ChatterBank0 min 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
@thread
Unless you have time on your hands, or boundless curiosity, don't read this link.
https:/ /www.br itannic a.com/t opic/ec lipse/A ssyrian
I'm only posting it so I can return to it without googling. If you pull the scroll bar to very nearly the end it is making a point about tiny but cumulative changes in day length and moon orbit which means some computed ancient solar/lunar eclipses can be mis-timed by hours, thus putting predicted ground track thousands of miles out. Cloverjo's link is from NASA and has a column labeled "delta T(seconds)", which I was initially clueless about but could well be just such a correction factor.
Unless you have time on your hands, or boundless curiosity, don't read this link.
https:/
I'm only posting it so I can return to it without googling. If you pull the scroll bar to very nearly the end it is making a point about tiny but cumulative changes in day length and moon orbit which means some computed ancient solar/lunar eclipses can be mis-timed by hours, thus putting predicted ground track thousands of miles out. Cloverjo's link is from NASA and has a column labeled "delta T(seconds)", which I was initially clueless about but could well be just such a correction factor.
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