Is The Rare ‘christmas Star’ Visible This December The Star Of Bethlehem? 21 Dec 2020 ?

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  1. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

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    Is the Rare ‘Christmas Star’

    Visible this December

    The Star of Bethlehem?

    On Dec. 21, 2020

    the planets Jupiter and Saturn

    will appear a tenth of a degree

    apart in the night sky,

    something called

    a “Great Conjunction.”


    20201210211256_ee6e29751e14e2d0b152dfddedd37ecf16a7388024485557d4b4fd7ae6f8efe1.
    Starry night. (photo: RealCG Animation Studio / Shutterstock)
    Hannah Brockhaus/CNAWorldDecember 10, 2020
    ROME —

    The “Great Conjunction” of Jupiter and Saturn taking place this month

    — dubbed the “Christmas Star”

    — is a pretty sight, but it is impossible to know for sure
    if it has any connection to the Star of Bethlehem,
    a Vatican astronomer said.

    On Dec. 21, 2020
    the planets Jupiter and Saturn will appear a tenth of a degree apart
    in the night sky, something called a “Great Conjunction.”

    This conjunction happens approximately every 20 years,
    but this year the two planets will appear the closest
    they have been in almost 400 years.

    To the naked eye, they will look like one, bright star,
    thus earning the nickname the “Christmas Star.”

    Jesuit Br. Guy Consolmagno,
    told CNA that the conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter
    doesn’t have a religious significance,
    but “nonetheless, it is a pretty sight that everyone should have a look at.”
    The Catholic priest is an astronomer and director o
    f the Vatican Observatory, which has research sites
    outside Rome at Castel Gandolfo and in Tucson, Arizona.

    To see the conjunction, he recommended looking
    just after sunset for Jupiter, “the bright ‘star’ low to the west;
    nearby is a fainter ‘star,’ Saturn.”

    All of December, “Jupiter will be creeping closer to Saturn,” he explained.

    “On Dec. 21, 2020
    they’ll be so close together that your naked eye
    won’t be able to tell them apart.”

    Some astronomers have theorized that this conjunction
    of the two bright planets could be what the three “wise men
    from the East” saw in the sky and followed
    , leading them to find the Child Jesus,
    as recounted in St. Matthew’s Gospel.
    “Is this really what the Star of Bethlehem was?”
    Br. Consolmagno asked.

    “No one knows for sure what the star was,
    and until we have a time machine where
    we can go back and interview Matthew
    with a video recorder, no one ever will know for sure!”

    He recalled that the Star of Bethlehem itself
    was not the focus of the account, but at whom the star pointed.

    “The important thing to remember
    is that the Star of Bethlehem is just a small part
    of the infancy narrative in Matthew’s Gospel.

    The point of his story isn’t the star.

    It’s the baby,” he said.

    “Whatever the Magi would have seen ...
    it was something that nobody looking at the sky
    would have noticed, but they did,”
    Br. Consolmagno told the CNA Newsroom podcast
    in December 2019.
    “The shepherds in the fields where it was dark,
    where they didn’t have city lights, they knew the sky.

    What was it the Magi saw that everybody else didn’t see?”
    Br. Consolmagno asked.

    “The Magi are seeing something in the sky
    which is interpreted in terms of astrology.

    Now, astrology is specifically forbidden
    in the Hebrew Scriptures,” he explained.

    “It was being used as a reason to worship the stars
    rather than God, and as a way of denying human freedom.”

    He said that you can download a program on your computer
    which tells you the position of the stars and roll it back
    to April of the year 6 B.C.

    What you will see is “all of the planets rising with the sun.”

    “And our understanding of what the ancients
    thought of astrology is they thought this would be significant,
    but you could only know that it’s happening
    if you’ve calculated it, because the sun is there!

    You can’t actually see the planets,” he said.
    “And this is a relatively rare event, it all fits,”
    he continued. “Is that really what Matthew
    was talking about? I don’t know

    . It’s fun to play with the idea.”

    Is the Rare ‘Christmas Star’ Visible this December the Star of Bethlehem?| National Catholic Register (ncregister.com)
    https://www.ncregister.com/cna/is-t...r-visible-this-december-the-star-of-bethlehem
     

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