ChatterBank55 mins ago
Was There A Solar Eclipse During The Crucifixion?
46 Answers
This question should be an "old chesnut", to anyone born later than the Renaissance, since thinkers of that time were the first to find a crucial internal contradiction, in the gospel accounts. If it is the first time this has been asked, on Answerbank, I ought to be surprised.
So, in detail, I need to ask whether gospel statement are generic: "the skies darkened", or specific: "the skies grew dark with clouds"; "the sun's disk was obscured" and so on.
So, in detail, I need to ask whether gospel statement are generic: "the skies darkened", or specific: "the skies grew dark with clouds"; "the sun's disk was obscured" and so on.
Answers
I am surprised that v.e. doesnt come out with "No, we know there wasnt" anyway https:// en. wikipedia. org/ wiki/ Crucifixion_ darkness we know there wasnt Patrick Moore used to say not on a yearly basis fifty years ago and that is good enough for me. BUT you can't have an eclipse if there is a full moon - apparently it means the sun/moon has to be in two places at one...
04:21 Fri 26th Aug 2016
-- answer removed --
Hi Mamya,
by extension, the whole Bible becomes "poetic licence", does it not?
I find that problematic. However, you do not strike me as the fundamentalist type, so you can have as many free passes as you want.
The subtext of my question is, I admit, one along the lines of "do you take the bible literally?" and to see how adherents tackle internal contradictions, which would imply an imperfect author: i.e. not God.
by extension, the whole Bible becomes "poetic licence", does it not?
I find that problematic. However, you do not strike me as the fundamentalist type, so you can have as many free passes as you want.
The subtext of my question is, I admit, one along the lines of "do you take the bible literally?" and to see how adherents tackle internal contradictions, which would imply an imperfect author: i.e. not God.
@vetuste 03:21
No worries. And Mamya's attributes have straightened many a morally dubious personage, no doubt.
@vetuste 03:24
Ahh, these things happen. Several times, in fact, so more like -500%, if truth be told. In mitigation, mostly I enter on page "n", in response to some other poster's contribution. Most of GL's threads get turned into such effective anti-religion propoganda that s/he doesn't post to it again, for fear of bumping it back to where it is highly visible again.
No worries. And Mamya's attributes have straightened many a morally dubious personage, no doubt.
@vetuste 03:24
Ahh, these things happen. Several times, in fact, so more like -500%, if truth be told. In mitigation, mostly I enter on page "n", in response to some other poster's contribution. Most of GL's threads get turned into such effective anti-religion propoganda that s/he doesn't post to it again, for fear of bumping it back to where it is highly visible again.
@Old_Geezer
// People's personal description likely embellished with the telling. //
That is the area I am exploring here. It's an impressive embellishment, signifying God's anger at his progeny's demise but there is a problem of timing, or passage of time not accounted for - at least two weeks - if any insistance is placed on an eclipse.
To be fair, I should add I would not have reached the correct answer to this question, unaided, myself as I was ignorant of the crucial fact of the matter.
// People's personal description likely embellished with the telling. //
That is the area I am exploring here. It's an impressive embellishment, signifying God's anger at his progeny's demise but there is a problem of timing, or passage of time not accounted for - at least two weeks - if any insistance is placed on an eclipse.
To be fair, I should add I would not have reached the correct answer to this question, unaided, myself as I was ignorant of the crucial fact of the matter.
@Jackdaw33
// mock and deride you should you how the slightest religious belief. //
Yes, I wish they wouldn't do that as it rather undermines our cause (not that we have one. Much.)
Not that I can claim to be free of guilt, for such behaviour. This time, I'm hoping the thread can stick to looking at the facts.
// mock and deride you should you how the slightest religious belief. //
Yes, I wish they wouldn't do that as it rather undermines our cause (not that we have one. Much.)
Not that I can claim to be free of guilt, for such behaviour. This time, I'm hoping the thread can stick to looking at the facts.
I am surprised that v.e. doesnt come out with "No, we know there wasnt"
anyway
https:/ /en.wik ipedia. org/wik i/Cruci fixion_ darknes s
we know there wasnt
Patrick Moore used to say not on a yearly basis fifty years ago and that is good enough for me. BUT you can't have an eclipse if there is a full moon - apparently it means the sun/moon has to be in two places at one time
so what was previously taken as a checkable fact previously ( 1500 y ago) is now what you call 'generic' - you will notice that it hasnt dented peoples beliefs in any way
anyway
https:/
we know there wasnt
Patrick Moore used to say not on a yearly basis fifty years ago and that is good enough for me. BUT you can't have an eclipse if there is a full moon - apparently it means the sun/moon has to be in two places at one time
so what was previously taken as a checkable fact previously ( 1500 y ago) is now what you call 'generic' - you will notice that it hasnt dented peoples beliefs in any way
Thanks, Peter. BA on its way, for that.
I happened across a page about this chap
https:/ /en.m.w ikipedi a.org/w iki/Gio vanni_P ico_del la_Mira ndola
and the issue got a mention.
Thanks to the page you linked to, I now see it didn't go unquestioned for 1400-odd years and even the Romans had queried it. (Passover always at full moon was the bit I hadn't heard of). The ancients would have been all genned up on their astronomy (if only for purposes of astrology) and could not have let this basic aspect slip by.
I happened across a page about this chap
https:/
and the issue got a mention.
Thanks to the page you linked to, I now see it didn't go unquestioned for 1400-odd years and even the Romans had queried it. (Passover always at full moon was the bit I hadn't heard of). The ancients would have been all genned up on their astronomy (if only for purposes of astrology) and could not have let this basic aspect slip by.
the sky grew dark here yesterday, even though there wasn't an eclipse (or as far as I know a crucifixion) on. Weather's pretty changeable, even in the normally sunny Middle East. I can't even see any reason for dismissing it as an exaggeration: it sounds wholly unremarkable, though it would obviously be memorable to those people attending a friend's execution.
the business of the temple curtain tearing in two is the really implausible bit.
the business of the temple curtain tearing in two is the really implausible bit.
Hypo, I don't know when the crucifixion was, exactly, but this gives a list of eclipses from the year 0000 to 0099, I think. It's a very good site anyway for knowing details about any eclipse in the future or past.
http:// eclipse .gsfc.n asa.gov /SEcat5 /SE0001 -0100.h tml
http://
@murraymints
It would be fair to call it poetic licence because, although "eclipse" now has a highly specific scientific definition, back in the 1st century, it would have been instantly understood to mean "the sun went black… for while". For its intended audience, it was the right word to use.
Indeed, we do not know whether everyone, at that time was a flat earther or whether they had figured out that eclipses were caused by the moon. That, in itself, entails belief in a heliocentric solar system.
It would not be perceived as an inconsitent story if a person, in those times, believed that eclipses were a thing that the sun did, by itself and of course the full moon was present, because it was passover.
@mikey and Cloverjo
Peter's link mentions 39AD. The choice of that year is another debate entirely but the nearest eclipse they could find, visible from Israel was November of that year.
If Passover is somehow dependent on full moon then it is a "moveable feast". The exact date is academic, for the purposes of this thread because the contradiction in question is full moon versus eclipse: - can't have both.
@jno
Good answer. Anything recogniseable as a weather event would not have cut the mustard as a story embellishment. Somewhere well down on Peter's link there was even a suggestion that contemporary audiences would have needed to understand this moon contradiction for the sky darkening to be at all mysterious or supernatural, likewise with sudden weather changes, coming off the sea or sandstorms, coming in off the desert.
It would be fair to call it poetic licence because, although "eclipse" now has a highly specific scientific definition, back in the 1st century, it would have been instantly understood to mean "the sun went black… for while". For its intended audience, it was the right word to use.
Indeed, we do not know whether everyone, at that time was a flat earther or whether they had figured out that eclipses were caused by the moon. That, in itself, entails belief in a heliocentric solar system.
It would not be perceived as an inconsitent story if a person, in those times, believed that eclipses were a thing that the sun did, by itself and of course the full moon was present, because it was passover.
@mikey and Cloverjo
Peter's link mentions 39AD. The choice of that year is another debate entirely but the nearest eclipse they could find, visible from Israel was November of that year.
If Passover is somehow dependent on full moon then it is a "moveable feast". The exact date is academic, for the purposes of this thread because the contradiction in question is full moon versus eclipse: - can't have both.
@jno
Good answer. Anything recogniseable as a weather event would not have cut the mustard as a story embellishment. Somewhere well down on Peter's link there was even a suggestion that contemporary audiences would have needed to understand this moon contradiction for the sky darkening to be at all mysterious or supernatural, likewise with sudden weather changes, coming off the sea or sandstorms, coming in off the desert.
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