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Easter Weekend Blood Moon/Total Lunar Eclipse Tetrad Over U.S. = Eerie Biblical Message

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posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 10:27 AM
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originally posted by: stosh64

originally posted by: UnBreakable

originally posted by: SirKonstantin
a reply to: IAMTAT

Hey Buddy,

I think this is great, very kool. I have missed the First two Blood Moons on account that I have no clue of the time frame ( 1am-3am?) of when the Blood Moon will be visible for me. I am not great at understanding this and would appreciate anyone's help.

So my Question...and Favor is, When is the appropriate Time to witness the Blood Moon?
I live:
((West Palm Beach, Florida)USA)

Thank you.


From around 12:15-2:00 am E .





In North America, skywatchers located in western Canada and the United States should have a great view of the eclipse, which will start at around 7:45 a.m. EST (4:45 a.m. PST, 1245 GMT), when the Earth's shadow begins to creep across the lunar disk.




est is 3 hours ahead of pst.
www.space.com...[/quot e]



Sorry, my dyslexia kicked in. I thought God's name was Fido.



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 10:32 AM
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a reply to: IAMTAT

Shakes head. All lunar eclipse make the moon look red that's why they were nicknames blood moons. Woo so scary...If you lived in the thirteenth century and are completely superstitious.



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 10:34 AM
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a reply to: mistressofspice

Oh, I'm certain it was a freaky event before widespread scientific literacy, but that doesn't explain why so many people are still convinced that there is a supernatural element to blood moons or eclipses 100 years later.



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 10:34 AM
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originally posted by: Krazysh0t
a reply to: UnBreakable

So much truth in this post.


Why because he said a God that never existed? ANYTHING posted that says God in it or has any sense of God at all you attack...You are impossible to reason with, as many in this thread have plainly spelled out...You even revised a post from someone you were arguing with to make it your own words....Dude, you have a major problem!



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 10:39 AM
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originally posted by: Krazysh0t
a reply to: IAMTAT

So we got a bunch of doom porn for the first eclipse of the year and now you are posting one for the first lunar eclipse. Are we just going to see doom porn for every eclipse this year? What is so terrifying about eclipses anyways?


What has these folks so alarmed is that there is what is called a tetrad. Four lunar eclipses in a row that all fall on Jewish holidays( so has zero to do with Easter) without a lunar eclipse in the mix that doesn't fall on a Jewish holiday. This started last year with one in April another in Oct or Nov I can't remember which and then this one and another in Nov of this year. All on Jewish holidays so the woo woo crowd is making something of it. You know those Christians...It's all about them. That's,why they needed to include Easter in the mix.
edit on 422015 by AutumnWitch657 because: (no reason given)



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 10:42 AM
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a reply to: IAMTAT

The ancient Greek Astronomer (not astrologist) and Mathematician, Aristarchus, knew the Earth (and all of the other planets) orbited around the Sun. It was only politics, and purposeful, willful ignorance that perpetuated the notion that the Sun orbited the Earth for so long.



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 10:46 AM
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originally posted by: 0zzymand0s
a reply to: IAMTAT

The ancient Greek Astronomer (not astrologist) and Mathematician, Aristarchus, knew the Earth (and all of the other planets) orbited around the Sun. It was only politics, and purposeful, willful ignorance that perpetuated the notion that the Sun orbited the Earth for so long.


Agreed...the Persians, Mayans, Egyptians and ancient Celts knew as well...among others
Still, Aristarchus, or Copernicus didn't write the Gospels.



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 10:54 AM
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a reply to: Chrisfishenstein

Sorry that I find the idea that patterns in the sky correlate to activity on the planet. It's just a ridiculous assumption to make. It's made a bunch of you religious types upset because all y'all like to do is prophesize about stuff that never happens. Boohoo. I really don't care what your opinion of me is either. I just don't like ignorance and all this hocus pocus is is ignorance. So I call it out.
edit on 2-4-2015 by Krazysh0t because: (no reason given)



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 10:55 AM
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originally posted by: IAMTAT

originally posted by: BlueMule
a reply to: IAMTAT

If it does, then it is such a regular occurrence that it can't be used as a sign.

No, the sun going dark either means to see it go dark in the sky, or it's a mystical metaphor.

πŸ‘£


The biblical quote actually says "The sun shall be turned into darkness..."In ancient understanding...that could translate into meaning the sun has moved to the far side of the earth...i.e. the event will happen at night.



I hate to burst your bubble but it's never night all over the planet. When it's night here it's day on the other side. I would think that biblical quote would mean it being dark for everyone not just half the planet. Right now it is always sunset, always sunrise, always noon and always midnight...somewhere on the globe.
Kind of like that quote in Matthew about praying your flight doesn't occur in winter...why doesn't God know that when it's summer on one half of the planet it's winter on the other half? He built the place. You'd think something like that wouldn't have escaped his notice. But when the bible was written this fact was unknown so it couldn't be included in the equation.
edit on 422015 by AutumnWitch657 because: (no reason given)



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 10:59 AM
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originally posted by: Chrisfishenstein

originally posted by: Krazysh0t
a reply to: UnBreakable

So much truth in this post.


Why because he said a God that never existed? ANYTHING posted that says God in it or has any sense of God at all you attack...You are impossible to reason with, as many in this thread have plainly spelled out...You even revised a post from someone you were arguing with to make it your own words....Dude, you have a major problem!




Spot on.

It must be a real burden to be right about everything. All the time.



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 11:00 AM
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originally posted by: AutumnWitch657

originally posted by: IAMTAT

originally posted by: BlueMule
a reply to: IAMTAT

If it does, then it is such a regular occurrence that it can't be used as a sign.

No, the sun going dark either means to see it go dark in the sky, or it's a mystical metaphor.

πŸ‘£


The biblical quote actually says "The sun shall be turned into darkness..."In ancient understanding...that could translate into meaning the sun has moved to the far side of the earth...i.e. the event will happen at night.



I hate to burst your bubble but it's never night all over the planet. When it's night here it's day on the other side. I would think that biblical quote would mean it being dark for everyone not just half the planet. Right now it is always sunset, always sunrise, always noon and always midnight...somewhere on the globe.


LOL..Thanks for setting me straight on how night and day works. WOW...Whoda'd figured.
I feel like such a TETRAD.



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 11:01 AM
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originally posted by: UnBreakable

originally posted by: stosh64

originally posted by: UnBreakable

originally posted by: SirKonstantin
a reply to: IAMTAT

Hey Buddy,

I think this is great, very kool. I have missed the First two Blood Moons on account that I have no clue of the time frame ( 1am-3am?) of when the Blood Moon will be visible for me. I am not great at understanding this and would appreciate anyone's help.

So my Question...and Favor is, When is the appropriate Time to witness the Blood Moon?
I live:
((West Palm Beach, Florida)USA)

Thank you.


From around 12:15-2:00 am E .





In North America, skywatchers located in western Canada and the United States should have a great view of the eclipse, which will start at around 7:45 a.m. EST (4:45 a.m. PST, 1245 GMT), when the Earth's shadow begins to creep across the lunar disk.




est is 3 hours ahead of pst.
www.space.com...




Sorry, my dyslexia kicked in. I thought God's name was Fido.


Heh Heh, I can so relate. It is rare when my misfiring brain accidently stops on all sevens and allows cognitive function.



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 11:05 AM
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originally posted by: BlueMule
a reply to: Bluesma

Yeah that's what I'm sayin'

πŸ‘£


I figured they were were referring to the Solar eclipse that actually did just happen a few days ago.....




posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 11:06 AM
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a reply to: IAMTAT

Just to throw out a possible, although quite unlikely, a very large spaceship if close enough to Earth could eclipse the Sun and depending on the angle of a daytime full moon eclipse it a as well. Especially if there were two very large ships.

Some very large rogue planets on a close flyby maybe. But the gravitational pull from either case would play hell with the Earth.



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 11:09 AM
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originally posted by: Ahabstar
a reply to: IAMTAT

Just to throw out a possible, although quite unlikely, a very large spaceship if close enough to Earth could eclipse the Sun and depending on the angle of a daytime full moon eclipse it a as well. Especially if there were two very large ships.

Some very large rogue planets on a close flyby maybe. But the gravitational pull from either case would play hell with the Earth.


OR...dare I say it?....NIBURU!



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 11:09 AM
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a reply to: GoShredAK

Shhh, reminding them that there was a recent solar eclipse on the equinox might scare them a little bit with the whole timing of the two events.



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 11:15 AM
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originally posted by: GoShredAK

originally posted by: BlueMule
a reply to: Bluesma

Yeah that's what I'm sayin'

πŸ‘£


I figured they were were referring to the Solar eclipse that actually did just happen a few days ago.....



That was more than a few days ago. Totally different window

No, the events we're talking about need to happen within the same window of opportunity or they are separate events. imo

πŸ‘£


edit on 719ThursdayuAmerica/ChicagoApruThursdayAmerica/Chicago by BlueMule because: (no reason given)



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 11:16 AM
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a reply to: IAMTAT

That was kindle auto correct which obviously didn't have the word In its dictionary. Shakes head. Low blow but hey why should I expect more. You are the one who said oh it must mean night when you should have realized it's never night everywhere. Your sarcasm indicates you already knew that but there you are saying that anyway.



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 11:21 AM
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originally posted by: Krazysh0t
Religion is all about placing undo importance on coincidences and unlikely events.


That, or exploiting people's ignorance of science and celestial cycles in order to coincide events with them and fool people into thinking they are divinely ordained and significant.

This day and age there should be no excuse. Everyone is taught basic science at school.



posted on Apr, 2 2015 @ 11:23 AM
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a reply to: Firefly_

Especially in regards to astronomy. It is common knowledge that most astronomical events are cyclical. There is no reason to believe that an event that we can ACCURATELY predict the next time it will happen because of its cyclical nature is anything special just because it happens to be an uncommon event.

That's like believing the ocean is going to flood every time the tide comes in.



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