'What is a blood moon?' and other questions about the upcoming apocalypse
The internet's got end-of-the-world fever: here's what's really happening
Independent (UK) | 8 April 2014
Tetrads, blood moons and the apocalypse:
sometimes it seems that
there’s just too many mystical-sounding buzzwords floating around not to throw up your hands and proclaim the end of days.
At least, this seems to have been the inspiration for
apocalypse-mongerers who have been busy greeting a fairly rare (but
completely foreseeable)
astronomical event as the fulfilment of an ancient prophecy of global
catastrophe.
To explain what’s happening as succinctly as possible: on
the 15th of April you’ll be able to see the first total lunar eclipse in a
series of four (a phenomenon known as a tetrad to astronomers), which will also
happen to coincide with the Jewish festivals of Passover and Sukkot in 2014 and
2015.
Lunar eclipses in general
are sometimes called ‘blood moons’ because the light bouncing off the moon is
refracted through the Earth’s atmosphere giving it a coppery hue (it’s the same
mechanism that make sunsets and sunrises look red).
From Revelation 6:12: “I watched as he
opened the sixth seal. There was a great earthquake. The Sun turned
black like sackcloth made of goat hair. The whole Moon turned blood
red."
At some point however, some individuals decided that although
on their own these phenomenon aren’t incredibly noteworthy, in aggregate they
make for a decent bit of apocalypse mongering. Add in some suitably Dan Brown-esque
bible soundbites (“The sun will be turned to darkness, and the moon to blood
before the great and dreadful day of the LORD comes”) and you’re halfway to the
New York Times’ Best Seller list.
The main culprit in all this is American pastor and author
John Hagee, whose 2013 book ‘Four Blood Moons: Something Is About To Change’
seems to have popularised the notion that four successive ‘blood moons’ is
“Every time this has happened in the last 500 years, it has
coincided with tragedy for the Jewish people followed by triumph,” Hagee told
The Daily Express. “And once again, for Israel, the timing of this Tetrad is remarkable.”
The tetrad has previously occured during the Six-Day war between Israel and the neighbouring states of Egypt, Jordan and Syria.
Hagee goes on to say that each of the next four total lunar
eclipses will coincide with Passover (15 April in 2014, 4 April in 2015) and Sukkot
or the Feast of the Tabernacles (8 October in 2014 and 28 September in 2015).
This is certainly unusual but hardly surprising given that
the Jewish calendar is based partly on lunar cycles: Passover are always marked
by a full moon and a lunar eclipse cannot – by definition – happen at any other
time apart from a full moon.
Writing over at Universe Today, David Dickinson spells it out
clearly: “Eclipses happen, and sometimes they occur on Passover. It’s rare that
they pop up on tetrad cycles, yes, but it’s at best a mathematical curiosity
that is a result of our attempt to keep our various calendrical systems in sync
with the heavens.”
Dickinson also notes that tetrads aren’t actually that
unusual. They occur when there are four successive total lunar eclipses
separated by six month periods when the Earth is directly between the Moon and
the Sun, first refracting the sunlight through the atmosphere onto the Moon (making
it ‘red’) and then blocking all direct illumination (the eclipse).
A composite image showing the various stages of a lunar eclipse from 2007.
This isn’t even the first tetrad of this century (that was
in 2003-2004) and including this one there will be seven more before the year
2100; And although it is certainly rarer
for all four eclipses to coincide with Passover and Sukkot (this has happen eight
times since 162 CE) this is still frequently enough to make any concurrent
events of historical significance nothing more than coincidence.
Throw a dart at a calendar and you’ll find something important
that happened of ‘historical significance’ happening on that day. It’s just what history is like.
So, although the thought of watching a good lunar eclipse is
pretty exciting (simply head outside on the night of the 15th – no special
equipment necessary) unfortunately the end-of-the-world stuff is about as
credible as the Mayan prophecies back in 2012. If you survived that then you’ll
probably be A-OK over the next couple of weeks. We promise.
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