations, Cambridge University Press, NY, 2010. Pp. 19 - 24
A History of Solar Eclipses. By: Bakich, Michael E., Discover, 02747529, Mar/Apr2024, Vol. 45, Issue 2
Genesis 1:14-19
Troyes, France 1040 – 1105.
Rashi ad loc. Based on Talmud Chullin 60b.
https://www.universetoday.com/17109/the-sun-and-the-moon/ see also Reader’s Digest Atlas of the Universe, Reader’s Digest, Sydney, 1974, pp. 82 - 84
Cited by Yaakov Tzvi Mecklenburg (19th Century), Haktav Vehakabbalah, ad loc. He personally rejects this interpretation.
William Shakespeare, King Lear, 1.2.101-102
Babylonian Talmud, Sukkah 29a
Ibid.
Rabbi Yonasan Eybeschutz, Ye’aros Devash 2:12
Rabbi Yehudah Loewe of Prague, Be’er Hagolah, Be’er 6, Chapter 2
For other understandings of the Talmud, see Rabbi Yosef Chaim of Baghdad, Ben Yehoyada, Sukkah ad loc., and Rabbi Zadok Hacohen Rabinowitz of Lublin, Kometz Haminchah, 1:18
For a complete discussion of the danger in direct viewing, appropriate eye protection and projection viewing techniques, see David Levy’s Guide to Eclipses, Transits and Occultations, pp. 36 - 40
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Post  Admin Thu 4 Apr 2024 - 23:15


The 2024 Solar Eclipse and INSANE Prophecy Events Are Coming! – Jim Staley (youtube.com)

This video has some interesting correlations of previous eclipses. No, he doesn't come off as a panic monger. Just pointing out different events in time and correlations to said previous eclipses.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3_mcNX99VaU



The April 8 2024 Eclipse and the 7 cities named Nineveh
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLkxKT65IFc

Gospel Lessons
70.8K subscribers
577,907 views 22 Mar 2024
When I put out my video on whether or not the April 8, 2024 eclipse was a sign of the 2nd coming, I had no idea it would get the kind of response it did, both positive and negative. Some of the comments were that I didn't address some of the events that people feel are significant.



The April 8 2024 Eclipse and the 7 cities named Nineveh
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLkxKT65IFc


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