Some thoughts on 
	              The Star of Bethlehem 
	                                 
                         by Liz Gormley 
 
	I was thinking about the Star of Bethlehem and the Wise Men.  The Wise Men 
either did not have access to the scriptures or did not understand them because after 
seeing the "Star" they had to go to Herod to find out where the Messiah was to be born.  
What did they see in the sky that prompted them to make the journey to find the 
Messiah?
   
	According to the Britannica Encyclopedia: Occultism: "Astrology in the 
Hellenistic period (3rd century BC to 3rd Century AD).  In the 3rd century BC and 
perhaps somewhat earlier, Babylonian diviners began - for the purpose of predicting 
the course of an individual's life - to utilize some planetary omens: positions relative to 
the horizon, latitudes, retrogressions, and other positions at the moment of birth or of 
computed conception." 
 
	The Catholic World Report (Ignatius Press) ran an article in its December 1992 
issue - a reprint of a Sky and Telescope issue - on the Star of Bethlehem.  This article 
made a strong case for the star as two planets coming together and forming a "New 
Star".  Jupiter and Venus did this twice (which is rare) in 2 B.C. in June and August in 
the constellation of Leo the Lion.  The Lion was considered to be a constellation of the 
Jewish nation (the other being Pisces) and known then as the "Lion of Judah".  The 
CWR article mentions a 1st century Christian drawing of some kind (I don't remember 
what) that had a star between the lion's paws that does not correspond to any star map. 
This position is where the conjunction of the two planets would have occurred. 
 
	The Britannica Encyclopedia says this about the star of Bethlehem: "The biblical 
account indicates two sightings of the star, one before the wise men began their journey 
(probably from Babylonia or Persia) and the other near their journey's end, when the 
omen 'came and stood over where the young child was.' A celestial object near the 
horizon of any given observer might be considered by him as pointing out some spot of 
Earth below." And here is what it says about the 2 BC June 17th occurrence:  "the bright 
planets Venus and Jupiter would have appeared to observers in Babylon to have 
merged just before setting in the general direction of Bethlehem to the west."  After the 
sun and moon, Jupiter and Venus are the next brightest objects in the sky.  Living in 
Texas, I have a new appreciation of this.  In New York my view was often obstructed 
by mountains.  Believe me, this "new" star would have been brilliant.  
 
	There is a symbolic connection between Jupiter (Zeus) and God. While Venus 
(Aphrodite) might be a little more obscure, I think of Socrates thoughts on beauty and 
love.  He said beauty, wisdom, and the good were all divine because they did not want 
for anything.  But, love "... is a  great spirit, and like all spirits he is intermediate 
between the divine and the mortal." "... what... is his power?'' He interprets... between 
gods and men, conveying and taking across to the gods the prayers and sacrifices of 
men, and to men the commands and replies of the gods; he is the mediator who spans 
the chasm which divides them, and therefore in him all is bound together, and through 
him the arts of the prophet and the priest, their sacrifices and mysteries, and all 
prophesy and incantation, find their way.  For God mingles not with man; but through 
Love all the intercourse and converse of God with man, whether awake or asleep, is 
carried on.  The wisdom which understands this is spiritual..."  Plato, Symposium 
 
	Here are a few more interesting bits of information about this "star":
 
1. The date of the first occurrence June 17th is near the summer solstice, the longest 
(brightest) day of the year.  
2. The "new star" would have appeared near the brightest star of the Lion constellation: 
Regulus (little king). 
3. If the wise men knew of the prophecy of the "virgin birth" then there is Virgo who 
follows the Lion.  She carries the star, Spica (ear of wheat) in her hand. 
 
Two more things I can see looking at the star charts and Zodiac signs: 
 
1. The Lion is made up of two main grouping of stars: the scythe (Second Person of the 
Trinity?)  and the triangle (the Trinity?).  And 2.  In the Zodiac the Lion rules the heart. 
 
	One can get lost in tracking down obscure signs and I believe God keeps his 
signs simple.  So, this is the last one and, I believe, the best sign:
 
	The constellation that precedes the Lion in the sky is Cancer. Here is what the 
Britannica says about the star cluster, Praesepe, in Cancer: "open, or galactic, cluster of 
several hundred stars... Visible to the unaided eye... included by Hipparchus in the 
earliest known star catalog, c 129 BC.  The name Praesepe ('cradle' or 'manger') was 
used even before Hipparchus' time."
 
	There are two stars on either side of the manger in Cancer called "Asellus 
Borealis and Asellus Australis.  According to my little Barron's Star book: "Astronomers 
of antiquity ... saw... two asses feeding at the manger."  Further, the date June 17th is 
near the cusp or transition of the Zodiac signs Gemini to Cancer. Cusp signs are 
considered important.  (I've read it's so, but I'm no expert.) It seems to me that the 
Angel's "sign" (Luke 2:12 "And this will be a sign to you: you will find a babe wrapped 
in swaddling cloths and lying in a manger"), was a sign for everyone.  Certainly 
everyone in the village would have understood it as referring to the new Zodiac sign.  
People followed the Zodiac signs then as now. Surely everyone in the village would 
have wanted to tell foreigners coming to Bethlehem the shepherds' story.  It's no 
wonder that at the reappearance of the Star over the house at Bethlehem and then 
hearing the confirming "sign" of the angels to the shepherds that the Wise Men, upon 
finding the Child, "prostrated themselves and did Him homage."

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