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diff --git a/28536.txt b/28536.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a5ebe19 --- /dev/null +++ b/28536.txt @@ -0,0 +1,12340 @@ +Project Gutenberg's The Astronomy of the Bible, by E. Walter Maunder + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Astronomy of the Bible + An Elementary Commentary on the Astronomical References + of Holy Scripture + +Author: E. Walter Maunder + +Release Date: April 8, 2009 [EBook #28536] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ASTRONOMY OF THE BIBLE *** + + + + +Produced by Curtis Weyant, Jeannie Howse, Lisa Reigel, and +the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images +generously made available by Case Western Reserve University +Preservation Department Digital Library) + + + + + + + +Transcriber's Notes: Variations in spelling and hyphenation have been +left as in the original. Words italicized in the original are surrounded +by _underscores_. Characters superscripted in the original are enclosed +in {braces}. In this text, in words translated from Hebrew, ` represents +an aleph, and ' represents an ayin. Some typographical and punctuation +errors have been corrected. A complete list follows the text. + +There are diacritic accents in the original. In this text, they are +represented as follows: + + [=a] = "a" with a macron [)e] = "e" with a breve + [=e] = "e" with a macron [vs] = "s" with a caron + [=i] = "i" with a macron [vS] = "S" with a caron + [=o] = "o" with a macron [H.] = "H" with an underdot + [=u] = "u" with a macron [h.] = "h" with an underdot + + + + +THE ASTRONOMY +OF THE BIBLE + + +[Illustration: _From the Painting by Sir Edward Burne-Jones in the +Birmingham Art Gallery._ + +THE STAR OF BETHLEHEM. + +"We have seen His star in the east, and are come to worship Him." + +[_Frontispiece._] + + + + +THE ASTRONOMY +OF THE BIBLE + +AN ELEMENTARY COMMENTARY ON THE +ASTRONOMICAL REFERENCES +OF HOLY SCRIPTURE + + +BY +E. WALTER MAUNDER, F.R.A.S. + +AUTHOR OF +'THE ROYAL OBSERVATORY, GREENWICH: ITS HISTORY AND WORK,' +AND 'ASTRONOMY WITHOUT A TELESCOPE' + + +_WITH THIRTY-FOUR ILLUSTRATIONS_ + + +NEW YORK +MITCHELL KENNERLEY + + +RICHARD CLAY & SONS, LIMITED, +BREAD STREET HILL, E.C., AND +BUNGAY, SUFFOLK. + + +To + +MY WIFE + +My helper in this Book +and in all things. + + + + +PREFACE + + +Why should an astronomer write a commentary on the Bible? + +Because commentators as a rule are not astronomers, and therefore either +pass over the astronomical allusions of Scripture in silence, or else +annotate them in a way which, from a scientific point of view, leaves +much to be desired. + +Astronomical allusions in the Bible, direct and indirect, are not few in +number, and, in order to bring out their full significance, need to be +treated astronomically. Astronomy further gives us the power of placing +ourselves to some degree in the position of the patriarchs and prophets +of old. We know that the same sun and moon, stars and planets, shine +upon us as shone upon Abraham and Moses, David and Isaiah. We can, if we +will, see the unchanging heavens with their eyes, and understand their +attitude towards them. + +It is worth while for us so to do. For the immense advances in science, +made since the Canon of Holy Scripture was closed, and especially during +the last three hundred years, may enable us to realize the significance +of a most remarkable fact. Even in those early ages, when to all the +nations surrounding Israel the heavenly bodies were objects for +divination or idolatry, the attitude of the sacred writers toward them +was perfect in its sanity and truth. + +Astronomy has a yet further part to play in Biblical study. The dating +of the several books of the Bible, and the relation of certain heathen +mythologies to the Scripture narratives of the world's earliest ages, +have received much attention of late years. Literary analysis has thrown +much light on these subjects, but hitherto any evidence that astronomy +could give has been almost wholly neglected; although, from the nature +of the case, such evidence, so far as it is available, must be most +decisive and exact. + +I have endeavoured, in the present book, to make an astronomical +commentary on the Bible, in a manner that shall be both clear and +interesting to the general reader, dispensing as far as possible with +astronomical technicalities, since the principles concerned are, for the +most part, quite simple. I trust, also, that I have taken the first step +in a new inquiry which promises to give results of no small importance. + + E. WALTER MAUNDER. + + _St. John's, London, S.E._ + _January 1908._ + + + + +CONTENTS + + +BOOK I + +THE HEAVENLY BODIES + +CHAPTER I. THE HEBREW AND ASTRONOMY + + Modern Astronomy--Astronomy in the Classical Age--The Canon of + Holy Scripture closed before the Classical Age--Character of the + Scriptural References to the Heavenly Bodies--Tradition of + Solomon's Eminence in Science--Attitude towards Nature of the + Sacred Writers--Plan of the Book 3 + +CHAPTER II. THE CREATION + + Indian Eclipse of 1898--Contrast between the Heathen and + Scientific Attitudes--The Law of Causality--Inconsistent with + Polytheism--Faith in One God the Source to the Hebrews of + Intellectual Freedom--The First Words of Genesis the Charter of + the Physical Sciences--The Limitations of Science--"Explanations" + of the First Chapter of Genesis--Its Real Purposes--The Sabbath 12 + +CHAPTER III. THE DEEP + + Babylonian Creation Myth--Tiamat, the Dragon of Chaos--Overcome + by Merodach--Similarity to the Scandinavian Myth--No Resemblance + to the Narrative in Genesis--Meanings of the Hebrew Word + _tehom_--Date of the Babylonian Creation Story 25 + +CHAPTER IV. THE FIRMAMENT + + Twofold Application of the Hebrew Word _raqia`_--Its Etymological + Meaning--The Idea of Solidity introduced by the "Seventy"--Not + the Hebrew Idea--The "Foundations" of Heaven and Earth--The + "Canopy" of Heaven--The "Stories" of Heaven--Clouds and Rain--The + Atmospheric Circulation--Hebrew Appreciation even of the Terrible + in Nature--The "Balancings" and "Spreadings" of the Clouds--The + "Windows of Heaven"--Not Literal Sluice-gates--The Four + Winds--The Four Quarters--The Circle of the Earth--The Waters + under the Earth--The "Depths" 35 + +CHAPTER V. THE ORDINANCES OF THE HEAVENS + + The Order of the Heavenly Movements--Daily Movement of the + Sun--Nightly Movements of the Stars--The "Host of Heaven"-- + Symbolic of the Angelic Host--Morning Stars--The Scripture View + of the Heavenly Order 55 + +CHAPTER VI. THE SUN + + The Double Purpose of the Two Great Heavenly Bodies--Symbolic Use + of the Sun as Light-giver--No Deification of the Sun or of + Light--Solar Idolatry in Israel--_Shemesh_ and _[H.]eres_-- + Sun-spots--Light before the Sun--"Under the Sun"--The Circuit of + the Sun--Sunstroke--"Variableness"--Our present Knowledge of the + Sun--Sir William Herschel's Theory--Conflict between the Old + Science and the New--Galileo--A Question of Evidence--A Question + of Principle 63 + +CHAPTER VII. THE MOON + + Importance of the Moon in Olden Times--Especially to the + Shepherd--Jewish Feasts at the Full Moon--The Harvest Moon--The + Hebrew Month a Natural one--Different Hebrew Words for Moon-- + Moon-worship forbidden--"Similitudes" of the Moon--Worship of + Ashtoreth--No mention of Lunar Phases--The Moon "for Seasons" 79 + +CHAPTER VIII. THE STARS + + Number of the Stars--"Magnitudes" of the Stars--Distances of the + Stars 95 + +CHAPTER IX. COMETS + + Great Comets unexpected Visitors--Description of Comets-- + Formation of the Tail--Possible References in Scripture to + Comets 103 + +CHAPTER X. METEORS + + Aerolites--Diana of the Ephesians--Star-showers--The Leonid + Meteors--References in Scripture--The Aurora Borealis 111 + +CHAPTER XI. ECLIPSES OF THE SUN AND MOON + + Vivid Impression produced by a Total Solar Eclipse--Eclipses not + Omens to the Hebrews--Eclipses visible in Ancient Palestine-- + Explanation of Eclipses--The Saros--Scripture References to + Eclipses--The Corona--The Egyptian "Winged Disc"--The Babylonian + "Ring with Wings"--The Corona at Minimum 118 + +CHAPTER XII. SATURN AND ASTROLOGY + + The "Seven Planets"--Possible Scripture References to Venus and + Jupiter--"Your God Remphan" probably Saturn--The Sabbath and + Saturn's Day--R. A. Proctor on the Names of the Days of the + Week--Order of the Planets--Alexandrian Origin of the Weekday + Names--The Relation of Astrology to Astronomy--Early Babylonian + Astrology--Hebrew Contempt for Divination 130 + + +BOOK II + +THE CONSTELLATIONS + +CHAPTER I. THE ORIGIN OF THE CONSTELLATIONS + + The "Greek Sphere"--Aratus--St Paul's Sermon at Athens--The + Constellations of Ptolemy's Catalogue--References to the + Constellations in Hesiod and Homer--The Constellation Figures on + Greek Coins--And on Babylonian "Boundary-stones"--The Unmapped + Space in the South--Its Explanation--Precession--Date and Place + of the Origin of the Constellations--Significant Positions of the + Serpent Forms in the Constellations--The Four "Royal Stars"--The + Constellations earlier than the Old Testament 149 + +CHAPTER II. GENESIS AND THE CONSTELLATIONS + + The Bow set in the Cloud--The Conflict with the Serpent--The Seed + of the Woman--The Cherubim--The "Mighty Hunter" 162 + +CHAPTER III. THE STORY OF THE DELUGE + + Resemblance between the Babylonian and Genesis Deluge + Stories--The Deluge Stories in Genesis--Their Special + Features--The Babylonian Deluge Story--Question as to its + Date--Its Correspondence with both the Genesis Narratives--The + Constellation Deluge Picture--Its Correspondence with both the + Genesis Narratives--The Genesis Deluge Story independent of Star + Myth and Babylonian Legend 170 + +CHAPTER IV. THE TRIBES OF ISRAEL AND THE ZODIAC + + Joseph's Dream--Alleged Association of the Zodiacal Figures with + the Tribes of Israel--The Standards of the Four Camps of + Israel--The Blessings of Jacob and Moses--The Prophecies of + Balaam--The Golden Calf--The Lion of Judah 186 + +CHAPTER V. LEVIATHAN + + The Four Serpent-like Forms in the Constellations--Their + Significant Positions--The Dragon's Head and Tail--The + Symbols for the Nodes--The Dragon of Eclipse--Hindu Myth + of Eclipses--Leviathan--References to the Stellar Serpents + in Scripture--Rahab--Andromeda--"The Eyelids of the + Morning"--Poetry, Science, and Myth 196 + +CHAPTER VI. THE PLEIADES + + Difficulty of Identification--The most Attractive + Constellations--_Kimah_--Not a Babylonian Star Name--A Pre-exilic + Hebrew Term--The Pleiades traditionally Seven--Maedler's + Suggestion--Pleiades associated in Tradition with the Rainy + Season--And with the Deluge--Their "Sweet Influences"--The Return + of Spring--The Pleiades in recent Photographs--Great Size and + Distance of the Cluster 213 + +CHAPTER VII. ORION + + _Kesil_--Probably Orion--Appearance of the Constellation-- + Identified in Jewish Tradition with Nimrod, who was probably + Merodach--Altitude of Orion in the Sky--_Kesilim_--The "Bands" of + Orion--The Bow-star and Lance-star, Orion's Dogs--Identification + of Tiamat with Cetus 231 + +CHAPTER VIII. MAZZAROTH + + Probably the "Signs of the Zodiac"--Babylonian Creation + Story--Significance of its Astronomical References--Difference + between the "Signs" and the "Constellations" of the Zodiac--Date + of the Change--And of the Babylonian Creation Epic--Stages of + Astrology--Astrology Younger than Astronomy by 2000 Years-- + _Mazzaroth_ and the "Chambers of the South"--_Mazzaloth_--The + Solar and Lunar Zodiacs--_Mazzaroth_ in his Season 243 + +CHAPTER IX. ARCTURUS + + _`Ash_ and _`Ayish_--Uncertainty as to their Identification-- + Probably the Great Bear--_Mezarim_--Probably another Name for the + Bears--"Canst thou guide the Bear?"--Proper Motions of the + Plough-stars--Estimated Distance 258 + + +BOOK III + +TIMES AND SEASONS + +CHAPTER I. THE DAY AND ITS DIVISIONS + + Rotation Period of Venus--Difficulty of the Time Problem on + Venus--The Sun and Stars as Time Measurers--The apparent Solar + Day the First in Use--It began at Sunset--Subdivisions of the Day + Interval--Between the Two Evenings--The Watches of the Night--The + 12-hour Day and the 24-hour Day 269 + +CHAPTER II. THE SABBATH AND THE WEEK + + The Week not an Astronomical Period--Different Weeks employed + by the Ancients--Four Origins assigned for the Week--The + Quarter-month--The Babylonian System--The Babylonian Sabbath not + a Rest Day--The Jewish Sabbath amongst the Romans--Alleged + Astrological Origin of the Week--Origin of the Week given in the + Bible 283 + +CHAPTER III. THE MONTH + + The New Moon a Holy Day with the Hebrews--The Full Moons at the + Two Equinoxes also Holy Days--The Beginnings of the Months + determined from actual Observation--Rule for finding Easter--Names + of the Jewish Months--Phoenician and Babylonian Month Names-- + Number of Days in the Month--Babylonian Dead Reckoning--Present + Jewish Calendar 293 + +CHAPTER IV. THE YEAR + + The Jewish Year a Luni-solar one--Need for an Intercalary + Month--The Metonic Cycle--The Sidereal and Tropical Years--The + Hebrew a Tropical Year--Beginning near the Spring Equinox--Meaning + of "the End of the Year"--Early Babylonian Method of determining + the First Month--Capella as the Indicator Star--The Triad of + Stars--The Tropical Year in the Deluge Story 305 + +CHAPTER V. THE SABBATIC YEAR AND THE JUBILEE + + Law of the Sabbatic Year--A Year of Rest and Release--The + Jubilee--Difficulties connected with the Sabbatic Year and the + Jubilee--The Sabbatic Year, an Agricultural one--Interval between + the Jubilees, Forty-nine Years, not Fifty--Forty-nine Years an + Astronomical Cycle 326 + +CHAPTER VI. THE CYCLES OF DANIEL + + The Jubilee Cycle possessed only by the Hebrews--High Estimation + of Daniel and his Companions entertained by Nebuchadnezzar--Due + possibly to Daniel's Knowledge of Luni-solar Cycles--Cycles in + Daniel's Prophecy--2300 Years and 1260 Years as Astronomical + Cycles--Early Astronomical Progress of the Babylonians much + overrated--Yet their Real Achievements not Small--Limitations of + the Babylonian--Freedom of the Hebrew 337 + + +BOOK IV + +THREE ASTRONOMICAL MARVELS + +CHAPTER I. JOSHUA'S LONG DAY + + METHOD OF STUDYING THE RECORD--To be discussed as it stands--An + early Astronomical Observation. BEFORE THE BATTLE--Movements of + the Israelites--Reasons for the Gibeonites' Action--Rapid + Movements of all the Parties. DAY, HOUR, AND PLACE OF THE + MIRACLE--Indication of the Sun's Declination--Joshua was at + Gibeon--And at High Noon--On the 21st Day of the Fourth Month. + JOSHUA'S STRATEGY--Key to it in the Flight of the Amorites by the + Beth-horon Route--The Amorites defeated but not surrounded--King + David as a Strategist. THE MIRACLE--The Noon-day Heat, the great + Hindrance to the Israelites--Joshua desired the Heat to be + tempered--The Sun made to "be silent"--The Hailstorm--The March + to Makkedah--A Full Day's March in the Afternoon--"The Miracle" + not a Poetic Hyperbole--Exact Accord of the Poem and the Prose + Chronicle--The Record made at the Time--Their March, the + Israelites' Measure of Time 351 + +CHAPTER II. THE DIAL OF AHAZ + + The Narrative--Suggested Explanations--The "Dial of Ahaz," + probably a Staircase--Probable History and Position of the + Staircase--Significance of the Sign 385 + +CHAPTER III. THE STAR OF BETHLEHEM + + The Narrative--No Astronomical Details given--Purpose of the + Scripture Narrative--Kepler's suggested Identification of the + Star--The New Star of 1572--Legend of the Well of Bethlehem--True + Significance of the Reticence of the Gospel Narrative 393 + + A TABLE OF SCRIPTURAL REFERENCE 401 + + INDEX 405 + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + + + PAGE + THE STAR OF BETHLEHEM (_Burne-Jones_) _Frontispiece_ + + THE RAINBOW (_Rubens_) 2 + + MERODACH AND TIAMAT 25 + + CIRRUS AND CUMULI 47 + + A CORNER OF THE MILKY WAY 94 + + THE GREAT COMET OF 1843 102 + + FALL OF AN AEROLITE 110 + + METEORIC SHOWER OF 1799 115 + + THE ASSYRIAN 'RING WITH WINGS' 126 + + CORONA OF MINIMUM TYPE 127 + + ST. PAUL PREACHING AT ATHENS (_Raphael_) 148 + + THE ANCIENT CONSTELLATIONS SOUTH OF THE ECLIPTIC 155 + + THE CELESTIAL SPHERE 156 + + THE MIDNIGHT CONSTELLATIONS OF SPRING, B.C. 2700 164 + + THE MIDNIGHT CONSTELLATIONS OF WINTER, B.C. 2700 165 + + OPHIUCHUS AND THE NEIGHBOURING CONSTELLATIONS 189 + + AQUARIUS AND THE NEIGHBOURING CONSTELLATIONS 192 + + HERCULES AND DRACO 197 + + HYDRA AND THE NEIGHBOURING CONSTELLATIONS 200 + + ANDROMEDA AND CETUS 207 + + STARS OF THE PLEIADES 219 + + INNER NEBULOSITIES OF THE PLEIADES 227 + + STARS OF ORION 232 + + ORION AND THE NEIGHBOURING CONSTELLATIONS 236 + + POSITION OF SPRING EQUINOX, B.C. 2700 246 + + POSITION OF SPRING EQUINOX, A.D. 1900 247 + + STARS OF THE PLOUGH, AS THE WINNOWING FAN 263 + + 'BLOW UP THE TRUMPET IN THE NEW MOON' 268 + + POSITION OF THE NEW MOON AT THE EQUINOXES 316 + + BOUNDARY-STONE IN THE LOUVRE 318 + + WORSHIP OF THE SUN-GOD AT SIPPARA 322 + + 'SUN, STAND THOU STILL UPON GIBEON, AND THOU MOON IN + THE VALLEY OF AJALON' 350 + + MAP OF SOUTHERN PALESTINE 357 + + BEARINGS OF THE RISING AND SETTING POINTS OF THE SUN + FROM GIBEON 363 + + +[Illustration: _By permission of the Autotype Co. 74, New Oxford +Street, London W.C._ + +THE RAINBOW (_by Rubens_). + +"The bow that is in the cloud on the day of rain."] + + + + +THE ASTRONOMY OF THE BIBLE + + + + +BOOK I + +THE HEAVENLY BODIES + + + + +CHAPTER I + +THE HEBREW AND ASTRONOMY + + +Modern astronomy began a little more than three centuries ago with the +invention of the telescope and Galileo's application of it to the study +of the heavenly bodies. This new instrument at once revealed to him the +mountains on the moon, the satellites of Jupiter, and the spots on the +sun, and brought the celestial bodies under observation in a way that no +one had dreamed of before. In our view to-day, the planets of the solar +system are worlds; we can examine their surfaces and judge wherein they +resemble or differ from our earth. To the ancients they were but points +of light; to us they are vast bodies that we have been able to measure +and to weigh. The telescope has enabled us also to penetrate deep into +outer space; we have learnt of other systems besides that of our own sun +and its dependents, many of them far more complex; clusters and clouds +of stars have been revealed to us, and mysterious nebulae, which suggest +by their forms that they are systems of suns in the making. More lately +the invention of the spectroscope has informed us of the very elements +which go to the composition of these numberless stars, and we can +distinguish those which are in a similar condition to our sun from those +differing from him. And photography has recorded for us objects too +faint for mere sight to detect, even when aided by the most powerful +telescope; too detailed and intricate for the most skilful hand to +depict. + +Galileo's friend and contemporary, Kepler, laid the foundations of +another department of modern astronomy at about the same time. He +studied the apparent movements of the planets until they yielded him +their secret so far that he was able to express them in three simple +laws, laws which, two generations later, Sir Isaac Newton demonstrated +to be the outcome of one grand and simple law of universal range, the +law of gravitation. Upon this law the marvellous mathematical conquests +of astronomy have been based. + +All these wonderful results have been attained by the free exercise of +men's mental abilities, and it cannot be imagined that God would have +intervened to hamper their growth in intellectual power by revealing to +men facts and methods which it was within their own ability to discover +for themselves. Men's mental powers have developed by their exercise; +they would have been stunted had men been led to look to revelation +rather than to diligent effort for the satisfaction of their curiosity. +We therefore do not find any reference in the Bible to that which +modern astronomy has taught us. Yet it may be noted that some +expressions, appropriate at any time, have become much more appropriate, +much more forcible, in the light of our present-day knowledge. + +The age of astronomy which preceded the Modern, and may be called the +Classical age, was almost as sharply defined in its beginning as its +successor. It lasted about two thousand years, and began with the +investigations into the movements of the planets made by some of the +early Greek mathematicians. Classical, like Modern astronomy, had its +two sides,--the instrumental and the mathematical. On the instrumental +side was the invention of graduated instruments for the determination of +the positions of the heavenly bodies; on the mathematical, the +development of geometry and trigonometry for the interpretation of those +positions when thus determined. Amongst the great names of this period +are those of Eudoxus of Knidus (B.C. 408-355), and Hipparchus of +Bithynia, who lived rather more than two centuries later. Under its +first leaders astronomy in the Classical age began to advance rapidly, +but it soon experienced a deadly blight. Men were not content to observe +the heavenly bodies for what they were; they endeavoured to make +them the sources of divination. The great school of Alexandria (founded +about 300 B.C.), the headquarters of astronomy, became invaded by +the spirit of astrology, the bastard science which has always +tried--parasite-like--to suck its life from astronomy. Thus from the +days of Claudius Ptolemy to the end of the Middle Ages the growth of +astronomy was arrested, and it bore but little fruit. + +It will be noticed that the Classical age did not commence until about +the time of the completion of the last books of the Old Testament; so we +do not find any reference in Holy Scripture to the astronomical +achievements of that period, amongst which the first attempts to explain +the apparent motions of sun, moon, stars, and planets were the most +considerable. + +We have a complete history of astronomy in the Modern and Classical +periods, but there was an earlier astronomy, not inconsiderable in +amount, of which no history is preserved. For when Eudoxus commenced his +labours, the length of the year had already been determined, the +equinoxes and solstices had been recognized, the ecliptic, the celestial +equator, and the poles of both great circles were known, and the five +principal planets were familiar objects. This Early astronomy must have +had its history, its stages of development, but we can only with +difficulty trace them out. It cannot have sprung into existence +full-grown any more than the other sciences; it must have started from +zero, and men must have slowly fought their way from one observation to +another, with gradually widening conceptions, before they could bring it +even to that stage of development in which it was when the observers of +the Museum of Alexandria began their work. + +The books of the Old Testament were written at different times during +the progress of this Early age of astronomy. We should therefore +naturally expect to find the astronomical allusions written from the +standpoint of such scientific knowledge as had then been acquired. We +cannot for a moment expect that any supernatural revelation of purely +material facts would be imparted to the writers of sacred books, two or +three thousand years before the progress of science had brought those +facts to light, and we ought not to be surprised if expressions are +occasionally used which we should not ourselves use to-day, if we were +writing about the phenomena of nature from a technical point of view. It +must further be borne in mind that the astronomical references are not +numerous, that they occur mostly in poetic imagery, and that Holy +Scripture was not intended to give an account of the scientific +achievements, if any, of the Hebrews of old. Its purpose was wholly +different: it was religious, not scientific; it was meant to give +spiritual, not intellectual enlightenment. + +An exceedingly valuable and interesting work has recently been brought +out by the most eminent of living Italian astronomers, Prof. G. V. +Schiaparelli, on this subject of "Astronomy in the Old Testament," to +which work I should like here to acknowledge my indebtedness. Yet I feel +that the avowed object of his book,[7:1]--to "discover what ideas the +ancient Jewish sages held regarding the structure of the universe, what +observations they made of the stars, and how far they made use of them +for the measurement and division of time"--is open to this +criticism,--that sufficient material for carrying it out is not within +our reach. If we were to accept implicitly the argument from the silence +of Scripture, we should conclude that the Hebrews--though their calendar +was essentially a lunar one, based upon the actual observation of the +new moon--had never noticed that the moon changed its apparent form as +the month wore on, for there is no mention in the Bible of the lunar +phases. + +The references to the heavenly bodies in Scripture are not numerous, and +deal with them either as time-measurers or as subjects for devout +allusion, poetic simile, or symbolic use. But there is one +characteristic of all these references to the phenomena of Nature, that +may not be ignored. None of the ancients ever approached the great +Hebrew writers in spiritual elevation; none equalled them in poetic +sublimity; and few, if any, surpassed them in keenness of observation, +or in quick sympathy with every work of the Creator. + +These characteristics imply a natural fitness of the Hebrews for +successful scientific work, and we should have a right to believe that +under propitious circumstances they would have shown a pre-eminence in +the field of physical research as striking as is the superiority of +their religious conceptions over those of the surrounding nations. We +cannot, of course, conceive of the average Jew as an Isaiah, any more +than we can conceive of the average Englishman as a Shakespeare, yet the +one man, like the other, is an index of the advancement and capacity of +his race; nor could Isaiah's writings have been preserved, more than +those of Shakespeare, without a true appreciation of them on the part of +many of his countrymen. + +But the necessary conditions for any great scientific development were +lacking to Israel. A small nation, planted between powerful and +aggressive empires, their history was for the most part the record of a +struggle for bare existence; and after three or four centuries of the +unequal conflict, first the one and then the other of the two sister +kingdoms was overwhelmed. There was but little opportunity during these +years of storm and stress for men to indulge in any curious searchings +into the secrets of nature. + +Once only was there a long interval of prosperity and peace; viz. from +the time that David had consolidated the kingdom to the time when it +suffered disruption under his grandson, Rehoboam; and it is significant +that tradition has ascribed to Solomon and to his times just such a +scientific activity as the ability and temperament of the Hebrew race +would lead us to expect it to display when the conditions should be +favourable for it. + +Thus, in the fourth chapter of the First Book of Kings, not only are the +attainments of Solomon himself described, but other men, contemporaries +either of his father David or himself, are referred to, as distinguished +in the same direction, though to a less degree. + + "And God gave Solomon wisdom and understanding exceeding much, + and largeness of heart, even as the sand that is on the + seashore. And Solomon's wisdom excelled the wisdom of all the + children of the east country, and all the wisdom of Egypt. For + he was wiser than all men; than Ethan the Ezrahite, and Heman, + and Chalcol, and Darda, the sons of Mahol: and his fame was in + all nations round about. And he spake three thousand proverbs: + and his songs were a thousand and five. And he spake of trees, + from the cedar-tree that is in Lebanon even unto the hyssop + that springeth out of the wall: he spake also of beasts, and + of fowl, and of creeping things, and of fishes. And there came + of all people to hear the wisdom of Solomon, from all kings of + the earth, which had heard of his wisdom." + +The tradition of his great eminence in scientific research is also +preserved in the words put into his mouth in the Book of the Wisdom of +Solomon, now included in the Apocrypha. + + "For" (God) "Himself gave me an unerring knowledge of the + things that are, to know the constitution of the world, and + the operation of the elements; the beginning and end and + middle of times, the alternations of the solstices and the + changes of seasons, the circuits of years and the positions" + (_margin_, constellations) "of stars; the natures of living + creatures and the ragings of wild beasts, the violences of + winds and the thoughts of men, the diversities of plants and + the virtues of roots: all things that are either secret or + manifest I learned, for she that is the artificer of all + things taught me, even Wisdom." + +Two great names have impressed themselves upon every part of the +East:--the one, that of Solomon the son of David, as the master of every +secret source of knowledge; and the other that of Alexander the Great, +as the mightiest of conquerors. It is not unreasonable to believe that +the traditions respecting the first have been founded upon as real a +basis of actual achievement as those respecting the second. + +But to such scientific achievements we have no express allusion in +Scripture, other than is afforded us by the two quotations just made. +Natural objects, natural phenomena are not referred to for their own +sake. Every thought leads up to God or to man's relation to Him. +Nature, as a whole and in its every aspect and detail, is the handiwork +of Jehovah: that is the truth which the heavens are always +declaring;--and it is His power, His wisdom, and His goodness to man +which it is sought to illustrate, when the beauty or wonder of natural +objects is described. + + "When I consider Thy heavens, the work of Thy fingers, + The moon and the stars, which Thou hast ordained; + What is man, that Thou art mindful of him? + And the son of man, that Thou visitest him?" + +The first purpose, therefore, of the following study of the astronomy of +the Bible is,--not to reconstruct the astronomy of the Hebrews, a task +for which the material is manifestly incomplete,--but to examine such +astronomical allusions as occur with respect to their appropriateness to +the lesson which the writer desired to teach. Following this, it will be +of interest to examine what connection can be traced between the Old +Testament Scriptures and the Constellations; the arrangement of the +stars into constellations having been the chief astronomical work +effected during the centuries when those Scriptures were severally +composed. The use made of the heavenly bodies as time-measurers amongst +the Hebrews will form a third division of the subject; whilst there are +two or three incidents in the history of Israel which appear to call for +examination from an astronomical point of view, and may suitably be +treated in a fourth and concluding section. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[7:1] _Astronomy in the Old Testament_, p. 12. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +THE CREATION + + +A few years ago a great eclipse of the sun, seen as total along a broad +belt of country right across India, drew thither astronomers from the +very ends of the earth. Not only did many English observers travel +thither, but the United States of America in the far west, and Japan in +the far east sent their contingents, and the entire length of country +covered by the path of the shadow was dotted with the temporary +observatories set up by the men of science. + +It was a wonderful sight that was vouchsafed to these travellers in +pursuit of knowledge. In a sky of unbroken purity, undimmed even for a +moment by haze or cloud, there shone down the fierce Indian sun. +Gradually a dark mysterious circle invaded its lower edge, and covered +its brightness; coolness replaced the burning heat; slowly the dark +covering crept on; slowly the sunlight diminished until at length the +whole of the sun's disc was hidden. Then in a moment a wonderful +starlike form flashed out, a noble form of glowing silver light on the +deep purple-coloured sky. + +There was, however, no time for the astronomers to devote to admiration +of the beauty of the scene, or indulgence in rhapsodies. Two short +minutes alone were allotted them to note all that was happening, to take +all their photographs, to ask all the questions, and obtain all the +answers for which this strange veiling of the sun, and still stranger +unveiling of his halo-like surroundings, gave opportunity. It was two +minutes of intensest strain, of hurried though orderly work; and then a +sudden rush of sunlight put an end to all. The mysterious vision had +withdrawn itself; the colour rushed back to the landscape, so +corpse-like whilst in the shadow; the black veil slid rapidly from off +the sun; the heat returned to the air; the eclipse was over. + +But the astronomers from distant lands were not the only people engaged +in watching the eclipse. At their work, they could hear the sound of a +great multitude, a sound of weeping and wailing, a people dismayed at +the distress of their god. + +It was so at every point along the shadow track, but especially where +that track met the course of the sacred river. Along a hundred roads the +pilgrims had poured in unceasing streams towards Holy Mother Gunga; +towards Benares, the sacred city; towards Buxar, where the eclipse was +central at the river bank. It is always meritorious--so the Hindoo +holds--to bathe in that sacred river, but such a time as this, when the +sun is in eclipse, is the most propitious moment of all for such +lustration. + +Could there be a greater contrast than that offered between the millions +trembling and dismayed at the signs of heaven, and the little companies +who had come for thousands of miles over land and sea, rejoicing in the +brief chance that was given them for learning a little more of the +secrets of the wonders of Nature? + +The contrast between the heathen and the scientists was in both their +spiritual and their intellectual standpoint, and, as we shall see later, +the intellectual contrast is a result of the spiritual. The heathen idea +is that the orbs of heaven are divine, or at least that each expresses a +divinity. This does not in itself seem an unnatural idea when we +consider the great benefits that come to us through the instrumentality +of the sun and moon. It is the sun that morning by morning rolls back +the darkness, and brings light and warmth and returning life to men; it +is the sun that rouses the earth after her winter sleep and quickens +vegetation. It is the moon that has power over the great world of +waters, whose pulse beats in some kind of mysterious obedience to her +will. + +Natural, then, has it been for men to go further, and to suppose that +not only is power lodged in these, and in the other members of the +heavenly host, but that it is living, intelligent, personal power; that +these shining orbs are beings, or the manifestations of beings; exalted, +mighty, immortal;--that they are gods. + +But if these are gods, then it is sacrilegious, it is profane, to treat +them as mere "things"; to observe them minutely in the microscope or +telescope; to dissect them, as it were, in the spectroscope; to identify +their elements in the laboratory; to be curious about their properties, +influences, relations, and actions on each other. + +And if these are gods, there are many gods, not One God. And if there +are many gods, there are many laws, not one law. Thus scientific +observations cannot be reconciled with polytheism, for scientific +observations demand the assumption of one universal law. The wise king +expressed this law thus:-- + +"The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be." The actual +language of science, as expressed by Professor Thiele, a leading +Continental astronomer, states that-- + + "Everything that exists, and everything that happens, exists + or happens as a necessary consequence of a previous state of + things. If a state of things is repeated in every detail, it + must lead to exactly the same consequences. Any difference + between the results of causes that are in part the same, must + be explainable by some difference in the other part of the + causes."[15:1] + + The law stated in the above words has been called the Law of + Causality. It "cannot be proved, but must be believed; in the + same way as we believe the fundamental assumptions of + religion, with which it is closely and intimately connected. + The law of causality forces itself upon our belief. It may be + denied in theory, but not in practice. Any person who denies + it, will, if he is watchful enough, catch himself constantly + asking himself, if no one else, why _this_ has happened, and + not _that_. But in that very question he bears witness to the + law of causality. If we are consistently to deny the law of + causality, we must repudiate all observation, and particularly + all prediction based on past experience, as useless and + misleading. + + "If we could imagine for an instant that the same complete + combination of causes could have a definite number of + different consequences, however small that number might be, + and that among these the occurrence of the actual consequence + was, in the old sense of the word, accidental, no observation + would ever be of any particular value."[16:1] + +So long as men hold, as a practical faith, that the results which attend +their efforts depend upon whether Jupiter is awake and active, or +Neptune is taking an unfair advantage of his brother's sleep; upon +whether Diana is bending her silver bow for the battle, or flying +weeping and discomfited because Juno has boxed her ears--so long is it +useless for them to make or consult observations. + +But, as Professor Thiele goes on to say-- + + "If the law of causality is acknowledged to be an assumption + which always holds good, then every observation gives us a + revelation which, when correctly appraised and compared with + others, teaches us the laws by which God rules the world." + +By what means have the modern scientists arrived at a position so +different from that of the heathen? It cannot have been by any process +of natural evolution that the intellectual standpoint which has made +scientific observation possible should be derived from the spiritual +standpoint of polytheism which rendered all scientific observation not +only profane but useless. + +In the old days the heathen in general regarded the heavenly host and +the heavenly bodies as the heathen do to-day. But by one nation, the +Hebrews, the truth that-- + + "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth" + +was preserved in the first words of their Sacred Book. That nation +declared-- + + "All the gods of the people are idols: but the Lord made the + heavens." + +For that same nation the watchword was-- + + "Hear, O Israel: the Lord our God is one Lord." + +From these words the Hebrews not only learned a great spiritual truth, +but derived intellectual freedom. For by these words they were taught +that all the host of heaven and of earth were created things--merely +"things," not divinities--and not only that, but that the Creator was +One God, not many gods; that there was but one law-giver; and that +therefore there could be no conflict of laws. These first words of +Genesis, then, may be called the charter of all the physical sciences, +for by them is conferred freedom from all the bonds of unscientific +superstition, and by them also do men know that consistent law holds +throughout the whole universe. It is the intellectual freedom of the +Hebrew that the scientist of to-day inherits. He may not indeed be able +to rise to the spiritual standpoint of the Hebrew, and consciously +acknowledge that-- + + "Thou, even Thou, art Lord alone; Thou hast made heaven, the + heaven of heavens, with all their host, the earth, and all + things that are therein, the seas, and all that is therein, + and Thou preservest them all; and the host of heaven + worshippeth Thee." + +But he must at least unconsciously assent to it, for it is on the first +great fundamental assumption of religion as stated in the first words of +Genesis, that the fundamental assumption of all his scientific reasoning +depends. + +Scientific reasoning and scientific observation can only hold good so +long and in so far as the Law of Causality holds good. We must assume a +pre-existing state of affairs which has given rise to the observed +effect; we must assume that this observed effect is itself antecedent to +a subsequent state of affairs. Science therefore cannot go back to the +absolute beginnings of things, or forward to the absolute ends of +things. It cannot reason about the way matter and energy came into +existence, or how they might cease to exist; it cannot reason about time +or space, as such, but only in the relations of these to phenomena that +can be observed. It does not deal with things themselves, but only with +the relations between things. Science indeed can only consider the +universe as a great machine which is in "going order," and it concerns +itself with the relations which some parts of the machine bear to other +parts, and with the laws and manner of the "going" of the machine in +those parts. The relations of the various parts, one to the other, and +the way in which they work together, may afford some idea of the design +and purpose of the machine, but it can give no information as to how the +material of which it is composed came into existence, nor as to the +method by which it was originally constructed. Once started, the +machine comes under the scrutiny of science, but the actual starting +lies outside its scope. + +Men therefore cannot find out for themselves how the worlds were +originally made, how the worlds were first moved, or how the spirit of +man was first formed within him; and this, not merely because these +beginnings of things were of necessity outside his experience, but also +because beginnings, as such, must lie outside the law by which he +reasons. + +By no process of research, therefore, could man find out for himself the +facts that are stated in the first chapter of Genesis. They must have +been revealed. Science cannot inquire into them for the purpose of +checking their accuracy; it must accept them, as it accepts the +fundamental law that governs its own working, without the possibility of +proof. + +And this is what has been revealed to man:--that the heaven and the +earth were not self-existent from all eternity, but were in their first +beginning created by God. As the writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews +expresses it: "Through faith we understand that the worlds were framed +by the word of God, so that things which are seen were not made of +things which do appear." And a further fact was revealed that man could +not have found out for himself; viz. that this creation was made and +finished in six Divine actings, comprised in what the narrative +denominates "days." It has not been revealed whether the duration of +these "days" can be expressed in any astronomical units of time. + +Since under these conditions science can afford no information, it is +not to be wondered at that the hypotheses that have been framed from +time to time to "explain" the first chapter of Genesis, or to express it +in scientific terms, are not wholly satisfactory. At one time the +chapter was interpreted to mean that the entire universe was called into +existence about 6,000 years ago, in six days of twenty-four hours each. +Later it was recognized that both geology and astronomy seemed to +indicate the existence of matter for untold millions of years instead of +some six thousand. It was then pointed out that, so far as the narrative +was concerned, there might have been a period of almost unlimited +duration between its first verse and its fourth; and it was suggested +that the six days of creation were six days of twenty-four hours each, +in which, after some great cataclysm, 6,000 years ago, the face of the +earth was renewed and replenished for the habitation of man, the +preceding geological ages being left entirely unnoticed. Some writers +have confined the cataclysm and renewal to a small portion of the +earth's surface--to "Eden," and its neighbourhood. Other commentators +have laid stress on the truth revealed in Scripture that "one day is +with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day," and +have urged the argument that the six days of creation were really vast +periods of time, during which the earth's geological changes and the +evolution of its varied forms of life were running their course. Others, +again, have urged that the six days of creation were six literal days, +but instead of being consecutive were separated by long ages. And yet +again, as no man was present during the creation period, it has been +suggested that the Divine revelation of it was given to Moses or some +other inspired prophet in six successive visions or dreams, which +constituted the "six days" in which the chief facts of creation were set +forth. + +All such hypotheses are based on the assumption that the opening +chapters of Genesis are intended to reveal to man certain physical +details in the material history of this planet; to be in fact a little +compendium of the geological and zoological history of the world, and so +a suitable introduction to the history of the early days of mankind +which followed it. + +It is surely more reasonable to conclude that there was no purpose +whatever of teaching us anything about the physical relationships of +land and sea, of tree and plant, of bird and fish; it seems, indeed, +scarcely conceivable that it should have been the Divine intention so to +supply the ages with a condensed manual of the physical sciences. What +useful purpose could it have served? What man would have been the wiser +or better for it? Who could have understood it until the time when men, +by their own intellectual strivings, had attained sufficient knowledge +of their physical surroundings to do without such a revelation at all? + +But although the opening chapters of Genesis were not designed to teach +the Hebrew certain physical facts of nature, they gave him the knowledge +that he might lawfully study nature. For he learnt from them that nature +has no power nor vitality of its own; that sun, and sea, and cloud, and +wind are not separate deities, nor the expression of deities that they +are but "things," however glorious and admirable; that they are the +handiwork of God; and-- + + "The works of the Lord are great, + Sought out of all them that have pleasure therein. + His work is honour and majesty; + And His righteousness endureth for ever. + He hath made His wonderful works to be remembered." + +What, then, is the significance of the detailed account given us of the +works effected on the successive days of creation? Why are we told that +light was made on the first day, the firmament on the second, dry land +on the third, and so on? Probably for two reasons. First, that the +rehearsal, as in a catalogue, of the leading classes of natural objects, +might give definiteness and precision to the teaching that each and all +were creatures, things made by the word of God. The bald statement that +the heaven and the earth were made by God might still have left room for +the imagination that the powers of nature were co-eternal with God, or +were at least subordinate divinities; or that other powers than God had +worked up into the present order the materials He had created. The +detailed account makes it clear that not only was the universe in +general created by God, but that there was no part of it that was not +fashioned by Him. + +The next purpose was to set a seal of sanctity upon the Sabbath. In the +second chapter of Genesis we read-- + + "On the seventh day God ended His work which He had made; and + He rested on the seventh day from all His work which He had + made. And God blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it: + because that in it He had rested from all His work which God + created and made." + +In this we get the institution of the _week_, the first ordinance +imposed by God upon man. For in the fourth of the ten commandments which +God gave through Moses, it is said-- + + "The seventh day is the sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it + thou shalt not do any work. . . . For in six days the Lord + made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and + rested the seventh day: wherefore the Lord blessed the sabbath + day, and hallowed it." + +And again, when the tabernacle was being builded, it was commanded-- + + "The children of Israel shall keep the sabbath, to observe the + sabbath throughout their generations, for a perpetual + covenant. It is a sign between Me and the children of Israel + for ever: for in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, and + on the seventh day He rested, and was refreshed." + +God made the sun, moon, and stars, and appointed them "for signs, and +for seasons, and for days, and years." The sun marks out the days; the +moon by her changes makes the months; the sun and the stars mark out the +seasons and the years. These were divisions of time which man would +naturally adopt. But there is not an exact number of days in the month, +nor an exact number of days or months in the year. Still less does the +period of seven days fit precisely into month or season or year; the +week is marked out by no phase of the moon, by no fixed relation between +the sun, the moon, or the stars. It is not a division of time that man +would naturally adopt for himself; it runs across all the natural +divisions of time. + +What are the six days of creative work, and the seventh day--the +Sabbath--of creative rest? They are not days of man, they are days of +God; and our days of work and rest, our week with its Sabbath, can only +be the figure and shadow of that week of God; something by which we may +gain some faint apprehension of its realities, not that by which we can +comprehend and measure it. + +Our week, therefore, is God's own direct appointment to us; and His +revelation that He fulfilled the work of creation in six acts or stages, +dignifies and exalts the toil of the labouring man, with his six days of +effort and one of rest, into an emblem of the creative work of God. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[15:1] T. N. Thiele, Director of the Copenhagen Observatory, _Theory of +Observations_, p. 1. + +[16:1] T. N. Thiele, Director of the Copenhagen Observatory, _Theory of +Observations_, p. 1. + + +[Illustration: MERODACH AND TIAMAT. + +[_To face p. 25._ + +Sculpture from the Palace of Assur-nazir-pel, King of Assyria. Now in +the British Museum. Damaged by fire. Supposed to represent the defeat of +Tiamat by Merodach.] + + + + +CHAPTER III + +THE DEEP + + +The second verse of Genesis states, "And the earth was without form and +void [_i. e._ waste and empty] and darkness was upon the face of the +deep." The word _teh[=o]m_, here translated _deep_, has been used to +support the theory that the Hebrews derived their Creation story from +one which, when exiles in Babylon, they heard from their conquerors. If +this theory were substantiated, it would have such an important bearing +upon the subject of the attitude of the inspired writers towards the +objects of nature, that a little space must be spared for its +examination. + +The purpose of the first chapter of Genesis is to tell us that-- + + "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth." + +From it we learn that the universe and all the parts that make it +up--all the different forms of energy, all the different forms of +matter--are neither deities themselves, nor their embodiments and +expressions, nor the work of conflicting deities. From it we learn that +the universe is not self-existent, nor even (as the pantheist thinks of +it) the expression of one vague, impersonal and unconscious, but +all-pervading influence. It was not self-made; it did not exist from all +eternity. It is not God, for God made it. + +But the problem of its origin has exercised the minds of many nations +beside the Hebrews, and an especial interest attaches to the solution +arrived at by those nations who were near neighbours of the Hebrews and +came of the same great Semitic stock. + +From the nature of the case, accounts of the origin of the world cannot +proceed from experience, or be the result of scientific experiment. They +cannot form items of history, or arise from tradition. There are only +two possible sources for them; one, Divine revelation; the other, the +invention of men. + +The account current amongst the Babylonians has been preserved to us by +the Syrian writer Damascius, who gives it as follows:-- + + "But the Babylonians, like the rest of the Barbarians, pass + over in silence the one principle of the Universe, and they + constitute two, Tavthe and Apason, making Apason the husband + of Tavthe, and denominating her "the mother of the gods." And + from these proceeds an only-begotten son, Mumis, which, I + conceive, is no other than the intelligible world proceeding + from the two principles. From them also another progeny is + derived, Lakhe and Lakhos; and again a third, Kissare and + Assoros, from which last three others proceed, Anos and + Illinos and Aos. And of Aos and Dakhe is born a son called + Belos, who, they say, is the fabricator of the world."[26:1] + +The actual story, thus summarized by Damascius, was discovered by Mr. +George Smith, in the form of a long epic poem, on a series of tablets, +brought from the royal library of Kouyunjik, or Nineveh, and he +published them in 1875, in his book on _The Chaldean Account of +Genesis_. None of the tablets were perfect; and of some only very small +portions remain. But portions of other copies of the poem have been +discovered in other localities, and it has been found possible to piece +together satisfactorily a considerable section, so that a fair idea of +the general scope of the poem has been given to us. + +It opens with the introduction of a being, Tiamtu--the Tavthe of the +account of Damascius,--who is regarded as the primeval mother of all +things. + + "When on high the heavens were unnamed, + Beneath the earth bore not a name: + The primeval ocean was their producer; + Mummu Tiamtu was she who begot the whole of them. + Their waters in one united themselves, and + The plains were not outlined, marshes were not to be seen. + When none of the gods had come forth, + They bore no name, the fates (had not been determined) + There were produced the gods (all of them)."[27:1] + +The genealogy of the gods follows, and after a gap in the story, Tiamat, +or Tiamtu, is represented as preparing for battle, "She who created +everything . . . produced giant serpents." She chose one of the gods, +Kingu, to be her husband and the general of her forces, and delivered to +him the tablets of fate. + +The second tablet shows the god An[vs]ar, angered at the threatening +attitude of Tiamat, and sending his son Anu to speak soothingly to her +and calm her rage. But first Anu and then another god turned back +baffled, and finally Merodach, the son of Ea, was asked to become the +champion of the gods. Merodach gladly consented, but made good terms for +himself. The gods were to assist him in every possible way by entrusting +all their powers to him, and were to acknowledge him as first and chief +of all. The gods in their extremity were nothing loth. They feasted +Merodach and, when swollen with wine, endued him with all magical +powers, and hailed him-- + + "Merodach, thou art he who is our avenger, + (Over) the whole universe have we given thee the kingdom."[28:1] + +At first the sight of his terrible enemy caused even Merodach to falter, +but plucking up courage he advanced to meet her, caught her in his net, +and, forcing an evil wind into her open mouth-- + + "He made the evil wind enter so that she could not close her lips. + The violence of the winds tortured her stomach, and + her heart was prostrated and her mouth was twisted. + He swung the club, he shattered her stomach; + he cut out her entrails; he over-mastered (her) heart; + he bound her and ended her life. + He threw down her corpse; he stood upon it."[28:2] + +The battle over and the enemy slain, Merodach considered how to dispose +of the corpse. + + "He strengthens his mind, he forms a clever plan, + And he stripped her of her skin like a fish, according to his + plan."[28:3] + +Of one half of the corpse of Tiamat he formed the earth, and of the +other half, the heavens. He then proceded to furnish the heavens and the +earth with their respective equipments; the details of this work +occupying apparently the fifth, sixth, and seventh tablets of the +series. + +Under ordinary circumstances such a legend as the foregoing would not +have attracted much attention. It is as barbarous and unintelligent as +any myth of Zulu or Fijian. Strictly speaking, it is not a Creation myth +at all. Tiamat and her serpent-brood and the gods are all existent +before Merodach commences his work, and all that the god effects is a +reconstruction of the world. The method of this reconstruction possesses +no features superior to those of the Creation myths of other barbarous +nations. Our own Scandinavian ancestors had a similar one, the setting +of which was certainly not inferior to the grotesque battle of Merodach +with Tiamat. The prose Edda tells us that the first man, Bur, was the +father of Boer, who was in turn the father of Odin and his two brothers +Vili and Ve. These sons of Boer slew Ymir, the old frost giant. + + "They dragged the body of Ymir into the middle of Ginnungagap, + and of it formed the earth. From Ymir's blood they made the + sea and waters; from his flesh, the land; from his bones, the + mountains; and his teeth and jaws, together with some bits of + broken bones, served them to make the stones and pebbles." + +It will be seen that there is a remarkable likeness between the +Babylonian and Scandinavian myths in the central and essential feature +of each, viz. the way in which the world is supposed to have been built +up by the gods from the fragments of the anatomy of a huge primaeval +monster. Yet it is not urged that there is any direct genetic connection +between the two; that the Babylonians either taught their legend to the +Scandinavians or learnt it from them. + +Under ordinary circumstances it would hardly have occurred to any one to +try to derive the monotheistic narrative of Gen. i. from either of these +pagan myths, crowded as they are with uncouth and barbarous details. But +it happened that Mr. George Smith, who brought to light the Assyrian +Creation tablets, brought also to light a Babylonian account of the +Flood, which had a large number of features in common with the narrative +of Gen. vi.-ix. The actual resemblance between the two Deluge narratives +has caused a resemblance to be imagined between the two Creation +narratives. It has been well brought out in some of the later comments +of Assyriologists that, so far from there being any resemblance in the +Babylonian legend to the narrative in Genesis, the two accounts differ +_in toto_. Mr. T. G. Pinches, for example, points out that in the +Babylonian account there is-- + + "No direct statement of the creation of the heavens and the + earth; + + "No systematic division of the things created into groups and + classes, such as is found in Genesis; + + "No reference to the Days of Creation; + + "No appearance of the Deity as the first and only cause of the + existence of things."[30:1] + +Indeed, in the Babylonian account, "the heavens and the earth are +represented as existing, though in a chaotic form, from the first." + +Yet on this purely imaginary resemblance between the Biblical and +Babylonian Creation narratives the legend has been founded "that the +introductory chapters of the Book of Genesis present to us the Hebrew +version of a mythology common to many of the Semitic peoples." And the +legend has been yet further developed, until writers of the standing of +Prof. Friedrich Delitzsch have claimed that the Genesis narrative was +_borrowed_ from the Babylonian, though "the priestly scholar who +composed Genesis, chapter i. endeavoured of course to remove all +possible mythological features of this Creation story."[31:1] + +If the Hebrew priest did borrow from the Babylonian myth, what was it +that he borrowed? Not the existence of sea and land, of sun and moon, of +plants and animals, of birds and beasts and fishes. For surely the +Hebrew may be credited with knowing this much of himself, without any +need for a transportation to Babylon to learn it. "In writing an account +of the Creation, statements as to what are the things created must of +necessity be inserted,"[31:2] whenever, wherever, and by whomsoever that +account is written. + +What else, then, is there common to the two accounts? _Tiamat_ is the +name given to the Babylonian mother of the universe, the dragon of the +deep; and in Genesis it is written that "darkness was upon the face of +the _deep_ (_teh[=o]m_)." + +Here, and here only, is a point of possible connection; but if it be +evidence of a connection, what kind of a connection does it imply? It +implies that the Babylonian based his barbarous myth upon the Hebrew +narrative. There is no other possible way of interpreting the +connection,--if connection there be. + +The Hebrew word would seem to mean, etymologically, "_surges_," +"_storm-tossed waters_,"--"Deep calleth unto deep at the noise of Thy +waterspouts." Our word "_deep_" is apt to give us the idea of +stillness--we have the proverb, "Still waters run deep,"--whereas in +some instances _teh[=o]m_ is used in Scripture of waters which were +certainly shallow, as, for instance, those passed through by Israel at +the Red Sea:-- + + "Pharaoh's chariots and his host hath He cast into the sea: + his chosen captains also are drowned in the Red Sea. The + _depths_ have covered them." + +In other passages the words used in our Authorized Version, "_deep_" or +"_depths_," give the correct signification. + +But deep waters, or waters in commotion, are in either case natural +objects. We get the word _teh[=o]m_ used continually in Scripture in a +perfectly matter-of-fact way, where there is no possibility of +personification or myth being intended. Tiamat, on the contrary, the +Babylonian dragon of the waters, is a mythological personification. Now +the natural object must come first. It never yet has been the case that +a nation has gained its knowledge of a perfectly common natural object +by de-mythologizing one of the mythological personifications of another +nation. The Israelites did not learn about _teh[=o]m_, the surging water +of the Red Sea, that rolled over the Egyptians in their sight, from any +Babylonian fable of a dragon of the waters, read by their descendants +hundreds of years later. + +Yet further, the Babylonian account of Creation is comparatively late; +the Hebrew account, as certainly, comparatively early. It is not merely +that the actual cuneiform tablets are of date about 700 B.C., coming as +they do from the Kouyunjik mound, the ruins of the palace of Sennacherib +and Assurbanipal, built about that date. The poem itself, as Prof. Sayce +has pointed out, indicates, by the peculiar pre-eminence given in it to +Merodach, that it is of late composition. It was late in the history of +Babylon that Merodach was adopted as the supreme deity. The astronomical +references in the poem are more conclusive still, for, as will be shown +later on, they point to a development of astronomy that cannot be dated +earlier than 700 B.C. + +On the other hand, the first chapter of Genesis was composed very early. +The references to the heavenly bodies in verse 16 bear the marks of the +most primitive condition possible of astronomy. The heavenly bodies are +simply the greater light, the lesser light, and the stars--the last +being introduced quite parenthetically. It is the simplest reference to +the heavenly bodies that is made in Scripture, or that, indeed, could be +made. + +There may well have been Babylonians who held higher conceptions of God +and nature than those given in the Tiamat myth. It is certain that very +many Hebrews fell short of the teaching conveyed in the first chapter of +Genesis. But the fact remains that the one nation preserved the Tiamat +myth, the other the narrative of Genesis, and each counted its own +Creation story sacred. We can only rightly judge the two nations by what +they valued. Thus judged, the Hebrew nation stands as high above the +Babylonian in intelligence, as well as in faith, as the first chapter of +Genesis is above the Tiamat myth. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[26:1] _Records of the Past_, vol. i. p. 124. + +[27:1] _The Old Testament in the Light of the Historical Records of +Assyria and Babylonia_, by T. G. Pinches, p. 16. + +[28:1] _The Old Testament in the Light of the Historical Records of +Assyria and Babylonia_, by T. G. Pinches, p. 16. + +[28:2] _Records of the Past_, vol. i. p. 140. + +[28:3] _Ibid._ p. 142. + +[30:1] _The Old Testament in the Light of the Historical Records of +Assyria and Babylonia_, by T. G. Pinches, p. 49. + +[31:1] _Babel and Bible_, Johns' translation, pp. 36 and 37. + +[31:2] _The Old Testament in the Light of the Historical Records of +Assyria and Babylonia_, by T. G. Pinches, p. 48. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +THE FIRMAMENT + + +The sixth verse of the first chapter of Genesis presents a difficulty as +to the precise meaning of the principal word, viz. that translated +_firmament_. + + "And God said, Let there be a _r[=a]qi[=a]`_ in the midst of + the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters. And + God made the _r[=a]qi[=a]`_, and divided the waters which were + under the _r[=a]qi[=a]`_ from the waters which were above the + _r[=a]qi[=a]`_: and it was so. And God called the + _r[=a]qi[=a]`_ _Shamayim_. And the evening and the morning + were the second day." + +It is, of course, perfectly clear that by the word _r[=a]qi[=a]`_ in the +preceding passage it is the atmosphere that is alluded to. But later on +in the chapter the word is used in a slightly different connection. "God +said, Let there be lights in the firmament of heaven." + +As we look upward from the earth, we look through a twofold medium. Near +the earth we have our atmosphere; above that there is inter-stellar +space, void of anything, so far as we know, except the Ether. We are not +able to detect any line of demarcation where our atmosphere ends, and +the outer void begins. Both therefore are equally spoken of as "the +firmament"; and yet there is a difference between the two. The lower +supports the clouds; in the upper are set the two great lights and the +stars. The upper, therefore, is emphatically _reqi[=a]` hasshamayim_, +"the firmament of heaven," of the "uplifted." It is "in the face +of"--that is, "before," or "under the eyes of," "beneath,"--this higher +expanse that the fowls of the air fly to and fro. + +The firmament, then, is that which Tennyson sings of as "the central +blue," the seeming vault of the sky, which we can consider as at any +height above us that we please. The clouds are above it in one sense; +yet in another, sun, moon and stars, which are clearly far higher than +the clouds, are set in it. + +There is no question therefore as to what is referred to by the word +"firmament"; but there is a question as to the etymological meaning of +the word, and associated with that, a question as to how the Hebrews +themselves conceived of the celestial vault. + +The word _r[=a]qi[=a]`_, translated "firmament," properly signifies "an +expanse," or "extension," something stretched or beaten out. The verb +from which this noun is derived is often used in Scripture, both as +referring to the heavens and in other connections. Thus in Job xxxvii. +18, the question is asked, "Canst thou with Him _spread out_ the sky, +which is strong as a molten mirror?" Eleazar, the priest, after the +rebellion of Korah, Dathan and Abiram took the brazen censers of the +rebels, and they were "_made broad_ plates for a covering of the altar." +The goldsmith described by Isaiah as making an idol, "_spreadeth it +over_ with gold"; whilst Jeremiah says, "silver _spread_ into plates is +brought from Tarshish." Again, in Psalm cxxxvi., in the account of +creation we have the same word used with reference to the earth, "To him +that _stretched out_ the earth above the waters." In this and in many +other passages the idea of extension is clearly that which the word is +intended to convey. But the Seventy, in making the Greek Version of the +Old Testament, were naturally influenced by the views of astronomical +science then held in Alexandria, the centre of Greek astronomy. Here, +and at this time, the doctrine of the crystalline spheres--a +misunderstanding of the mathematical researches of Eudoxus and +others--held currency. These spheres were supposed to be a succession of +perfectly transparent and invisible solid shells, in which the sun, +moon, and planets were severally placed. The Seventy no doubt considered +that in rendering _r[=a]qi[=a]`_, by _stere[=o]ma_, i. e. firmament, +thus conveying the idea of a solid structure, they were speaking the +last word of up-to-date science. + +There should be no reluctance in ascribing to the Hebrews an erroneous +scientific conception if there is any evidence that they held it. We +cannot too clearly realize that the writers of the Scriptures were not +supernaturally inspired to give correct technical scientific +descriptions; and supposing they had been so inspired, we must bear in +mind that we should often consider those descriptions wrong just in +proportion to their correctness, for the very sufficient reason that not +even our own science of to-day has yet reached finality in all things. + +There should be no reluctance in ascribing to the Hebrews an erroneous +scientific conception if there is any evidence that they held it. In +this case, there is no such evidence; indeed, there is strong evidence +to the contrary. + +The Hebrew word _r[=a]qi[=a]`_, as already shown, really signifies +"extension," just as the word for heaven, _shamayim_ means the +"uplifted." In these two words, therefore, significant respectively of a +surface and of height, there is a recognition of the "three +dimensions,"--in other words, of Space. + +When we wish to refer to super-terrestrial space, we have two +expressions in modern English by which to describe it: we can speak of +"the vault of heaven," or of "the canopy of heaven." "The vault of +heaven" is most used, it has indeed been recently adopted as the title +of a scientific work by a well-known astronomer. But the word _vault_ +certainly gives the suggestion of a solid structure; whilst the word +_canopy_ calls up the idea of a slighter covering, probably of some +textile fabric. + +The reasons for thinking that the Hebrews did not consider the +"firmament" a solid structure are, first, that the word does not +necessarily convey that meaning; next, that the attitude of the Hebrew +mind towards nature was not such as to require this idea. The question, +"What holds up the waters above the firmament?" would not have troubled +them. It would have been sufficient for them, as for the writer to the +Hebrews, to consider that God was "upholding all things by the word of +His power," and they would not have troubled about the machinery. But +besides this, there are many passages in Scripture, some occurring in +the earliest books, which expressly speak of the clouds as carrying the +water; so that the expressions placing waters "above the firmament," or +"above the heavens," can mean no more than "in the clouds." Indeed, as +we shall see, quite a clear account is given of the atmospheric +circulation, such as could hardly be mended by a modern poet. + +It is true that David sang that "the _foundations_ of heaven moved and +shook, because He was wroth," and Job says that "the _pillars_ of heaven +tremble and are astonished at His reproof." But not only are the +references to foundations and pillars evidently intended merely as +poetic imagery, but they are also used much more frequently of the +earth, and yet at the same time Job expressly points out that God +"stretcheth out the north over the empty place, and hangeth the earth +upon nothing." The Hebrew formed no ideas like those of the Hindus, who +thought the earth supported by elephants, the elephants by a tortoise, +the tortoise by a snake. + +In Scripture, in most cases the word "earth" (_eretz_) does not mean the +solid mass of this our planet, but only its surface; the "dry land" as +opposed to the "seas"; the countries, the dwelling place of man and +beast. The "pillars" or "foundations" of the earth in this sense are the +great systems of the rocks, and these were conceived of as directly +supported by the power of God, without any need of intermediary +structures. The Hebrew clearly recognized that it is the will of God +alone that keeps the whole secure. + +Thus Hannah sang-- + + "The pillars of the earth are the Lord's, + And He hath set the world upon them." + +And Asaph represents the Lord as saying:-- + + "The earth and all the inhabitants thereof are dissolved: + I bear up the pillars of it." + +Yet again, just as we speak of "the celestial canopy," so Psalm civ. +describes the Lord as He "who stretchest out the heavens like a +curtain," and Isaiah gives the image in a fuller form,--"that stretcheth +out the heavens as a curtain, and spreadeth them out as a tent to dwell +in." The same expression of "stretching out the heavens" is repeatedly +used in Isaiah; it is indeed one of his typical phrases. Here, beyond +question, extension, spreading out, is the idea sought to be conveyed, +not that of solidity. + +The prophet Amos uses yet another parallel. "It is He that buildeth His +stories in the heaven." While Isaiah speaks of the entire stellar +universe as the tent or pavilion of Jehovah, Amos likens the height of +the heavens as the steps up to His throne; the "stories" are the +"ascent," as Moses speaks of the "ascent of Akrabbim," and David makes +"the ascent" of the Mount of Olives. The Hebrews cannot have regarded +the heavens as, literally, both staircase and reservoir. + +The firmament, _i. e._ the atmosphere, is spoken of as dividing between +the waters that are under the firmament, _i. e._ oceans, seas, rivers, +etc., from the waters that are above the firmament, _i. e._ the masses +of water vapour carried by the atmosphere, seen in the clouds, and +condensing from them as rain. We get the very same expression as this of +the "waters which were above" in the Psalm of Praise:-- + + "Praise Him, ye heavens of heavens, + And ye waters that be above the heavens;" + +and again in the Song of the Three Children:-- + + "O all ye waters that be above the heaven, bless ye the Lord." + +In the later books of the Bible the subject of the circulation of water +through the atmosphere is referred to much more fully. Twice over the +prophet Amos describes Jehovah as "He that calleth for the waters of the +sea, and poureth them out upon the face of the earth." This is not +merely a reference to the tides, for the Preacher in the book of +Ecclesiastes expressly points out that "all the rivers run into the sea, +yet the sea is not full; unto the place from whence the rivers come, +thither they return again"; and Isaiah seems to employ something of the +same thought: + + "For as the rain cometh down and the snow from heaven, and + returneth not thither, but watereth the earth, and maketh it + bring forth and bud, and giveth seed to the sower and bread to + the eater." + +Schiaparelli indeed argues that this very passage from Isaiah "expressly +excludes any idea of an atmospheric circulation of waters"[41:1] on the +ground that the water so falling is thought to be transmuted into seeds +and fruits. But surely the image is as true as it is beautiful! The rain +is absorbed by vegetation, and is transmuted into seeds and fruit, and +it would go hard to say that the same particles of rain are again +evaporated and taken up afresh into the clouds. Besides, if we complete +the quotation we find that what is stated is that the rain does not +return _until_ it has accomplished its purpose:-- + + "So shall My word be that goeth forth out of My mouth: it + shall not return unto Me void, but it shall accomplish that + which I please, and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I + sent it." + +Elihu describes the process of evaporation precisely:-- + + "Behold, God is great, and we know Him not; + The number of His years is unsearchable. + For He draweth up the drops of water, + Which distil in rain from His vapour: + Which the skies pour down + And drop upon man abundantly." + +Throughout the books of Holy Scripture, the connection between the +clouds and the rain is clearly borne in mind. Deborah says in her song +"the clouds dropped water." In the Psalms there are many references. In +lxxvii. 17, "The clouds poured out water;" in cxlvii. 8, "Who covereth +the heaven with clouds, Who prepareth rain for the earth." Proverbs xvi. +15, "His favour is as a cloud of the latter rain." The Preacher says +that "clouds return after the rain"; and Isaiah, "I will also command +the clouds that they rain no rain upon it"; and Jude, "Clouds they are +without water, carried about of winds." + +The clouds, too, were not conceived as being heavy. Nahum says that "the +clouds are the dust of His feet," and Isaiah speaks of "a cloud of dew +in the heat of harvest." The Preacher clearly understood that "the +waters above" were not pent in by solid barriers; that they were +carried by the clouds; for "if the clouds be full of rain, they empty +themselves upon the earth." And Job says of Jehovah, "He bindeth up the +waters in His thick clouds, and the cloud is not rent under them;" and, +later, Jehovah Himself asks:-- + + "Canst thou lift up thy voice to the clouds, + That abundance of waters may cover thee? + + * * * * * + + Who can number the clouds by wisdom, + Or who can pour out the bottles of heaven?" + +The Hebrews, therefore, were quite aware that the waters of the sea were +drawn up into the atmosphere by evaporation, and were carried by it in +the form of clouds. No doubt their knowledge in this respect, as in +others, was the growth of time. But there is no need to suppose that, +even in the earlier stages of their development, the Hebrews thought of +the "waters that be above the heavens" as contained in a literal cistern +overhead. Still less is there reason to adopt Prof. Schiaparelli's +strange deduction: "Considering the spherical and convex shape of the +firmament, the upper waters could not remain above without a second wall +to hold them in at the sides and the top. So a second vault above the +vault of the firmament closes in, together with the firmament, a space +where are the storehouses of rain, hail, and snow."[43:1] There seems to +be nowhere in Scripture the slightest hint or suggestion of any such +second vault; certainly not in the beautiful passage to which Prof. +Schiaparelli is here referring. + + "Where is the way to the dwelling of light, + And as for darkness, where is the place thereof; + That thou shouldest take it to the bound thereof, + And that thou shouldst discern the paths to the house thereof. + + * * * * * + + Hast thou entered the treasuries of the snow, + Or hast thou seen the treasuries of the hail, + Which I have reserved against the time of trouble, + Against the day of battle and war? + By what way is the light parted, + Or the east wind scattered upon the earth? + Who hath cleft a channel for the water-flood, + Or a way for the lightning of the thunder; + + * * * * * + + Hath the rain a father? + Or who hath begotten the drops of dew? + Out of whose womb came the ice? + And the hoary frost of heaven, who hath gendered it?" + +The Song of David, Psalm xviii., clearly shows that its writer held no +fantasy of a solidly built cistern of waters in the sky, but thought of +the "dark waters" in the heavens, as identical with the "thick clouds." +The passage is worth quoting at some length, not merely as supplying a +magnificent word picture of a storm, but as showing the free and +courageous spirit of the Hebrew poet, a spirit more emancipated than can +be found in any other nation of antiquity. It was not only the gentler +aspect of nature that attracted him; even for its most terrible, he had +a sympathy, rising, under the influence of his strong faith in God, into +positive exultation in it. + + "In my distress I called upon the Lord, + And cried unto my God: + He heard my voice out of His temple, + And my cry before Him came into His ears. + Then the earth shook and trembled, + The foundations also of the mountains moved + And were shaken, because He was wroth. + There went up a smoke out of His nostrils, + And fire out of His mouth devoured: + Coals were kindled by it. + He bowed the heavens also, and came down; + And thick darkness was under His feet. + And He rode upon a cherub, and did fly: + Yea, He flew swiftly upon the wings of the wind. + He made darkness His hiding place, + His pavilion round about Him; + Darkness of waters, thick clouds of the skies. + At the brightness before Him His thick clouds passed, + Hailstones and coals of fire. + The Lord also thundered in the heavens, + And the Most High uttered His voice; + Hailstones and coals of fire. + And He sent out His arrows, and scattered them; + Yea lightnings manifold, and discomfited them. + Then the channels of waters appeared, + And the foundations of the world were laid bare, + At Thy rebuke, O Lord, + At the blast of the breath of Thy nostrils. + He sent from on high, He took me; + He drew me out of many waters. + He delivered me from my strong enemy, + And from them that hated me, for they were too mighty for me." + +Two other passages point to the circulation of water vapour upward from +the earth before its descent as rain; one in the prophecy of Jeremiah, +the other, almost identical with it, in Psalm cxxxv. 7: "When He +uttereth His voice, there is a tumult of waters in the heavens, and He +causeth the vapours to ascend from the ends of the earth; He maketh +lightnings for the rain, and bringeth forth the wind out of His +treasuries." Here we get a hint of a close observing of nature among +the Hebrews. For by the foreshortening that clouds undergo in the +distance, they inevitably appear to form chiefly on the horizon, "at the +ends of the earth," whence they move upwards towards the zenith. + +A further reference to clouds reveals not observation only but acute +reflection, though it leaves the mystery without solution. "Dost thou +know the balancings of the clouds, the wondrous works of Him Which is +perfect in knowledge?" There is a deep mystery here, which science is +far from having completely solved, how it is that the clouds float, each +in its own place, at its own level; each perfectly "balanced" in the +thin air. + + "That mist which lies in the morning so softly in the valley, + level and white, through which the tops of the trees rise as + if through an inundation--why is _it_ so heavy? and why does + it lie so low, being yet so thin and frail that it will melt + away utterly into splendour of morning, when the sun has shone + on it but a few moments more? Those colossal pyramids, huge + and firm, with outlines as of rocks, and strength to bear the + beating of the high sun full on their fiery flanks--why are + _they_ so light--their bases high over our heads, high over + the heads of Alps? why will these melt away, not as the sun + rises, but as he descends, and leave the stars of twilight + clear, while the valley vapour gains again upon the earth like + a shroud?"[46:1] + +The fact of the "balancing" has been brought home to us during the past +hundred years very vividly by the progress of aerial navigation. +Balloons are objects too familiar even to our children to cause them any +surprise, and every one knows how instantly a balloon, when in the +air, rises up higher if a few pounds of ballast are thrown out, or sinks +if a little of the gas is allowed to escape. We know of no balancing +more delicate than this, of a body floating in the air. + +[Illustration: CIRRUS FROM SOUTH KENSINGTON, 1906, MAY 29.] + +[Illustration: CUMULI FROM TUNBRIDGE WELLS, 1906, MAY 20. + +(Photographs of clouds, taken by Dr. W. J. S. Lockyer.) + +"Dost thou know the balancing of the clouds?"] + +"The spreadings of the clouds," mentioned by Elihu are of the same +nature as their "balancings," but the expression is less remarkable. The +"spreading" is a thing manifest to all, but it required the mind both of +a poet and a man of science to appreciate that such spreading involved a +delicate poising of each cloud in its place. + +The heavy rain which fell at the time of the Deluge is indeed spoken of +as if it were water let out of a reservoir by its floodgates,--"the +windows of heaven were opened;" but it seems to show some dulness on the +part of an objector to argue that this expression involves the idea of a +literal stone built reservoir with its sluices. Those who have actually +seen tropical rain in full violence will find the Scriptural phrase not +merely appropriate but almost inevitable. The rain does indeed fall like +hitherto pent-up waters rushing forth at the opening of a sluice, and it +seems unreasonable to try to place too literal an interpretation upon so +suitable a simile. + +There is the less reason to insist upon this very matter-of-fact +rendering of the "windows of heaven," that in two out of the three +connections in which it occurs, the expression is certainly used +metaphorically. On the occasion of the famine in the city of Samaria, +Elisha prophesied that-- + + "To-morrow about this time shall a measure of fine flour be + sold for a shekel, and two measures of barley for a shekel, in + the gate of Samaria. Then a lord on whose hand the king leaned + answered the man of God, and said, Behold, if the Lord would + make windows in heaven, might this thing be?" + +So again Malachi exhorted the Jews after the Return from Babylon:-- + + "Bring ye all the tithes into the storehouse, that there may + be meat in Mine house, and prove Me now herewith, saith the + Lord of hosts, if I will not open you the windows of heaven, + and pour you out a blessing, that there shall not be room + enough to receive it." + +In neither case can the "windows of heaven" have been meant by the +speaker to convey the idea of the sluice-gates of an actual, +solidly-built reservoir in the sky. + +One other cloud fact--their dissipation as the sun rises high in the +heavens--is noticed in one of the most tender and pathetic passages in +all the prophetic Scriptures. The Lord, by the mouth of Hosea, is +mourning over the instability of His people. "O Ephraim, what shall I do +unto thee? O Judah, what shall I do unto thee? For your goodness is as a +morning cloud, and as the early dew it goeth away." + +The winds of heaven were considered as four in number, corresponding to +our own four "cardinal points." Thus the great horn of Daniel's he-goat +was broken and succeeded by four notable horns toward the four winds of +heaven; as the empire of Alexander the Great was divided amongst his +four generals. In Ezekiel's vision of the dry bones the prophet prays, +"Come from the four winds, O breath, and breathe upon these slain;" and +Jeremiah foretells that "the four winds from the four quarters of +heaven" shall be brought upon Elam, and scatter its outcasts into every +nation. + +The circulation of the winds is clearly set forth by the Preacher in the +Book of Ecclesiastes. + + "The wind goeth toward the south, and turneth about unto the + north; it whirleth about continually, and the wind returneth + again according to his circuits." + +Of the four quarters, the Hebrews reckoned the east as first. It was to +the east that they supposed themselves always looking. The chief word +for east, therefore, _kedem_, means "that which is before," "the front"; +and the word next in use is, naturally, _mizrach_, the rising of the +sun. The west is, as naturally, _meb[=o] hasshemesh_, the going down of +the sun; but as the Mediterranean Sea lay to the westward of Palestine +"the sea" (_yam_) is frequently put instead of that point of the +compass. With the east in front, the south becomes the right, and the +north the left. The south also was _negeb_, the desert, since the desert +shut in Palestine to the south, as the sea to the west. In opposition to +_tsaphon_, the dark or hidden north, the south is _darom_, the bright +and sunny region. + +The phrase "four corners of the earth" does not imply that the Hebrews +thought of the earth as square. Several expressions on the contrary show +that they thought of it as circular. The Lord "sitteth upon the circle +of the earth," and in another passage the same form is applied to the +ocean. "He set a compass (_margin_ circle) upon the face of the depth." +This circle is no doubt the circle of the visible horizon, within which +earth and sea are spread out apparently as a plain; above it "the vault +of heaven" (Job xxii. 14; R.V. _margin_) is arched. There does not +appear to be allusion, anywhere in Scripture, to the spherical form of +the earth. + +The Hebrew knowledge of the extent of the terrestrial plain was of +course very limited, but it would seem that, like many other nations of +antiquity, they supposed that the ocean occupied the outer part of the +circle surrounding the land which was in the centre. This may be +inferred from Job's statement-- + + "He hath described a boundary upon the face of the waters, + Unto the confines of light and darkness." + +The boundary of the world is represented as being "described," or more +properly "circumscribed," drawn as a circle, upon the ocean. This ocean +is considered as essentially one, exactly as by actual exploration we +now know it to be;--"Let the waters under the heaven be gathered +together unto one place;"--all the oceans and seas communicate. + +Beneath the earth there are the waters. The Lord hath founded the world +"upon the seas, and established it upon the floods," and (Psalm cxxxvi. +6) "stretched out the earth above the waters." This for the most part +means simply that the water surface lies lower than the land surface. +But there are waters,--other than those of the ocean,--which are, in a +strict sense, beneath the earth; the subterranean waters, which though +in the very substance of the earth, and existing there in an altogether +different way from the great masses of water we see upon the surface, +form a water system, which may legitimately be termed a kind of ocean +underground. From these subterranean waters our springs issue forth, and +it is these waters we tap in our wells. Of the cedar in Lebanon Ezekiel +spoke: "The waters made him great, the deep set him up on high with her +rivers running round about his plants, and sent out her little rivers +(_margin_, conduits) unto all the trees of the field." The "deep," +_teh[=o]m_, applies therefore, not merely to the restless waters of the +ocean, but to these unseen waters as well; and means, not merely +"surging waters," but depths of any kind. When in the great Deluge the +floodgates of heaven were opened, these "fountains of the great deep +were broken up" as well. And later both fountains and windows were +"stopped." So the Lord asks Job, "Hast thou entered into the springs of +the sea? or hast thou walked in the search of the depth?" and in +Proverbs it is said of the Lord, "By His knowledge the depths are broken +up, and the clouds drop down the dew." + +The tides upon the sea-coast of Palestine are very slight, but some have +seen a reference to them in Jer. v. 22 where the Lord says, I "have +placed the sand for the bound of the sea by a perpetual decree, that it +cannot pass it: and though the waves thereof toss themselves, yet can +they not prevail; though they roar, yet can they not pass over it." More +probably the idea to be conveyed is merely that of the restraint of the +sea to its proper basin, as in the passage where the Lord asks Job, "Who +shut up the sea with doors when it brake forth, as if it had issued out +of the womb?" And the writer of Proverbs sums all up:-- + + "When He prepared the heavens I [Wisdom] was there: when He + set a compass upon the face of the depth: when He established + the clouds above: when He strengthened the fountains of the + deep: when He gave to the sea His decree, that the waters + should not pass His commandment: when He appointed the + foundations of the earth." + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[41:1] _Astronomy in the Old Testament_, p. 33 note. + +[43:1] _Astronomy in the Old Testament_, p. 32. + +[46:1] Ruskin, _Modern Painters_, part vii. chap. i. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +THE ORDINANCES OF THE HEAVENS + + +As has been already pointed out, the astronomical references in +Scripture are not numerous, and probably give but an inadequate idea of +the actual degree of progress attained by the Hebrews in astronomical +science. Yet it is clear, even from the record which we have, that there +was one great astronomical fact which they had observed, and that it had +made a deep impression upon them. + +That fact was the sublime Order of the heavenly movements. First amongst +these was the order of the daily progress of the sun; rising in the east +and moving slowly, majestically, and resistlessly upward to the +meridian,--the "midst" or "bisection" of heaven, of Josh. x. 13,--and +then passing downwards as smoothly and unfalteringly to his setting in +the west. + +This motion of the sun inspires the simile employed by the Psalmist in +the astronomical psalm, the nineteenth. He sings-- + + "The heavens declare the glory of God. + + * * * * * + + In them hath He set a tabernacle for the sun, + Which is as a bridegroom coming out of his chamber, + And rejoiceth as a strong man to run his course. + His going forth is from the end of the heaven, + And his circuit unto the ends of it: + And there is nothing hid from the heat thereof." + +The night revealed another Order, in its way more majestic still. As the +twilight faded away the bright and silent watchers of the heavens +mustered each in his place. And each, like the sun during the day, was +moving, slowly, majestically, resistlessly, "without haste, without +rest." Each had its appointed place, its appointed path. Some moved in +small circles in the north; some rose in the east, and swept in long +curves over towards their setting in the west, some scarcely lifted +themselves above the southern horizon. But each one kept its own place. +None jostled another, or hurried in advance, or lagged behind. It is no +wonder that as the multitude of the stars was observed, and the unbroken +order of their going, that the simile suggested itself of an army on the +march--"the host of heaven." And the sight of the unbroken order of +these bright celestial orbs suggested a comparison with the unseen army +of exalted beings, the angels; the army or host of heaven in another +sense, marshalled, like the stars, in perfect obedience to the Divine +will. So in the vision of Micaiah, the son of Imlah, the "host of +heaven" are the thousands of attendant spirits waiting around the throne +of God to fulfil His bidding. + + "I saw the Lord sitting on His throne, and all the host of + heaven standing by him on His right hand and on His left." + +But more frequently it is the starry, not the angelic, army to which +reference is made. + +So Jeremiah prophesies-- + + "As the host of heaven cannot be numbered, + Neither the sand of the sea measured: + So will I multiply the seed of David My servant, + And the Levites that minister unto Me." + +The prophets of Israel recognized clearly, that the starry host of +heaven and the angelic host were distinct; that the first, in their +brightness, order, and obedience formed fitting comparison for the +second; but that both were created beings; neither were divinities. + +The heathen nations around recognized also the hosts both of the stars +and of spiritual beings, but the first they took as the manifestations +of the second, whom they counted as divinities. There was often a great +confusion between the two, and the observance or worship of the first +could not be kept distinguished from the recognition or worship of the +other; the very ideogram for a god was an 8-rayed star. + +The Hebrews were warned again and again lest, confusing in their minds +these two great hosts of stars and angels, they should deem the one the +divine manifestation of the other, the divinity, not accounting them +both fellow-servants, the handiwork of God. + +Thus, in the wilderness, the Lord commands them through Moses-- + + "Take ye therefore good heed unto yourselves, . . . lest thou + lift up thine eyes unto heaven, and when thou seest the sun, + and the moon, and the stars, even all the host of heaven, + shouldest be driven to worship them, and serve them, which the + Lord thy God hath divided [distributed] unto all nations under + the whole heaven." + +But the one celestial army continually suggests the other, and the two +are placed in the closest parallelism when reference is made to the time +when the foundations of the earth were fastened, and the corner stone +thereof was laid, + + "When the morning stars sang together, + And all the sons of God shouted for joy." + +So when Deborah sings of the deliverance which the Lord gave to Israel +at the battle of the Kishon, she puts the stars for the angelic legions +that she feels assured were engaged in warring in their support. + + "They fought from heaven; + The stars in their courses fought against Sisera." + +The "courses" of the stars are the paths which they appear to follow as +they move round the pole of the heavens as the night proceeds, whilst +the stars themselves stand for the heavenly helpers who, unseen, had +mingled in the battle and discomforted the squadrons of Sisera's +war-chariots. It almost reads as if to Deborah had been vouchsafed such +a vision as Elisha prayed might be given to his servant:-- + + "Therefore sent the King of Syria thither horses, and + chariots, and a great host: and they came by night, and + compassed the city about. + + "And when the servant of the man of God was risen early, and + gone forth, behold, an host compassed the city both with + horses and chariots. And his servant said unto him, Alas, my + master! how shall we do? + + "And he answered, Fear not: for they that be with us are more + than they that be with them. + + "And Elisha prayed, and said, Lord, I pray Thee, open his + eyes that he may see. And the Lord opened the eyes of the + young man; and he saw: and, behold, the mountain was full of + horses and chariots of fire round about Elisha." + +The solemn procession of the starry host through the long night--the +rising in the east, the southing, and the setting in the west--is not +the only ordered movement of the stars of heaven that may be recognized. +As night by night brightens to its dawn, if we watch the eastern horizon +and note what stars are the last to rise above it before the growing +daylight overpowers the feeble stellar rays, then we see that some +bright star, invisible on the preceding mornings, shines out for a few +moments low down in the glimmer of the dawn. As morning succeeds morning +it rises earlier, until at last it mounts when it is yet dark, and some +other star takes its place as the herald of the rising sun. We recognize +to-day this "heliacal rising" of the stars. Though we do not make use of +it in our system of time-measuring, it played an important part in the +calendar-making of the ancients. Such heralds of the rising sun were +called "morning stars" by the Hebrews, and they used them "for seasons" +and "for years." One star or constellation of stars would herald by its +"heliacal rising" the beginning of spring, another the coming of winter; +the time to plough, the time to sow, the time of the rains, would all be +indicated by the successive "morning stars" as they appeared. And after +an interval of three hundred and sixty-five or three hundred and +sixty-six days the same star would again show itself as a morning star +for a second time, marking out the year, whilst the other morning stars +would follow, each in its due season. So we read in Job, that God led +"forth the Mazzaroth in their season." + +This wonderful procession of the midnight sky is not known and admired +by those who live in walled cities and ceiled houses, as it is by those +who live in the open, in the wilderness. It is not therefore to be +wondered at, that we find praise of these "works of the Lord . . . +sought out of all them that have pleasure therein," mostly amongst the +shepherds, the herdsmen, the wanderers in the open--in the words and +prophecies of Job, of Jacob, Moses, David and Amos. + +The thought that each new day, beginning with a new outburst of light, +was, in its degree, a kind of new creation, an emblem of the original +act by which the world was brought into being, renders appropriate and +beautiful the ascription of the term "morning stars" to those "sons of +God," the angels. As the stars in the eastern sky are poetically thought +of as "singing together" to herald the creation of each new day, so in +the verses already quoted from the Book of Job, the angels of God are +represented as shouting for joy when the foundations of the earth were +laid. + +The "morning star" again stands as the type and earnest of that new +creation which God has promised to His servants. The epistle to Thyatira +concludes with the promise--"He that overcometh, and keepeth my works +unto the end, . . . I will give him the morning star." + +The brightest of these heralds of the sun is the planet Venus, and such +a "morning star" for power, glory, and magnificence, the king of +Babylon had once been; like one of the angels of God. But as addressed +in Isaiah's prophecy, he has been brought down to Sheol:-- + + "How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the + morning!. . . For thou hast said in thine heart, I will ascend + into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God + . . . I will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will be + like the most High." + +But the "morning star" is taken as a higher type, even of our Lord +Himself, and of His future coming in glory. St. Peter bids the +disciples, to whom he writes, take heed unto the word of prophecy as +unto a lamp shining in a dark place "until the day dawn, and the Day +star arise in your hearts." In almost the last words of the Bible, the +Lord uses the same image Himself:-- + + "I, Jesus, have sent Mine angel to testify unto you these + things in the Churches. I am the root and the offspring of + David, the bright and morning star." + +In the sublime and ordered movements of the various heavenly bodies, the +Hebrews recognized the ordinances of God. The point of view always taken +in Scripture is the theo-centric one; the relation sought to be brought +out is not the relation of thing to thing--which is the objective of +physical science--but the relation of creature to Creator. We have no +means of knowing whether they made attempt to find any mechanical +explanation of the movements; such inquiry would lie entirely outside +the scope of the books of Holy Scripture, and other ancient Hebrew +literature has not been transmitted to us. + +The lesson which the Psalmists and the Prophets desired to teach was +not the daily rotation of the earth upon its axis, nor its yearly +revolution round the sun, but that-- + + "If those ordinances depart from before Me, saith the Lord, + then the seed of Israel also shall cease from being a nation + before Me for ever." + +In the Bible all intermediate steps are omitted, and the result is +linked immediately to the first Cause. God Himself is the theme, and +trust in Him the lesson. + + "Lift up your eyes on high, and see Who hath created these, + That bringeth out their host by number: He calleth them all by + name; by the greatness of His might, and for that He is strong + in power, not one is lacking. + + "Why sayest thou, O Jacob, and speakest, O Israel, My way is + hid from the Lord, and my judgment is passed away from my God. + Hast thou not known? hast thou not heard? the everlasting God, + the Lord, the Creator of the ends of the earth, fainteth not, + neither is weary; there is no searching of His understanding. + He giveth power to the faint; and to him that hath no might He + increaseth strength. Even the youths shall faint and be weary, + and the young men shall utterly fall: but they that wait upon + the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with + wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; they shall + walk, and not faint." + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +THE SUN + + "And God said Let there be lights in the firmament of the + heaven to divide the day from the night; and let them be for + signs, and for seasons and for days, and years: and let them + be for lights in the firmament of the heaven, to give light + upon the earth: and it was so. And God made two great lights; + the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to + rule the night: He made the stars also. And God set them in + the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth, and + to rule over the day and over the night, and to divide the + light from the darkness: and God saw that it was good. And the + evening and the morning were the fourth day." + + +A double purpose for the two great heavenly bodies is indicated +here,--first, the obvious one of giving light; next, that of time +measurement. These, from the human and practical point of view, are the +two main services which the sun and moon render to us, and naturally +sufficed for the object that the writer had before him. There is no +evidence that he had any idea that the moon simply shone by reflecting +the light of the sun; still less that the sun was a light for worlds +other than our own; but if he had known these facts we can hardly +suppose that he would have mentioned them; there would have been no +purpose to be served by so doing. + +But it is remarkable that no reference is made either to the +incalculable benefits conferred by the action of the sun in ripening the +fruits of the earth, or to the services of the moon as a time-measurer, +in dividing off the months. Both these actions are clearly indicated +later on in the Scriptures, where Moses, in the blessing which he +pronounced upon the tribe of Joseph, prayed that his land might be +blessed "for the precious things of the fruits of the sun," so that we +may take their omission here, together with the omission of all mention +of the planets, and the slight parenthetical reference to the stars, as +indicating that this chapter was composed at an exceedingly early date. + +The chief purpose of the sun is to give light; it "rules" or regulates +the day and "divides the light from the darkness." As such it is the +appropriate emblem of God Himself, Who "is Light, and in Him is no +darkness at all." These images are frequently repeated in the +Scriptures, and it is only possible to give a few instances. David +sings, "The Lord is my light and my salvation." "The Lord shall be unto +thee an everlasting light," is the promise made to Zion. St. John +expressly uses the term of the Son of God, our Lord: "That was the true +Light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world." Whilst the +more concrete emblem is used as often. In the eighty-fourth psalm, the +psalm of pilgrimage, we read, "The Lord God is a sun and shield;" +Malachi predicts that "the Sun of Righteousness shall arise with +healing in His wings," and St James, with the same thought of the sun in +his mind, speaks of God as "the Father of lights." + +But in none of these or the other parallel passages is there the +remotest approach to any deification of the sun, or even of that most +ethereal of influences, light itself. Both are creatures, both are made +by God; they are things and things only, and are not even the shrines of +a deity. They may be used as emblems of God in some of His attributes; +they do not even furnish any indication of His special presence, for He +is equally present where sun and light are not. "The darkness hideth not +from Thee; but the night shineth as the day: the darkness and the light +are both alike to Thee." + +The worship of the sun and of other heavenly bodies is one of the sins +most unsparingly denounced in Scripture. It was one of the first +warnings of the Book of Deuteronomy that Israel as a people were to take +heed "lest thou lift up thine eyes unto heaven, and when thou seest the +sun, and the moon, and the stars, even all the host of heaven, shouldest +be driven to worship them and serve them," and the utter overthrow of +the nation was foretold should they break this law. And as for the +nation, so for the individual, any "man or woman that hath wrought +wickedness in the sight of the Lord thy God, in transgressing His +covenant and hath gone and served other gods, and worshipped them, +either the sun, or moon, or any of the host of heaven" was when +convicted of working "such abomination" unsparingly to be put to death. + +Yet with all this, sun-worship prevailed in Israel again and again. Two +of the reforming kings of Judah, Asa and Josiah, found it necessary to +take away "the sun-images;" indeed, the latter king found that the +horses and chariots which his predecessors, Manasseh and Amon, had +dedicated to sun worship were kept at the very entrance to the temple. +In spite of his reformation, however, the evil spread until the final +corruption of Jerusalem was shown in vision to Ezekiel, "Seventy men of +the ancients"--that is the complete Sanhedrim--offered incense to +creeping things and abominable beasts; the women wept for Tammuz, +probably the sun-god in his decline to winter death; and deepest +apostasy of all, five and twenty men, the high-priest, and the chief +priests of the twenty-four courses, "with their backs toward the temple +of the Lord, and their faces toward the east; and they worshipped the +sun toward the east." The entire nation, as represented in its chief +members in State, Society, and Church, was apostate, and its ruin +followed. Five years more and the temple was burned and Jerusalem +destroyed, and in captivity and exile the nation learned to abhor the +idolatry that had brought about its overthrow. + +Four words are translated "sun" in our Authorized Version. Of these one, +used Job xxxi. 26, should really be "light," as in the margin--"If I +beheld the light when it shined,"--though the sun is obviously meant. +The second word is one used in poetry chiefly in conjunction with a +poetical word for the moon, and refers to the sun's warmth, as the other +does to the whiteness of the moon. Thus the Bride in the Song of Solomon +is described as "fair as the moon, clear as the sun." The third word +has given use to some ambiguity. In the eighth chapter of Judges in the +Authorized Version, it is stated that "Gideon, the son of Joash, +returned from the battle before the sun was up," but in the Revised +Version that he "returned from the battle from the ascent of Heres." +There was a mount [H.]eres, a mount of the sun, in the portion of the +Danites held by the Amorites, but that cannot have been the [H.]eres of +Gideon. Still the probability is that a mount sacred to the sun is meant +here as well as in the reference to the Danites; though _[h.]eres_ as +meaning the sun itself occurs in the story of Samson's riddle, for the +men of the city gave him the answer to it which they had extorted from +his wife, "before the sun (_[h.]eres_) went down." _Shemesh_, the +_Samas_ of the Babylonians, is the usual word for the sun; and we find +it in Beth-shemesh, the "house of the sun," a Levitical city within the +tribe of Judah, the scene of the return of the ark after its captivity +amongst the Philistines. There was another Beth-shemesh in Naphtali on +the borders of Issachar, and Jeremiah prophesies that Nebuchadnezzar +"shall break also the images of Beth-shemesh, that is in the land of +Egypt," probably the obelisks of the sun in On, or Heliopolis. It was +from this city that Joseph, when vizier of Egypt, took his wife, the +daughter of the high priest there. The images of the sun, and of Baal as +the sun-god, seem to have been obelisks or pillars of stone, and hence +had to be "broken down"; whilst the Asherah, the "groves" of the +Authorized Version, the images of Ashtoreth as the moon-goddess, were +wooden pillars, to be "cut" or "hewn down." + +Another "city of the sun" in the land of Egypt is also mentioned by +Isaiah, in his prophecy of the conversion and restoration of the +Egyptians. "Five cities in the land of Egypt shall speak the language of +Canaan, and swear to the Lord of hosts; one shall be called The city of +destruction;" lit. of _[H.]eres_, or of the sun. It was upon the +strength of this text that Onias, the son of Onias the high priest, +appealed to Ptolemy Philometer to be allowed to build a temple to +Jehovah in the prefecture of Heliopolis (the city of the sun), and +obtained his permission to do so, B.C. 149.[68:1] + +The epithet applied to the sun in Cant. vi. already quoted, "Clear as +the sun," may be taken as equivalent to "spotless." That is its ordinary +appearance to the naked eye, though from time to time--far more +frequently than most persons have any idea--there are spots upon the sun +sufficiently large to be seen without any optical assistance. Thus in +the twenty years from 1882 to 1901 inclusive, such a phenomenon occurred +on the average once in each week. No reference to the existence of +sun-spots occurs in Scripture. Nor is this surprising, for it would not +have fallen within the purpose of Scripture to record such a fact. But +it is surprising that whilst the Chinese detected their occasional +appearance, there is no distinct account of such an observation given +either on Babylonian tablets or by classical or mediaeval writers. + +The achievement of the Chinese in this direction is very notable, for +the difficulty of looking directly at the sun, under ordinary +circumstances is so great, and the very largest sunspots are so small as +compared with the entire disc, that it argues great perseverance in +watching such appearances on the part of the Chinese, for them to have +assured themselves that they were not due to very small distant clouds +in our own atmosphere. + +It has often been the subject of comment that light is mentioned in Gen. +i. as having been created on the first day, but the sun not until the +fourth. The order is entirely appropriate from an astronomical point of +view, for we know that our sun is not the only source of light, since it +is but one out of millions of stars, many of which greatly exceed it in +splendour. Further, most astronomers consider that our solar system +existed as a luminous nebula long ages before the sun was formed as a +central condensation. + +But the true explanation of the creation of light being put first is +probably this--that there might be no imagining that, though gross solid +bodies, like earth and sea, sun and moon might require a Creator, yet +something so ethereal and all-pervading as light was self-existent, and +by its own nature, eternal. This was a truth that needed to be stated +first. God is light, but light is not God. + +The other references to the sun in Scripture do not call for much +comment. Its apparent unchangeableness qualifies it for use as an +expression for eternal duration, as in the seventy-second, the Royal, +Psalm, "They shall fear Thee as long as the sun and moon endure;" and +again, "His name shall endure for ever: His name shall be continued as +long as the sun." And again, in the eighty-ninth Psalm, it is said of +David: "His seed shall endure for ever, and his throne as the sun before +Me." + +The daily course of the sun from beyond the eastern horizon to beyond +the western gives the widest expression for the compass of the whole +earth. "The mighty God, even the Lord, hath spoken, and called the +earth, from the rising of the sun unto the going down thereof." "From +the rising of the sun, unto the going down of the same, the Lord's name +is to be praised." The sun's rays penetrate everywhere. "His going forth +is from the end of the heaven, and his circuit unto the ends of it: and +there is nothing hid from the heat thereof." Whilst in the Book of +Ecclesiastes, the melancholy words of the Preacher revert over and over +again to that which is done "under the sun." "What profit hath a man of +all his labour which he taketh under the sun?" + +It should be noted that this same Book of Ecclesiastes shows a much +clearer idea of the sun's daily apparent motion than was held by many of +the writers of antiquity. There is, of course, nowhere in Scripture any +mention of the rotation of the earth on its axis as the mechanical +explanation of the sun's daily apparent motion; any more than we should +refer to it ourselves to-day except when writing from a purely technical +point of view. As said already, the Hebrews had probably not discovered +this explanation, and would certainly have not gone out of their way to +mention it in any of their Scriptures if they had. + +One passage of great beauty has sometimes been quoted as if it contained +a reference to the earth's rotation, but when carefully examined it is +seen to be dealing simply with the apparent motion of the sun in the +course of the year and of the day. + + "Hast thou commanded the morning since thy days; + And caused the dayspring to know his place; + That it might take hold of the ends of the earth, + That the wicked might be shaken out of it? + It is turned as clay to the seal; + And they stand as a garment." + +The earth appears to be spoken of as being "turned" to the sun, the +dayspring; and this, we know, takes place, morning by morning, in +consequence of the diurnal rotation. But the last two lines are better +rendered in the Revised Version-- + + "It is changed as clay under the seal; + And _all things_ stand forth as a garment." + +The ancient seals were cylinders, rolled over the clay, which, formless +before, took upon it the desired relief as the seal passed over it. So a +garment, laid aside and folded up during the night, is shapeless, but +once again takes form when the wearer puts it on. And the earth, +formless in the darkness, gains shape and colour and relief with the +impress upon it of the morning light. + +It is quite clear that the Hebrews did not suppose that it was a new sun +that came up from the east each morning, as did Xenophanes and the +Epicureans amongst the Greeks. It was the same sun throughout. Nor is +there any idea of his hiding himself behind a mysterious mountain during +the night. "The sun," the Preacher tells us, "ariseth and the sun goeth +down, and hasteth to his place where he arose." The Hebrew was quite +aware that the earth was unsupported in space, for he knew that the Lord +"stretcheth out the north over the empty place, and hangeth the earth +upon nothing." There was therefore nothing to hinder the sun passing +freely under the earth from west to east, and thus making his path, not +a mere march onward ending in his dissolution at sunset, but a complete +"circuit," as noted by the writer of the nineteenth Psalm. + +The fierceness of the sun's heat in Palestine rendered sun-stroke a +serious danger. The little son of the Shunammite was probably so smitten +as he watched his father at work with the reapers. So the promise is +given to God's people more than once: "The sun shall not smite thee by +day." "They shall not hunger nor thirst; neither shall the heat nor sun +smite them." The martyrs who pass through the great tribulation "shall +hunger no more, neither thirst any more; neither shall the sun light on +them, nor any heat." + +There are fewer references in Scripture to the vivifying effects of +sunlight upon vegetation than we might have expected. The explanation is +possibly to be found in the terrible perversion men had made of the +benefits which came to them by means of this action of sunlight, by +using them as an excuse for plunging into all kinds of nature-worship. +Yet there are one or two allusions not without interest. As already +mentioned, "the precious fruits brought forth by the sun" were promised +to the tribe of Joseph, whilst the great modern discovery that nearly +every form of terrestrial energy is derived ultimately from the energy +of the sun's rays gives a most striking appropriateness to the imagery +made use of by St. James. + + "Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and + cometh down from the Father of Lights, with Whom is no + variableness, neither shadow of turning." + +God, that is to say, is the true Sun, the true Origin of all Lights, the +true bestower of every good and perfect gift. The word rendered +"variableness," is a technical word, used by ourselves in modern English +as "parallax," and employed in the Septuagint Version to denote the +revolutions of the heavenly bodies, described in the thirty-eighth +chapter of the book of Job, as "the ordinances of the heavens." With the +natural sun, therefore, there is "variableness," that is to say, real or +apparent change of place; there is none with God. Neither is there with +Him any darkness of eclipse; any "shadow" caused as in the case of the +material sun, by the "turning" of earth and moon in their orbits. The +knowledge of "the alternations of the turning of the sun," described in +the Book of Wisdom as a feature of the learning of Solomon, was a +knowledge of the laws of this "variableness" and "turning"; especially +of the "turning" of its rising and setting points at the two solstices; +and St. James may well have had that passage in his mind when he wrote. +For Science deals with the knowledge of things that change, as they +change, and of their changes, but Faith with the knowledge of Him that +abideth for ever, and it is to this higher knowledge that St. James +wished to point his readers. + +Science deals with the knowledge of things that change, as they change +and of their changes. The physical facts that we have learned in the +last years about that changeful body the sun are briefly these:-- + +Its core or inner nucleus is not accessible to observation, its nature +and constitution being a mere matter of inference. The "photosphere" is +a shell of incandescent cloud surrounding the nucleus, but the depth, or +thickness of this shell is quite unknown. The outer surface--which we +see--of the photosphere is certainly pretty sharply defined, though very +irregular, rising at points into whiter aggregations, called "faculae," +and perhaps depressed at other places in the dark "spots." Immediately +above the photosphere lies the "reversing layer" in which are found the +substances which give rise to the gaps in the sun's spectrum--the +Fraunhofer lines. Above the "reversing layer" lies the scarlet +"chromosphere" with "prominences" of various forms and dimensions rising +high above the solar surface; and over, and embracing all, is the +"corona," with its mysterious petal-like forms and rod-like rays. + +The great body of the sun is gaseous, though it is impossible for us to +conceive of the condition of the gaseous core, subjected, as it is, at +once to temperature and pressure both enormously great. Probably it is a +gas so viscous that it would resist motion as pitch or putty does. Nor +do we know much of the nature of either the sun-spots or the solar +corona. Both seem to be produced by causes which lie within the sun; +both undergo changes that are periodical and connected with each other. +They exercise some influence upon the earth's magnetism, but whether +this influence extends to terrestrial weather, to rainfall and storms, +is still a matter of controversy. + +The sun itself is distant from the earth in the mean, about 92,885,000 +miles, but this distance varies between January and June by 3,100,000 +miles. The diameter of the sun is 866,400 miles, but perhaps this is +variable to the extent of some hundreds of miles. It would contain +1,305,000 times the bulk of the earth, but its mean density is but +one-quarter that of the earth. The force of gravity at its surface is +27-1/2 times that at the surface of the earth, and it rotates on its +axis in about 25 days. But the sun's surface does not appear to rotate +as a whole, so this time of rotating varies by as much as two days if we +consider a region on the sun's equator or at a distance from it of 45 deg.. +The intensity of sunlight at the surface of the sun is about 190,000 +times that of a candle-flame, and the effective temperature of the solar +surface is eight or ten thousand degrees centigrade. + +Such are some of the facts about the sun that are received, or, as it +would be technically expressed, "adopted" to-day. Doubtless a very few +years will find them altered and rendered more accurate as observations +accumulate. In a few hundred years, knowledge of the constitution of the +sun may have so increased that these data and suggestions may seem so +erroneous as to be absurd. It is little more than a century since one of +the greatest of astronomers, Sir William Herschel, contended that the +central globe of the sun might be a habitable world, sheltered from the +blazing photosphere by a layer of cool non-luminous clouds. Such an +hypothesis was not incompatible with what was then known of the +constitution of the heavenly bodies, though it is incompatible with what +we know now. It was simply a matter on which more evidence was to be +accumulated, and the holding of such a view does not, and did not, +detract from the scientific status of Sir William Herschel. + +The hypotheses of science require continual restatement in the light of +new evidence, and, as to the weight and interpretation to be given to +such evidence, there is continual conflict--if it may so be +called--between the old and the new science, between the science that is +established and the science that is being established. It is by this +conflict that knowledge is rendered sure. + +Such a conflict took place rather more than 300 years ago at the opening +of the Modern Era of astronomy. It was a conflict between two schools of +science--between the disciples of Aristotle and Claudius Ptolemy on the +one hand and the disciples of Copernicus on the other. It has often been +represented as a conflict between religion and science, whereas that +which happened was that the representatives of the older school of +science made use of the powers of the Church to persecute the newer +school as represented by Galileo. That persecution was no doubt a +flagrant abuse of authority, but it should be impossible at the present +day for any one to claim a theological standing for either theory, +whether Copernican or Ptolemaic. + +So long as evidence sufficient to demonstrate the Copernican hypothesis +was not forthcoming, it was possible for a man to hold the Ptolemaic, +without detracting from his scientific position, just as it is thought +no discredit to Sir William Herschel that he held his curious idea of a +cool sun under the conditions of knowledge of a hundred years ago. Even +at the present day, we habitually use the Ptolemaic phraseology. Not +only do we speak of "sunrise" and "sunset," but astronomers in strictly +technical papers use the expression, "acceleration of the sun's motion" +when "acceleration of the earth's motion" is meant. + +The question as to whether the earth goes round the sun or the sun goes +round the earth has been decided by the accumulation of evidence. It was +a question for evidence to decide. It was an open question so long as +the evidence available was not sufficient to decide it. It was perfectly +possible at one time for a scientific or a religious man to hold either +view. Neither view interfered with his fundamental standing or with his +mental attitude towards either sun or earth. In this respect--important +as the question is in itself--it might be said to be a mere detail, +almost a matter of indifference. + +But it is not a mere detail, a matter of indifference to either +scientist or religious man, as to what the sun and earth _are_--whether +he can treat them as things that can be weighed, measured, compared, +analyzed, as, a few pages back, we have shown has been done, or whether, +as one of the chief astrologers of to-day puts it, he-- + + "Believes that the sun is the body of the Logos of this solar + system, 'in Him we live and move and have our being.' The + planets are his angels, being modifications in the + consciousness of the Logos," + +and that the sun + + "Stands as Power, having Love and Will united." + +The difference between these two points of view is fundamental, and one +of root principle. The foundation, the common foundation on which both +the believer and the scientist build, is threatened by this false +science and false religion. The calling, the very existence of both is +assailed, and they must stand or fall together. The believer in one God +cannot acknowledge a Sun-god, a Solar Logos, these planetary angels; the +astronomer cannot admit the intrusion of planetary influences that obey +no known laws, and the supposed effects of which are in no way +proportional to the supposed causes. The Law of Causality does not run +within the borders of astrology. + +It is the old antithesis restated of the Hebrew and the heathen. The +believer in one God and the scientist alike derive their heritage from +the Hebrew, whilst the modern astrologer claims that the astrology of +to-day is once more a revelation of the Chaldean and Assyrian religions. +But polytheism--whether in its gross form of many gods, of planetary +angels, or in the more subtle form of pantheism,--is the very negation +of sane religion; and astrology is the negation of sane astronomy. + + "For the invisible things of Him from the creation of the + world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that + are made, even His eternal power and Godhead; so that they are + without excuse: because that, when they knew God, they + glorified Him not as God, neither were thankful; but became + vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was + darkened. Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools, + and changed the glory of the uncorruptible God into an image + made like to corruptible man, and to birds, and fourfooted + beasts, and creeping things." + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[68:1] Josephus, _Antiquities_, XIII. iii. 1. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +THE MOON + + "The balmy moon of blessed Israel + Floods all the deep-blue gloom with beams divine: + All night the splintered crags that wall the dell + With spires of silver shine." + + +So, in Tennyson's words, sang Jephthah's daughter, as she recalled the +days of her mourning before she accomplished her self-sacrifice. + +It is hard for modern dwellers in towns to realize the immense +importance of the moon to the people of old. "The night cometh when no +man can work" fitly describes their condition when she was absent. In +sub-tropical countries like Palestine, twilight is short, and, the sun +once set, deep darkness soon covers everything. Such artificial lights +as men then had would now be deemed very inefficient. There was little +opportunity, when once darkness had fallen, for either work or +enjoyment. + +But, when the moon was up, how very different was the case. Then men +might say-- + + "This night, methinks, is but the daylight sick; + It looks a little paler: 'tis a day, + Such as the day is when the sun is hid." + +In the long moonlit nights, travelling was easy and safe; the labours +of the field and house could still be carried on; the friendly feast +need not be interrupted. But of all men, the shepherd would most rejoice +at this season; all his toils, all his dangers were immeasurably +lightened during the nights near the full. As in the beautiful rendering +which Tennyson has given us of one of the finest passages in the +_Iliad_-- + + "In heaven the stars about the moon + Look beautiful, when all the winds are laid, + And every height comes out, and jutting peak + And valley, and the immeasurable heavens + Break open to their highest, and all the stars + Shine, and the Shepherd gladdens in his heart." + +A large proportion of the people of Israel, long after their settlement +in Palestine, maintained the habits of their forefathers, and led the +shepherd's life. To them, therefore, the full of the moon must have been +of special importance; yet there is no single reference in Scripture to +this phase as such; nor indeed to any change of the moon's apparent +figure. In two cases in our Revised Version we do indeed find the +expression "at the full moon," but if we compare these passages with the +Authorized Version, we find them there rendered "in the time appointed," +or "at the day appointed." This latter appears to be the literal +meaning, though there can be no question, as is seen by a comparison +with the Syriac, that the period of the full moon is referred to. No +doubt it was because travelling was so much more safe and easy than in +the moonless nights, that the two great spring and autumn festivals of +the Jews were held at the full moon. Indeed, the latter feast, when the +Israelites "camped out" for a week "in booths," was held at the time of +the "harvest moon." The phenomenon of the "harvest moon" may be briefly +explained as follows. At the autumnal equinox, when the sun is crossing +from the north side of the equator to the south, the full moon is +crossing from the south side of the equator to the north. It is thus +higher in the sky, when it souths, on each succeeding night, and is +therefore up for a greater length of time. This counterbalances to a +considerable extent its movement eastward amongst the stars, so that, +for several nights in succession, it rises almost at sundown. These +nights of the Feast of Tabernacles, when all Israel was rejoicing over +the ingathered fruits, each family in its tent or arbour of green +boughs, were therefore the fullest of moonlight in the year.[81:1] + +Modern civilization has almost shut us off from the heavens, at least in +our great towns and cities. These offer many conveniences, but they +remove us from not a few of the beauties which nature has to offer. And +so it comes that, taking the population as a whole, there is perhaps +less practically known of astronomy in England to-day than there was +under the Plantagenets. A very few are astronomers, professional and +amateur, and know immeasurably more than our forefathers did of the +science. Then there is a large, more or less cultured, public that know +something of the science at secondhand through books. But the great +majority know nothing of the heavenly bodies except of the sun; they +need to "look in the almanack" to "find out moonshine." But to simpler +peoples the difference between the "light half" of the month, from the +first quarter to the last quarter through the full of the moon, and the +"dark half," from the last quarter to the first quarter, through new, is +very great. Indian astronomers so divide the month to this day. + +In one passage of Holy Scripture, the description which Isaiah gives of +the "City of the Lord, the Zion of the Holy One of Israel," there is a +reference to the dark part of the month. + + "Thy sun shall no more go down; neither shall thy moon + (literally "month") withdraw itself: for the Lord shall be + thine everlasting light, and the days of thy mourning shall be + ended." + +The parallelism expressed in the verse lies between the darkness of +night whilst the sun is below the horizon, and the special darkness of +those nights when the moon, being near conjunction with the sun, is +absent from the sky during the greater part or whole of the night hours, +and has but a small portion of her disc illuminated. Just as half the +day is dark because the sun has withdrawn itself, so half the nights of +the month are dark because the moon has withdrawn itself. + +The Hebrew month was a natural one, determined by actual observation of +the new moon. They used three words in their references to the moon, the +first of which, _chodesh_, derived from a root meaning "to be new," +indicates the fact that the new moon, as actually observed, governed +their calendar. The word therefore signifies the new moon--the day of +the new moon: and thus a month; that is, a lunar month beginning at the +new moon. This is the Hebrew word used in the Deluge story in the +seventh chapter of Genesis; and in all references to feasts depending on +a day in the month. As when the Lord spake to Moses, saying, "Also in +the day of your gladness, and in your solemn days, and in the beginnings +of your months, ye shall blow with your trumpets over your burnt +offerings, and over the sacrifices of your peace offerings." And again +in the Psalm of Asaph to the chief musician upon Gittith: "Blow up the +trumpet in the new moon, in the time appointed, on our solemn feast +day." This is the word also that Isaiah uses in describing the bravery +of the daughters of Zion, "the tinkling ornaments about their feet, and +their cauls, and their round tires like the moon, the chains, and the +bracelets." "The round tires" were not discs, like the full moon, but +were round like the crescent. + +Generally speaking, _chodesh_ is employed where either reference is made +to the shape or newness of the crescent moon, or where "month" is used +in any precise way. This is the word for "month" employed throughout by +the prophet Ezekiel, who is so precise in the dating of his prophecies. + +When the moon is mentioned as the lesser light of heaven, without +particular reference to its form, or when a month is mentioned as a +somewhat indefinite period of time, then the Hebrew word _yar[=e]ach_, +is used. Here the word has the root meaning of "paleness"; it is the +"silver moon." + +_Yar[=e]ach_ is the word always used where the moon is classed among the +heavenly bodies; as when Joseph dreamed of the sun, the moon, and the +eleven constellations; or in Jer. viii. 2, where the Lord says that they +shall bring out the bones of the kings, princes, priests, prophets, and +inhabitants of Jerusalem, "and they shall spread them before the sun, +and the moon, and all the host of heaven, whom they have loved, and whom +they have served, and after whom they have walked, and whom they have +sought, and whom they have worshipped." + +The same word is used for the moon in its character of "making +ordinances." Thus we have it several times in the Psalms: "He (the Lord) +appointed the moon for seasons." "His seed shall endure for ever, and +his throne as the sun before Me. It shall be established for ever as the +moon, and as a faithful witness in heaven." And again: "The moon and +stars rule by night;" whilst Jeremiah says, "Thus saith the Lord, Which +giveth the sun for a light by day, and the ordinances of the moon and of +the stars for a light by night." + +In all passages where reference seems to be made to the darkening or +withdrawing of the moon's light (Eccl. xii. 2; Isa. xiii. 10; Ezek. +xxxii. 7; Joel ii. 10, 31, and iii. 15; and Hab. iii. 11) the word +_yar[=e]ach_ is employed. A slight variant of the same word indicates +the month when viewed as a period of time not quite defined, and not in +the strict sense of a lunar month. This is the term used in Exod. ii. 2, +for the three months that the mother of Moses hid him when she saw that +he was a goodly child; by Moses, in his prophecy for Joseph, of "Blessed +of the Lord be his land . . . for the precious fruits brought forth by +the sun, and for the precious things put forth by the months." Such a +"full month of days" did Shallum the son of Jabesh reign in Samaria in +the nine and thirtieth year of Uzziah, king of Judah. Such also were the +twelve months of warning given to Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, +before his madness fell upon him. The same word is once used for a true +lunar month, viz. in Ezra vi. 15, when the building of the "house was +finished on the third day of the month Adar, which was in the sixth year +of the reign of Darius the king." In all other references to the months +derived from the Babylonians, such as the "month Chisleu" in Neh. i. 1, +the term _chodesh_ is used, since these, like the Hebrew months, were +defined by the observation of the new moon; but for the Tyrian months, +Zif, Bul, Ethanim, we find the term _yerach_ in three out of the four +instances. + +In three instances a third word is used poetically to express the moon. +This is _lebanah_, which has the meaning of whiteness. In Song of Sol. +vi. 10, it is asked-- + + "Who is she that looketh forth as the morning, fair as the + moon, clear as the sun, and terrible as an army with banners?" + +Isaiah also says-- + + "Then the moon shall be confounded, and the sun ashamed, when + the Lord of Hosts shall reign in Mount Zion, and in Jerusalem, + and before His ancients gloriously." + +And yet again-- + + "Moreover the light of the moon shall be as the light of the + sun, and the light of the sun shall be sevenfold, as the light + of seven days, in the day that the Lord bindeth up the breach + of His people, and healeth the stroke of their wound." + +It may not be without significance that each of these three passages, +wherein the moon is denominated by its name of whiteness or purity, +looks forward prophetically to the same great event, pictured yet more +clearly in the Revelation-- + + "And I heard as it were the voice of a great multitude, and as + the voice of many waters, and as the voice of mighty + thunderings, saying, Alleluia: for the Lord God omnipotent + reigneth. + + "Let us be glad and rejoice, and give honour to Him: for the + marriage of the Lamb is come, and His wife hath made herself + ready. + + "And to her was granted that she should be arrayed in fine + linen, clean and white: for the fine linen is the + righteousness of saints." + +_Chodesh_ and _yar[=e]ach_ are masculine words; _lebanah_ is feminine. +But nowhere throughout the Old Testament is the moon personified, and in +only one instance is it used figuratively to represent a person. This is +in the case of Jacob's reading of Joseph's dream, already referred to, +where he said-- + + "Behold I have dreamed a dream more; and, behold, the sun and + the moon and the eleven stars made obeisance to me." + +And his father quickly rebuked him, saying-- + + "What is this dream that thou hast dreamed? Shall I and thy + mother and thy brethren indeed come to bow down ourselves to + thee to the earth?" + +Here Jacob understands that the moon (_yar[=e]ach_) stands for a woman, +his wife. But in Mesopotamia, whence his grandfather Abraham had come +out, Sin, the moon-god, was held to be a male god, high indeed among the +deities at that time, and superior even to Samas, the sun-god. Terah, +the father of Abraham, was held by Jewish tradition to have been an +especial worshipper of the moon-god, whose great temple was in Haran, +where he dwelt. + +Wherever the land of Uz may have been, at whatever period Job may have +lived, there and then it was an iniquity to worship the moon or the +moon-god. In his final defence to his friends, when the "three men +ceased to answer Job, because he was righteous in his own eyes," Job, +justifying his life, said-- + + "If I beheld the sun when it shined, + Or the moon walking in brightness; + And my heart hath been secretly enticed, + And my mouth hath kissed my hand: + This also were an iniquity to be punished by the judges: + For I should have lied to God that is above." + +The Hebrews, too, were forbidden to worship the sun, the moon, or the +stars, the host of heaven, and disobeyed the commandment both early and +late in their history. When Moses spake unto all Israel on this side +Jordan in the wilderness in the plain over against the Red Sea, he said +to them-- + + "The Lord spake unto you out of the midst of the fire: ye + heard the voice of the words, but saw no similitude; only + ye heard a voice. . . . Take ye therefore good heed unto + yourselves; for ye saw no manner of similitude on the day that + the Lord spake unto you in Horeb out of the midst of the fire: + + "Lest ye corrupt yourselves, and make you a graven image, the + similitude of any figure, the likeness of male or female. . . . + And lest thou lift up thine eyes unto heaven, and when thou + seest the sun, and the moon, and the stars, even all the host + of heaven, shouldst be driven to worship them, and serve them, + which the Lord thy God hath divided unto all nations under the + whole heaven." + +We know what the "similitude" of the sun and the moon were like among +the surrounding nations. We see their "hieroglyphs" on numberless seals +and images from the ruins of Nineveh or Babylon. That of the sun was +first a rayed star or disc, later a figure, rayed and winged. That of +the moon was a crescent, one lying on its back, like a bowl or cup, the +actual attitude of the new moon at the beginning of the new year. Just +such moon similitudes did the soldiers of Gideon take from off the +camels of Zebah and Zalmunna; just such were the "round tires like the +moon" that Isaiah condemns among the bravery of the daughters of Zion. + +The similitude or token of Ashtoreth, the paramount goddess of the +Zidonians, was the _ashera_, the "grove" of the Authorized Version, +probably in most cases merely a wooden pillar. This goddess, "the +abomination of the Zidonians," was a moon-goddess, concerning whom +Eusebius preserves a statement by the Phoenician historian, +Sanchoniathon, that her images had the head of an ox. In the wars in +the days of Abraham we find Chedorlaomer, and the kings that were with +him, smiting the Rephaim in Ashteroth Karnaim, that is, in the +Ashtoreths "of the horns." It is impossible to decide at this date +whether the horns which gave the distinctive title to this shrine of +Ashtoreth owed their origin to the horns of the animal merged in the +goddess, or to the horns of the crescent moon, with which she was to +some extent identified. Possibly there was always a confusion between +the two in the minds of her worshippers. The cult of Ashtoreth was +spread not only among the Hebrews, but throughout the whole plain of +Mesopotamia. In the times of the Judges, and in the days of Samuel, we +find continually the statement that the people "served Baalim and +Ashtaroth"--the plurals of Baal and Ashtoreth--these representing the +sun and moon, and reigning as king and queen in heaven. When the +Philistines fought with Saul at Mount Gilboa, and he was slain, they +stripped off his armour and put it "in the house of Ashtaroth." Yet +later we find that Solomon loved strange women of the Zidonians, who +turned his heart after Ashtoreth, the goddess of the Zidonians, and he +built a high place for her on the right hand of the Mount of Olives, +which remained for some three and a half centuries, until Josiah, the +king, defiled it. Nevertheless, the worship of Ashtoreth continued, and +the prophet Jeremiah describes her cult:-- + + "The children gather wood, and the fathers kindle the fire, + and the women knead their dough, to make cakes to the queen of + heaven." + +This was done in the cities of Judah and streets of Jerusalem, but the +Jews carried the cult with them even when they fled into Egypt, and +whilst there they answered Jeremiah-- + + "We will certainly do whatsoever thing goeth forth out of our + own mouth, to burn incense unto the queen of heaven, and to + pour out drink offerings unto her, as we have done, we, and + our fathers, our kings, and our princes, in the cities of + Judah, and in the streets of Jerusalem: for then had we plenty + of victuals, and were well, and saw no evil. But since we left + off to burn incense to the queen of heaven, and to pour out + drink offerings unto her, we have wanted all things, and have + been consumed by the sword and by the famine." + +_Ashtoreth_, according to Pinches[90:1] is evidently a lengthening of +the name of the Assyrio-Babylonian goddess I[vs]tar, and the Babylonian +legend of the Descent of I[vs]tar may well have been a myth founded on +the varying phases of the moon. But it must be remembered that, though +Ashtoreth or I[vs]tar might be the queen of heaven, the moon was not +necessarily the only aspect in which her worshippers recognized her. In +others, the planet Venus may have been chosen as her representative; in +others the constellation Taurus, at one time the leader of the Zodiac; +in others, yet again, the actual form of a material bull or cow. + +The Hebrews recognized the great superiority in brightness of the sun +over the moon, as testified in their names of the "greater" and "lesser" +lights, and in such passages as that already quoted from Isaiah (xxx. +26). The word here used for moon is the poetic one, _lebanah_. Of course +no argument can be founded on the parallelism employed so as to lead to +the conclusion that the Hebrews considered that the solar light exceeded +the lunar by only seven times, instead of the 600,000 times indicated by +modern photometric measurement. + +In only one instance in Scripture--that already quoted of the moon +withdrawing itself--is there even an allusion to the changing phases of +the moon, other than that implied in the frequent references to the new +moons. The appointment of certain feasts to be held on the fifteenth day +of the month is a confirmation of the supposition that their months were +truly lunar, for then the moon is fully lighted, and rides the sky the +whole night long from sunset to sunrise. It is clear, therefore, that +the Hebrews, not only noticed the phases of the moon, but made regular +use of them. Yet, if we adopted the argument from silence, we should +suppose that they had never observed its changes of shape, for there is +no direct allusion to them in Scripture. We cannot, therefore, argue +from silence as to whether or no they had divined the cause of those +changes, namely that the moon shines by reflecting the light of the sun. + +Nor are there any references to the markings on the moon. It is quite +obvious to the naked eye that there are grey stains upon her silver +surface, that these grey stains are always there, most of them forming a +chain which curves through the upper hemisphere. Of the bright parts of +the moon, some shine out with greater lustre than others, particularly +one spot in the lower left-hand quadrant, not far from the edge of the +full disc. The edges of the moon gleam more brightly as a rule than the +central parts. All this was apparent to the Hebrews of old, as it is to +our unassisted sight to-day. + +The moon's influence in raising the tides is naturally not mentioned. +The Hebrews were not a seafaring race, nor are the tides on the coast of +Palestine pronounced enough to draw much attention. One influence is +ascribed to the moon; an influence still obscure, or even disputed. For +the promise that-- + + "The sun shall not smite thee by day, + Nor the moon by night," + +quite obvious in its application to the sun, with the moon seems to +refer to its supposed influence on certain diseases and in causing +"moon-blindness." + +The chief function of the moon, as indicated in Scripture, is to +regulate the calendar, and mark out the times for the days of solemnity. +In the words of the 104th Psalm:-- + + "He (God) appointed the moon for seasons: + The sun knoweth his going down. + Thou makest darkness, and it is night; + Wherein all the beasts of the forest do creep forth. + The young lions roar after their prey, + And seek their meat from God. + The sun ariseth, they get them away, + And lay them down in their dens. + Man goeth forth unto his work + And to his labour until the evening. + O Lord, how manifold are Thy works! + In wisdom hast Thou made them all: + The earth is full of Thy riches." + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[81:1] How the little children must have revelled in that yearly +holiday! + +[90:1] T. G. Pinches, _The Old Testament in the Light of the Historical +Records of Assyria and Babylonia_, p. 278. + + +[Illustration: A CORNER OF THE MILKY WAY. + +The "America Nebula": photographed by Dr. Max Wolf, at Heidelberg.] + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +THE STARS + + +The stars and the heaven, whose host they are, were used by the Hebrew +writers to express the superlatives of number, of height, and of +expanse. To an observer, watching the heavens at any particular time and +place, not more than some two thousand stars are separately visible to +the unassisted sight. But it was evident to the Hebrew, as it is to any +one to-day, that the stars separately visible do not by any means make +up their whole number. On clear nights the whole vault of heaven seems +covered with a tapestry or curtain the pattern of which is formed of +patches of various intensities of light, and sprinkled upon this +patterned curtain are the brighter stars that may be separately seen. +The most striking feature in the pattern is the Milky Way, and it may be +easily discerned that its texture is made up of innumerable minute +points of light, a granulation, of which some of the grains are set more +closely together, forming the more brilliant patches, and some more +loosely, giving the darker shades. The mind easily conceives that the +minute points of light whose aggregations make up the varying pattern of +the Milky Way, though too small to be individually seen, are also +stars, differing perhaps from the stars of the Pleiades or the Bears +only in their greater distance or smaller size. It was of all these that +the Lord said to Abram-- + + "Look now toward heaven, and tell the stars, if thou be able + to number them: and He said unto him, So shall thy seed be." + +The first catalogue of the stars of which we have record was that of +Hipparchus in 129 B.C. It contained 1,025 stars, and Ptolemy brought +this catalogue up to date in the Almagest of 137 A.D. Tycho Brahe in +1602 made a catalogue of 777 stars, and Kepler republished this in 1627, +and increased the number to 1,005. These were before the invention of +the telescope, and consequently contained only naked-eye stars. Since +astronomers have been able to sound the heavens more deeply, catalogues +have increased in size and number. Flamsteed, the first Astronomer +Royal, made one of 3,310 stars; from the observations of Bradley, the +third, a yet more famous catalogue has been compiled. In our own day +more than three hundred thousand stars have been catalogued in the Bonn +Durchmusterung; and the great International Photographic Chart of the +Heavens will probably show not less than fifty millions of stars, and in +this it has limited itself to stars exceeding the fourteenth magnitude +in brightness, thus leaving out of its pages many millions of stars that +are visible through our more powerful telescopes. + +So when Abraham, Moses, Job or Jeremiah speaks of the host of heaven +that cannot be numbered, it does not mean simply that these men had but +small powers of numeration. To us,--who can count beyond that which we +can conceive,--as to the Psalmist, it is a sign of infinite power, +wisdom and knowledge that "He telleth the number of the stars; He +calleth them all by their names." + +Isaiah describes the Lord as "He that sitteth upon the circle of the +earth, . . . that stretcheth out the heavens as a curtain, and spreadeth +them out as a tent to dwell in." And many others of the prophets use the +same simile of a curtain which we have seen to be so appropriate to the +appearance of the starry sky. Nowhere, however, have we any indication +whether or not they considered the stars were all set _on_ this curtain, +that is to say were all at the same distance from us. We now know that +they are not equidistant from us, but this we largely base on the fact +that the stars are of very different orders of brightness, and we judge +that, on an average, the fainter a star appears, the further is it +distant from us. To the Hebrews, as to us, it was evident that the stars +differ in magnitude, and the writer of the Epistle to the Corinthians +expressed this when he wrote-- + + "There is one glory of the sun, and another glory of the moon, + and another glory of the stars: for one star differeth from + another star in glory." + +The ancient Greek astronomers divided the stars according to their +brightness into six classes, or six "magnitudes," to use the modern +technical term. The average star of any particular magnitude gives about +two and a half times as much light as the average star of the next +magnitude. More exactly, the average first magnitude star gives one +hundred times the light of the average star of the sixth magnitude. + +In a few instances we have been able to measure, in the very roughest +degree, the distances of stars; not a hundred stars have their +parallaxes known, and these have all been measured in the course of the +last century. And so far away are these stars, even the nearest of them, +that we do not express their distance from us in millions of miles; we +express it in the time that their light takes in travelling from them to +us. Now it takes light only one second to traverse 186,300 miles, and +yet it requires four and a third years for the light from the nearest +star to reach us. This is a star of the first magnitude, Alpha in the +constellation of the Centaur. The next nearest star is a faint one of +between the seventh and eighth magnitudes, and its light takes seven +years to come. From a sixth magnitude star in the constellation of the +Swan, the light requires eight years; and from Sirius, the brightest +star in the heavens, light requires eight and a half years. These four +stars are the nearest to us; from no other star, that we know of, does +light take less than ten years to travel; from the majority of those +whose distance we have succeeded in measuring, the light takes at least +twenty years. + +To get some conception of what a "light-year" means, let us remember +that light could travel right round the earth at its equator seven times +in the space of a single second, and that there are 31,556,925 seconds +in a year. Light then could girdle the earth a thousand million times +whilst it comes from Alpha Centauri. Or we may put it another way. The +distance from Alpha Centauri exceeds the equator of the earth by as much +as this exceeds an inch and a half; or by as much as the distance from +London to Manchester exceeds the hundredth of an inch. + +Of all the rest of the innumerable stars, as far as actual measurement +is concerned, for us, as for the Hebrews, they might all actually lie on +the texture of a curtain, at practically the same distance from us. + +We have measured the distances of but a very few stars; the rest--as +every one of them was for the Hebrew--are at a greater distance than any +effort of ours can reach, be our telescopes ever so great and powerful, +our measuring instruments ever so precise and delicate. For them, as for +us, the heaven of stars is "for height," for a height which is beyond +measure and therefore the only fitting image for the immensity of God. + +So Zophar the Naamathite said-- + + "Canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection? + It is as high as heaven; what canst thou do?" + +and Eliphaz the Temanite reiterated still more strongly-- + + "Is not God in the height of heaven? + And behold the height of the stars, how high they are." + +God Himself is represented as using the expanse of heaven as a measure +of the greatness of his fidelity and mercy. The prophet Jeremiah +writes-- + + "Thus saith the Lord; if Heaven above can be measured, and the + foundations of the earth searched out beneath, I will also + cast off all the seed of Israel for all that they have done, + saith the Lord." + +As if he were using the figure of a great cross, whose height was that +of the heavens, whose arms stretched from east to west, David testifies +of the same mercy and forgiveness:-- + + "For as the heaven is high above the earth, + So great is His mercy toward them that fear Him. + As far as the east is from the west, + So far hath He removed our transgressions from us." + + +[Illustration: THE GREAT COMET OF 1843. + +"Running like a road through the constellations" (_see_ p. 105).] + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +COMETS + + +Great comets are almost always unexpected visitors. There is only one +great comet that we know has been seen more than once, and expect with +reasonable certainty to see again. This is Halley's comet, which has +been returning to a near approach to the sun at somewhat irregular +intervals of seventy-five to seventy-eight years during the last +centuries: indeed, it is possible that it was this comet that was +coincident with the invasion of England by William the Conqueror. + +There are other small comets that are also regular inhabitants of the +solar system; but, as with Halley's comet, so with these, two +circumstances are to be borne in mind. First, that each successive +revolution round the sun involves an increasing degradation of their +brightness, since there is a manifest waste of their material at each +near approach to the sun; until at length the comet is seen no more, not +because it has left the warm precincts of the sun for the outer +darkness, but because it has spent its substance. Halley's comet was not +as brilliant or as impressive in 1835 as it was in 1759: in 1910 it may +have become degraded to an appearance of quite the second order. + +Next, we have no knowledge, no evidence, that any of these comets have +always been members of the solar family. Some of them, indeed, we know +were adopted into it by the influence of one or other of the greater +planets: Uranus we know is responsible for the introduction of one, +Jupiter of a considerable number. The vast majority of comets, great or +small, seem to blunder into the solar system anyhow, anywhere, from any +direction: they come within the attractive influence of the sun; obey +his laws whilst within that influence; make one close approach to him, +passing rapidly across our sky; and then depart in an orbit which will +never bring them to his neighbourhood again. Some chance of direction, +some compelling influence of a planet that it may have approached, so +modified the path of Halley's comet when it first entered the solar +system, that it has remained a member ever since, and may so remain +until it has ceased to be a comet at all. + +It follows, therefore, that, as to the number of great comets that may +be seen in any age, we can scarcely even apply the laws of probability. +During the last couple of thousand years, since chronicles have been +abundant, we know that many great comets have been seen. We may suppose, +therefore, that during the preceding age, that in which the Scriptures +were written, there were also many great comets seen, but we do not +know. And most emphatically we are not able to say, from our knowledge +of comets themselves and of their motions, that in the days of this or +that writer a comet was flaming in the sky. + +If a comet had been observed in those ages we might not recognize the +description of it. Thus in the fourth year of the 101st Olympiad, the +Greeks were startled by a celestial portent. They did not draw fine +distinctions, and posterity might have remained ignorant that the +terrifying object was possibly a comet, had not Aristotle, who saw it as +a boy at Stagira, left a rather more scientifically worded description +of it. It flared up from the sunset sky with a narrow definite tail +running "like a road through the constellations." In recent times the +great comet of 1843 may be mentioned as having exactly such an +appearance. + +So we cannot expect to find in the Scriptures definite and precise +descriptions that we can recognize as those of comets. At the most we +may find some expressions, some descriptions, that to us may seem +appropriate to the forms and appearances of these objects, and we may +therefore infer that the appearance of a comet may have suggested these +descriptions or expressions. + +The head of a great comet is brilliant, sometimes starlike. But its tail +often takes on the most impressive appearance. Donati's comet, in 1858, +assumed the most varied shapes--sometimes its tail was broad, with one +bright and curving edge, the other fainter and finer, the whole making +up a stupendous semi-circular blade-like object. Later, the tail was +shaped like a scimitar, and later again, it assumed a duplex form. + +Though the bulk of comets is huge, they contain extraordinarily little +substance. Their heads must contain some solid matter, but it is +probably in the form of a loose aggregation of stones enveloped in +vaporous material. There is some reason to suppose that comets are apt +to shed some of these stones as they travel along their paths, for the +orbits of the meteors that cause some of our greatest "star showers" are +coincident with the paths of comets that have been observed. + +But it is not only by shedding its loose stones that a comet diminishes +its bulk; it loses also through its tail. As the comet gets close to the +sun its head becomes heated, and throws off concentric envelopes, much +of which consists of matter in an extremely fine state of division. Now +it has been shown that the radiations of the sun have the power of +repelling matter, whilst the sun itself attracts by its gravitational +force. But there is a difference in the action of the two forces. The +light-pressure varies with the surface of the particle upon which it is +exercised; the gravitational attraction varies with the mass or volume. +If we consider the behaviour of very small particles, it follows that +the attraction due to gravitation (depending on the volume of the +particle) will diminish more rapidly than the repulsion due to +light-pressure (depending on the surface of the particle), as we +decrease continually the size of the particle, since its volume +diminishes more rapidly than its surface. A limit therefore will be +reached below which the repulsion will become greater than the +attraction. Thus for particles less than the 1/25000 part of an inch in +diameter the repulsion of the sun is greater than its attraction. +Particles in the outer envelope of the comet below this size will be +driven away in a continuous stream, and will form that thin, luminous +fog which we see as the comet's tail. + +We cannot tell whether such objects as these were present to the mind of +Joel when he spoke of "blood and fire and pillars of smoke"; possibly +these metaphors are better explained by a sand- or thunder-storm, +especially when we consider that the Hebrew expression for the "pillars +of smoke" indicates a resemblance to a palm-tree, as in the spreading +out of the head of a sand- or thunder-cloud in the sky. The suggestion +has been made,--following the closing lines of _Paradise Lost_ (for +Milton is responsible for many of our interpretations of Scripture) + + "High in front advanced, + The brandished sword of God before them blazed, + Fierce as a comet," + +--that a comet was indeed the "flaming sword which turned every way, to +keep the way of the tree of life." There is less improbability in the +suggestion made by several writers that, when the pestilence wasted +Jerusalem, and David offered up the sacrifice of intercession in the +threshing floor of Ornan the Jebusite, the king may have seen, in the +scimitar-like tail of a comet such as Donati's, God's "minister,"--"a +flame of fire,"--"the angel of the Lord stand between the earth and the +heaven, having a drawn sword in his hand stretched out over Jerusalem." + +The late R. A. Proctor describes the wanderings of a comet thus:-- + + "A comet is seen in the far distant depths of space as a + faint and scarcely discernible speck. It draws nearer and + nearer with continually increasing velocity, growing + continually larger and brighter. Faster and faster it rushes + on until it makes its nearest approach to our sun, and then, + sweeping round him, it begins its long return voyage into + infinite space. As it recedes it grows fainter and fainter, + until at length it passes beyond the range of the most + powerful telescopes made by man, and is seen no more. It has + been seen for the first and last time by the generation of men + to whom it has displayed its glories. It has been seen for the + first and last time by the race of man itself."[108:1] + + "These are . . . wandering stars, to whom is reserved the + blackness of darkness for ever." + + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[108:1] R. A. Proctor, _The Expanse of Heaven_, p. 134. + + +[Illustration: FALL OF AN AEROLITE. + +"There fell a great star from heaven, burning as it were a lamp." (_see_ +p. 116).] + + + + +CHAPTER X + +METEORS + + +Great meteorites--"aerolites" as they are called--are like great comets, +chance visitors to our world. Now and then they come, but we cannot +foretell their coming. Such an aerolite exploded some fifteen miles +above Madrid at about 9{h} 29{m}, on the morning of February 10, 1896:-- + + "A vivid glare of blinding light was followed in 1-1/2 minutes + by a loud report, the concussion being such as not merely to + create a panic, but to break many windows, and in some cases + to shake down partitions. The sky was clear, and the sun + shining brightly, when a white cloud, bordered with red, was + seen rushing from south-west to north-east, leaving behind it + a train of fine white dust. A red-tinted cloud was long + visible in the east." + +Many fragments were picked up, and analyzed, and, like other aerolites, +were found to consist of materials already known on the earth. The outer +crust showed the signs of fire,--the meteoric stone had been fused and +ignited by its very rapid rush through the air--but the interior was +entirely unaffected by the heat. The manner in which the elements were +combined is somewhat peculiar to aerolites; the nearest terrestrial +affinity of the minerals aggregated in them, is to be found in the +volcanic products from great depths. Thus aerolites seem to be broken-up +fragments from the interior parts of globes like our own. They do not +come from our own volcanoes, for the velocities with which they entered +our atmosphere prove their cosmical origin. Had our atmosphere not +entangled them, many, circuiting the sun in a parabolic or hyperbolic +curve, would have escaped for ever from our system. The swift motions, +which they had on entering our atmosphere, are considerably greater on +the average than those of comets, and probably their true home is not in +our solar system, but in interstellar space. + +The aerolites that reach the surface are not always exploded into very +small fragments, but every now and then quite large masses remain +intact. Most of these are stony; some have bits of iron scattered +through them; others are almost pure iron, or with a little nickel +alloy, or have pockets in them laden with stone. There are hundreds of +accounts of the falls of aerolites during the past 2,500 years. The +Greeks and Romans considered them as celestial omens, and kept some of +them in temples. One at Mecca is revered by the faithful Mohammedans, +and Jehangir, the great Mogul, is said to have had a sword forged from +an iron aerolite which fell in 1620 in the Panjab. Diana of Ephesus +stood on a shapeless block which, tradition says, was a meteoric stone, +and reference may perhaps be found to this in the speech of the +town-clerk of the city to appease the riot stirred up against St. Paul +by Demetrius the silversmith and his companions:-- + + "Ye men of Ephesus, what man is there who knoweth not how + that the city of the Ephesians is temple-keeper of the great + Diana, and of the image which fell down from Jupiter?" + +Aerolites come singly and unexpectedly, falling actually to earth on +land or sea. "Shooting stars" come usually in battalions. They travel +together in swarms, and the earth may meet the same swarm again and +again. They are smaller than aerolites, probably mere particles of dust, +and for the most part are entirely consumed in our upper atmosphere, so +that they do not actually reach the earth. The swarms travel along paths +that resemble cometary orbits; they are very elongated ellipses, +inclined at all angles to the plane of the ecliptic. Indeed, several of +the orbits are actually those of known comets, and it is generally held +that these meteorites or "shooting stars" are the _debris_ that a comet +sheds on its journey. + +We can never see the same "shooting star" twice; its visibility implies +its dissolution, for it is only as it is entrapped and burnt up in our +atmosphere that we see it, or can see it. Its companions in a great +meteoric swarm, are, however, as the sand on the sea-shore, and we +recognize them as members of the same swarm by their agreement in +direction and date. The swarms move in a closed orbit, and it is where +this orbit intersects that of the earth that we get a great "star +shower," if both earth and swarm are present together at the +intersection. If the swarm is drawn out, so that many meteorites are +scattered throughout the whole circuit of its orbit, then we get a +"shower" every year. If the meteor swarm is more condensed, so as to +form a cluster, then the "shower" only comes when the "gem of the ring," +as it is termed, is at the intersection of the orbits, and the earth is +there too. + +Such a conjunction may present the most impressive spectacle that the +heavens can afford. The Leonid meteor shower is, perhaps, the most +famous. It has been seen at intervals of about thirty-three years, since +early in the tenth century. When Ibrahim ben Ahmed lay dying, in the +year 902 A.D., it was recorded that "an infinite number of stars were +seen during the night, scattering themselves like rain to the right and +left, and that year was known as the year of stars." When the earth +encountered the same system in 1202 A.D. the Mohammedan record runs that +"on the night of Saturday, on the last day of Muharram, stars shot +hither and thither in the heavens, eastward and westward, and flew +against one another, like a scattering swarm of locusts, to the right +and left." There are not records of all the returns of this meteoric +swarm between the thirteenth century and the eighteenth, but when the +earth encountered it in 1799, Humboldt reported that "from the beginning +of the phenomenon there was not a space in the firmament equal in extent +to three diameters of the moon that was not filled every instant with +bolides and falling stars;" and Mr. Andrew Ellicott, an agent of the +United States, cruising off the coast of Florida, watched this same +meteoric display, and made the drawing reproduced on the opposite page. +In 1833 a planter in South Carolina wrote of a return of this same +system, "Never did rain fall much thicker than the meteors fell towards +the earth; east, west, north, south, it was the same." In 1866 the +shower was again heavy and brilliant, but at the end of the nineteenth +century, when the swarm should have returned, the display was meagre and +ineffective. + +[Illustration: METEORIC SHOWER OF 1799, NOVEMBER 12. + +Seen off Cape Florida, by Mr. Andrew Ellicott.] + +The Leonid system of meteorites did not always move in a closed orbit +round our sun. Tracing back their records and history, we find that in +A.D. 126 the swarm passed close to Uranus, and probably at that time the +planet captured them for the sun. But we cannot doubt that some such +similar sight as they have afforded us suggested the imagery employed by +the Apostle St. John when he wrote, "The stars of heaven fell unto the +earth, even as a fig-tree casteth her untimely figs, when she is shaken +of a mighty wind. And the heavens departed as a scroll when it is rolled +together." + +And the prophet Isaiah used a very similar figure-- + + "All the host of heaven shall be dissolved, and the heavens + shall be rolled together as a scroll: and all their host shall + fall down, as the leaf falleth off from the vine, and as a + falling fig from the fig-tree." + +Whilst the simile of a great aerolite is that employed by St. John in +his description of the star "Wormwood"-- + + "The third angel sounded, and there fell a great star from + heaven, burning as it were a lamp, and it fell upon the third + part of the rivers, and upon the fountains of waters." + +St. Jude's simile of the "wandering stars, to whom is reserved the +blackness of darkness for ever," may have been drawn from meteors rather +than from comets. But, as has been seen, the two classes of objects are +closely connected. + +The word "meteor" is sometimes used for any unusual light seen in the +sky. The Zodiacal Light, the pale conical beam seen after sunset in the +west in the spring, and before sunrise in the east in the autumn, and +known to the Arabs as the "False Dawn," does not appear to be mentioned +in Scripture. Some commentators wrongly consider that the expression, +"the eyelids of the morning," occurring twice in the Book of Job, is +intended to describe it, but the metaphor does not in the least apply. + +The Aurora Borealis, on the other hand, seldom though it is seen on an +impressive scale in Palestine, seems clearly indicated in one passage. +"Out of the north cometh golden splendour" would well fit the gleaming +of the "Northern Lights," seen, as they often are, "as sheaves of golden +rays." + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +ECLIPSES OF THE SUN AND MOON + + +We do not know what great comets, or aerolites, or "star-showers" were +seen in Palestine during the centuries in which the books of the Bible +were composed. But we do know that eclipses, both of the sun and moon, +must have been seen, for these are not the results of chance +conjunctions. We know more, that not only partial eclipses of the sun, +but total eclipses, fell within the period so covered. + +There is no phenomenon of nature which is so truly impressive as a total +eclipse of the sun. The beautiful pageants of the evening and the +morning are too often witnessed to produce the same effect upon us, +whilst the storm and the earthquake and the volcano in eruption, by the +confusion and fear for personal safety they produce, render men unfit to +watch their developments. But the eclipse awes and subdues by what might +almost be called moral means alone: no noise, no danger accompanies it; +the body is not tortured, nor the mind confused by the rush of the +blast, the crash of the thunder-peal, the rocking of the earthquake, or +the fires of the volcano. The only sense appealed to is that of sight; +the movements of the orbs of heaven go on without noise or confusion, +and with a majestic smoothness in which there is neither hurry nor +delay. + +This impression is felt by every one, no matter how perfectly +acquainted, not only with the cause of the phenomenon, but also with the +appearances to be expected, and scientific men have found themselves +awestruck and even overwhelmed. + +But if such are the feelings called forth by an eclipse now-a-days, in +those who are expecting it, who are prepared for it, knowing perfectly +what will happen and what brings it about, how can we gauge aright the +unspeakable terror such an event must have caused in ages long ago, when +it came utterly unforeseen, and it was impossible to understand what was +really taking place? + +And so, in olden time, an eclipse of the sun came as an omen of terrible +disaster, nay as being itself one of the worst of disasters. It came so +to all nations but one. But to that nation the word of the prophet had +come-- + + "Learn not the way of the heathen, and be not dismayed at the + signs of heaven; for the heathen are dismayed at them." + +God did not reveal the physical explanation of the eclipse to the +Hebrews: that, in process of time, they could learn by the exercise of +their own mental powers. But He set them free from the slavish fear of +the heathen; they could look at all these terror-striking signs without +fear; they could look with calmness, with confidence, because they +looked in faith. + +It is not easy to exaggerate the advantage which this must have given +the Hebrews over the neighbouring nations, from a scientific point of +view. The word of God gave them intellectual freedom, and so far as they +were faithful to it, there was no hindrance to their fully working out +the scientific problems which came before them. They neither worshipped +the heavenly bodies nor were dismayed at their signs. We have no record +as to how far the Hebrews made use of this freedom, for, as already +pointed out, the Holy Scriptures were not written to chronicle their +scientific achievements. But there can be no doubt that, given the +leisure of peace, it is _a priori_ more likely that they should have +taught astronomy to their neighbours, than have learnt it even from the +most advanced. + +There must have been numberless eclipses of the moon seen in the ages +during which the Canon of Holy Scripture was written. Of eclipses of the +sun, total or very nearly total over the regions of Palestine or +Mesopotamia, in the times of the Old Testament, we know of four that +were actually seen, whose record is preserved in contemporaneous +history, and a fifth that was nearly total in Judaea about midday. + +The first of the four is recorded on a tablet from Babylon, lately +deciphered, in which it states that on "the 26th day of Sivan, day was +turned into night, and fire appeared in the midst of heaven." This has +been identified with the eclipse of July 31, 1063 B.C., and we do not +find any reference to it in Scripture. + +The second is that of Aug. 15, 831 B.C. No specific record of this +eclipse has been found as yet, but it took place during the lifetime of +the prophets Joel and Amos, and may have been seen by them, and their +recollection of it may have influenced the wording of their prophecies. + +The third eclipse is recorded on a tablet from Nineveh, stating the +coincidence of an eclipse in Sivan with a revolt in the city of Assur. +This has been identified with the eclipse of June 15, 763 B.C. + +The fourth is that known as the eclipse of Larissa on May 18, 603 B.C., +which was coincident with the final overthrow of the Assyrian Empire, +and the fifth is that of Thales on May 28, 585 B.C. + +The earth goes round the sun once in a year, the moon goes round the +earth once in a month, and sometimes the three bodies are in one +straight line. In this case the intermediate body--earth or +moon--deprives the other, wholly or partially of the light from the sun, +thus causing an eclipse. If the orbits of the earth and moon were in the +same plane, an eclipse would happen every time the moon was new or full; +that is to say, at every conjunction and every opposition, or about +twenty-five times a year. But the plane of the moon's orbit is inclined +to the plane of the earth's orbit at an angle of about 5 deg., and so an +eclipse only occurs when the moon is in conjunction or opposition and is +at the same time at or very near one of the nodes--that is, one of the +two points where the plane of the earth's orbit intersects the moon's +orbit. If the moon is in opposition, or "full," then, under these +conditions, an eclipse of the moon takes place, and this is visible at +all places where the moon is above the horizon at the time. If, +however, the moon is in conjunction, or "new," it is the sun that is +eclipsed, and as the shadow cast by the moon is but small, only a +portion of the earth's surface will experience the solar eclipse. The +nodes of the moon's orbit are not stationary, but have a daily +retrograde motion of 3' 10.64''. It takes the moon therefore 27{d} 5{h} +5{m} 36{s} (27.21222{d}) to perform a journey in its orbit from one node +back to that node again; this is called a Draconic period. But it takes +the moon 29{d} 12{h} 44{m} 2.87{s} (29.53059{d}) to pass from new to +new, or from full to full, _i. e._ to complete a lunation. Now 242 +Draconic periods very nearly equal 223 lunations, being about 18 years +10-1/3 days, and both are very nearly equal to 19 returns of the sun to +the moon's node; so that if the moon is new or full when at a node, in +18 years and 10 or 11 days it will be at that node again, and again new +or full, and the sun will be also present in very nearly its former +position. If, therefore, an eclipse occurred on the former occasion, it +will probably occur on the latter. This recurrence of eclipses after +intervals of 18.03 years is called the Saros, and was known to the +Chaldeans. We do not know whether it was known to the Hebrews prior to +their captivity in Babylon, but possibly the statement of the wise king, +already quoted from the Apocryphal "Wisdom of Solomon," may refer to +some such knowledge. + +Our calendar to-day is a purely solar one; our months are twelve in +number, but of purely arbitrary length, divorced from all connection +with the moon; and to us, the Saros cycle does not readily leap to the +eye, for eclipses of sun or moon seem to fall haphazard on any day of +the month or year. + +But with the Hebrews, Assyrians, and Babylonians it was not so. Their +calendar was a luni-solar one--their year was on the average a solar +year, their months were true lunations; the first day of their new month +began on the evening when the first thin crescent of the moon appeared +after its conjunction with the sun. This observation is what is meant in +the Bible by the "new moon." Astronomers now by "new moon" mean the time +when it is actually in conjunction with the sun, and is therefore not +visible. Nations whose calendar was of this description were certain to +discover the Saros much sooner than those whose months were not true +lunations, like the Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans. + +There are no direct references to eclipses in Scripture. They might have +been used in the historical portions for the purpose of dating events, +as was the great earthquake in the days of King Uzziah, but they were +not so used. But we find not a few allusions to their characteristic +appearances and phenomena in the books of the prophets. God in the +beginning set the two great lights in the firmament for signs as well as +for seasons; and the prophets throughout use the relations of the sun +and moon as types of spiritual relations. The Messiah was the Sun of +Righteousness; the chosen people, the Church, was as the moon, which +derives her light from Him. The "signs of heaven" were _symbols_ of +great spiritual events, not _omens_ of mundane disasters. + +The prophets Joel and Amos are clear and vivid in their descriptions; +probably because the eclipse of 831 B.C. was within their recollection. +Joel says first, "The sun and the moon shall be dark;" and again, more +plainly,-- + + "I will show wonders in the heavens and in the earth, blood, + and fire, and pillars of smoke. The sun shall be turned into + darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great and the + terrible day of the Lord come." + +This prophecy was quoted by St. Peter on the day of Pentecost. And in +the Apocalypse, St. John says that when the sixth seal was opened, "the +sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the moon became as blood." + +In these references, the two kinds of eclipses are referred to--the sun +becomes black when the moon is "new" and hides it; the moon becomes as +blood when it is "full" and the earth's shadow falls upon it; its deep +copper colour, like that of dried blood, being due to the fact that the +light, falling upon it, has passed through a great depth of the earth's +atmosphere. These two eclipses cannot therefore be coincident, but they +may occur only a fortnight apart--a total eclipse of the sun may be +accompanied by a partial eclipse of the moon, a fortnight earlier or a +fortnight later; a total eclipse of the moon may be accompanied by +partial eclipses of the sun, both at the preceding and following "new +moons." + +Writing at about the same period, the prophet Amos says-- + + "Saith the Lord God, I will cause the sun to go down at noon, + and I will darken the earth in the clear day," + +and seems to refer to the fact that the eclipse of 831 B.C. occurred +about midday in Judaea. + +Later Micah writes-- + + "The sun shall go down over the prophets, and the day shall be + dark over them." + +Isaiah says that the "sun shall be darkened in his going forth," and +Jeremiah that "her sun is gone down while it was yet day." Whilst +Ezekiel says-- + + "I will cover the sun with a cloud, and the moon shall not + give her light. All the bright lights of heaven will I make + dark over thee, and set darkness upon thy land, saith the Lord + God." + +But a total eclipse is not all darkness and terror; it has a beauty and +a glory all its own. Scarcely has the dark moon hidden the last thread +of sunlight from view, than spurs of rosy light are seen around the +black disc that now fills the place so lately occupied by the glorious +king of day. And these rosy spurs of light shine on a background of +pearly glory, as impressive in its beauty as the swift march of the +awful shadow, and the seeming descent of the darkened heavens, were in +terror. There it shines, pure, lovely, serene, radiant with a light like +molten silver, wreathing the darkened sun with a halo like that round a +saintly head in some noble altar-piece; so that while in some cases the +dreadful shadow has awed a laughing and frivolous crowd into silence, in +others the radiance of that halo has brought spectators to their knees +with an involuntary exclamation, "The Glory!" as if God Himself had made +known His presence in the moment of the sun's eclipse. + +And this, indeed, seems to have been the thought of both the +Babylonians and Egyptians of old. Both nations had a specially sacred +symbol to set forth the Divine Presence--the Egyptians, a disc with long +outstretched wings; the Babylonians, a ring with wings. The latter +symbol on Assyrian monuments is always shown as floating over the head +of the king, and is designed to indicate the presence and protection of +the Deity. + +[Illustration: THE ASSYRIAN "RING WITH WINGS."] + +We may take it for granted that the Egyptians and Chaldeans of old, as +modern astronomers to-day, had at one time or another presented to them +every type of coronal form. But there would, no doubt, be a difficulty +in grasping or remembering the irregular details of the corona as seen +in most eclipses. Sometimes, however, the corona shows itself in a +striking and simple form--when sun-spots are few in number, it spreads +itself out in two great equatorial streamers. At the eclipse of Algiers +in 1900, already referred to, one observer who watched the eclipse from +the sea, said-- + + "The sky was blue all round the sun, and the effect of the + silvery corona projected on it was beyond any one to describe. + I can only say it seemed to me what angels' wings will be + like."[129:1] + +[Illustration: CORONA OF MINIMUM TYPE. + +Drawing made by W. H. Wesley, from photographs of the 1900 Eclipse.] + +It seems exceedingly probable that the symbol of the ring with wings +owed its origin not to any supposed analogy between the ring and the +wings and the divine attributes of eternity and power, but to the +revelations of a total eclipse with a corona of minimum type. Moreover +the Assyrians, when they insert a figure of their deity within the ring, +give him a kilt-like dress, and this kilted or feathered characteristic +is often retained where the figure is omitted. This gives the symbol a +yet closer likeness to the corona, whose "polar rays" are remarkably +like the tail feathers of a bird. + +Perhaps the prophet Malachi makes a reference to this characteristic of +the eclipsed sun, with its corona like "angels' wings," when he +predicts-- + + "But unto you that fear My name shall the Sun of Righteousness + arise with healing in His wings." + +But, if this be so, it must be borne in mind that the prophet uses the +corona as a simile only. No more than the sun itself, is it the Deity, +or the manifestation of the Deity. + +In the New Testament we may find perhaps a reference to what causes an +eclipse--to the shadow cast by a heavenly body in its revolution--its +"turning." + + "Every good gift and every perfect boon is from above, coming + down from the Father of Lights, with Whom can be no variation, + neither shadow that is cast by turning." + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[129:1] _The Total Solar Eclipse of May, 1900_, p. 22. + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +SATURN AND ASTROLOGY + + +The planets, as such, are nowhere mentioned in the Bible. In the one +instance in which the word appears in our versions, it is given as a +translation of _Mazzaloth_, better rendered in the margin as the "twelve +signs or constellations." The evidence is not fully conclusive that +allusion is made to any planet, even in its capacity of a god worshipped +by the surrounding nations. + +Of planets, besides the earth, modern astronomy knows Mercury, Venus, +Mars, many planetoids, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. And of +satellites revolving round planets there are at present known, the moon +which owns our earth as primary, two satellites to Mars, seven +satellites to Jupiter, ten to Saturn, four to Uranus, and one to +Neptune. + +The ancients counted the planets as seven, numbering the moon and the +sun amongst them. The rest were Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and +Saturn. They recognized no satellites to any planet. We have no evidence +that the ancient Semitic nations considered that the moon was more +intimately connected with the earth than any of the other six. + +But though the planets were sometimes regarded as "seven" in number, +the ancients perfectly recognized that the sun and moon stood in a +different category altogether from the other five. And though the +heathen recognized them as deities, confusion resulted as to the +identity of the deity of which each was a manifestation. Samas was the +sun-god and Baal was the sun-god, but Samas and Baal, or Bel, were not +identical, and both were something more than merely the sun personified. +Again, Merodach, or Marduk, is sometimes expressly identified with Bel +as sun-god, sometimes with the divinity of the planet Jupiter. Similarly +Ashtoreth, or I[vs]tar, is sometimes identified with the goddess of the +moon, sometimes with the planet Venus. It would not be safe, therefore, +to assume that reference is intended to any particular heavenly body, +because a deity is mentioned that has been on occasions identified with +that heavenly body. Still less safe would it be to assume astronomical +allusions in the description of the qualities or characteristics of that +deity. Though Ashtoreth, or I[vs]tar, may have been often identified +with the planet Venus, it is ridiculous to argue, as some have done, +from the expression "Ashteroth-Karnaim," Ashteroth of "the horns," that +the ancients had sight or instruments sufficiently powerful to enable +them to observe that Venus, like the moon, had her phases, her "horns." +Though Nebo has been identified with the planet Mercury, we must not see +any astronomical allusion to its being the nearest planet to the sun in +Isaiah's coupling the two together, where he says, "Bel boweth down, +Nebo stoopeth." + +Isaiah speaks of the King of Babylon-- + + "How art thou fallen from Heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning!" + +The word here translated Lucifer, "light-bearer," is the word _h[=e]lel_ +from the root _halal_, and means _spreading brightness_. In the +Assyrio-Babylonian, the planet Venus is sometimes termed _Must[=e]lel_, +from the root _[=e]lil_, and she is the most lustrous of all the +"morning stars," of the stars that herald the dawn. But except that her +greater brilliancy marks her as especially appropriate to the +expression, Sirius or any other in its capacity of morning star would be +suitable as an explanation of the term. + +St. Peter uses the equivalent Greek expression _Ph[=o]sphorus_ in his +second epistle: "A light that shineth in a dark place, until the day +dawn and the day-star" (light-bringer) "arise in your hearts." + +Isaiah again says-- + + "Ye are they that forsake the Lord, that forget My holy + mountain, that prepare a table for that Troop, and that + furnish the drink offering unto that Number." + +"Gad" and "Meni," here literally translated as "Troop" and "Number," are +in the Revised Version rendered as "Fortune" and "Destiny." A reference +to this god "Meni" has been suggested in the mysterious inscription +which the King of Babylon saw written by a hand upon the wall, which +Daniel interpreted as "God hath numbered thy kingdom, and brought it to +an end." By some commentators Meni is understood to be the planet Venus, +and Gad to be Jupiter, for these are associated in Arabian astrology +with Fortune or Fate in the sense of good luck. Or, from the similarity +of Meni with the Greek _m[=e]n[=e]_, moon, "that Number" might be +identified with the moon, and "that Troop," by analogy, with the sun. + +It is more probable, if any astrological deities are intended, that the +two little star clusters--the Pleiades and the Hyades--situated on the +back and head of the Bull, may have been accounted the manifestations of +the divinities which are by their names so intimately associated with +the idea of multitude. The number seven has been held a sacred number, +and has been traditionally associated with both the little star groups. + +In one instance alone does there seem to be any strong evidence that +reference is intended to one of the five planets known to the ancients, +when worshipped as a god; and even that is not conclusive. The prophet +Amos, charging the Israelites with idolatry even in the wilderness, +asks-- + + "Have ye offered unto Me sacrifices and offerings in the + wilderness forty years, O house of Israel? But ye have borne + the tabernacle of your Moloch and Chiun your images, the star + of your god, which ye made to yourselves." + +But the Septuagint Version makes the accusation run thus:-- + + "Ye took up the tabernacle of Moloch and the star of your god + Remphan, figures which ye made to worship them." + +This was the version which St. Stephen quoted in his defence before the +High Priest. It is quite clear that it was star worship to which he was +referring, for he prefaces his quotation by saying, "God turned and gave +them up to serve the host of heaven, as it is written in the book of the +prophets." + +The difference between the names "Chiun" and "Remphan" is explained by a +probable misreading on the part of the Septuagint translators into the +Greek, who seemed to have transcribed the initial of the word as "resh," +where it should have been "caph"--"R" instead of "K,"--thus the real +word should be transliterated "_Kaivan_," which was the name of the +planet Saturn both amongst the ancient Arabs and Syrians, and also +amongst the Assyrians, whilst "_Kevan_" is the name of that planet in +the sacred books of the Parsees. On the other hand, there seems to be +some difficulty in supposing that a deity is intended of which there is +no other mention in Scripture, seeing that the reference, both by Amos +and St. Stephen, would imply that the particular object of idolatry +denounced was one exceedingly familiar to them. Gesenius, therefore, +after having previously accepted the view that we have here a reference +to the worship of Saturn, finally adopted the rendering of the Latin +Vulgate, that the word "Chiun" should be translated "statue" or "image." +The passage would then become-- + + "Ye have borne the booth of your Moloch and the image of your + idols, the star of your god which ye made for yourselves." + +If we accept the view that the worship of the planet Saturn is indeed +referred to, it does not necessarily follow that the prophet Amos was +stating that the Israelites in the wilderness actually observed and +worshipped him as such. The prophet may mean no more than that the +Israelites, whilst outwardly conforming to the worship of Jehovah, were +in their secret desires hankering after Sabaeism--the worship of the +heavenly host. And it may well be that he chooses Moloch and Saturn as +representing the cruellest and most debased forms of heathenism. + +The planet Saturn gives its name to the seventh day of our week, +"Saturn's day," the sabbath of the week of the Jews, and the coincidence +of the two has called forth not a few ingenious theories. Why do the +days of our week bear their present names, and what is the explanation +of their order? + +The late well-known astronomer, R. A. Proctor, gives the explanation as +follows:-- + + "The twenty-four hours of each day were devoted to those + planets in the order of their supposed distance from the + earth,--Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, the Sun, Venus, Mercury, and + the Moon. The outermost planet, Saturn, which also travels in + the longest period, was regarded in this arrangement as of + chief dignity, as encompassing in his movement all the rest, + Jupiter was of higher dignity than Mars, and so forth. + Moreover to the outermost planet, partly because of Saturn's + gloomy aspect, partly because among half-savage races the + powers of evil are always more respected than the powers that + work for good, a maleficent influence was attributed. Now, if + we assign to the successive hours of a day the planets as + above-named, beginning with Saturn on the day assigned to that + powerful deity, it will be found that the last hour of that + day will be assigned to Mars--'the lesser infortune,' as + Saturn was 'the greater infortune,' of the old system of + astrology--and the first hour of the next day to the next + planet, the Sun; the day following Saturday would thus be + Sunday. The last hour of Sunday would fall to Mercury, and the + first of the next to the Moon; so Monday, the Moon's day, + follows Sunday. The next day would be the day of Mars, who, in + the Scandinavian theology, is represented by Tuisco; so + Tuisco's day, or Tuesday (Mardi), follows Monday. Then, by + following the same system, we come to Mercury's day + (Mercredi), Woden's day, or Wednesday; next to Jupiter's day, + Jove's day (Jeudi), Thor's day, or Thursday; to Venus's day, + Vendredi (Veneris dies), Freya's day, or Friday, and so to + Saturday again. That the day devoted to the most evil and most + powerful of all the deities of the Sabdans (_sic_) should be + set apart--first as one on which it was unlucky to work, and + afterwards as one on which it was held to be sinful to + work--was but the natural outcome of the superstitious belief + that the planets were gods ruling the fates of men and + nations."[136:1] + +This theory appears at first sight so simple, so plausible, that many +are tempted to say, "It must be true," and it has accordingly gained a +wide acceptance. Yet a moment's thought shows that it makes many +assumptions, some of which rest without any proof, and others are known +to be false. + +When were the planets discovered? Not certainly at the dawn of +astronomy. The fixed stars must have become familiar, and have been +recognized in their various groupings before it could have been known +that there were others that were not fixed,--were "planets," _i. e._ +wanderers. Thus, amongst the Greeks, no planet is alluded to by Hesiod, +and Homer mentions no planet other than Venus, and apparently regarded +her as two distinct objects, according as she was seen as a morning and +as an evening star. Pythagoras is reputed to have been the first of the +Greek philosophers to realize the identity of Phosphorus and Hesperus, +that is Venus at her two elongations, so that the Greeks did not know +this until the sixth century before our era. We are yet without certain +knowledge as to when the Babylonians began to notice the different +planets, but the order of discovery can hardly have been different from +what it seems to have been amongst the Greeks--that is to say, first +Venus as two separate objects, then Jupiter and Mars, and, probably much +later, Saturn and Mercury. This last, again, would originally be +considered a pair of planets, just as Venus had been. Later these +planets as morning stars would be identified with their appearances as +evening stars. After this obscurity had been cleared up, there was a +still further advance to be made before the astrologers could have +adopted their strange grouping of the sun and moon as planets equally +with the other five. This certainly is no primitive conception; for the +sun and moon have such appreciable dimensions and are of such great +brightness that they seem to be marked off (as in the first chapter of +Genesis) as of an entirely different order from all the other heavenly +bodies. The point in common with the other five planets, namely their +apparent periodical movements, could only have been brought out by very +careful and prolonged observation. The recognition, therefore, of the +planets as being "seven," two of the seven being the sun and moon, must +have been quite late in the history of the world. The connection of the +"seven planets" with the seven days of the week was something much later +still. It implies, as we have seen, the adoption of a particular order +for the planets, and this order further implies that a knowledge had +been obtained of their relative distances, and involves a particular +theory of the solar system, that which we now know as the Ptolemaic. It +is not the order of the Babylonians, for they arranged them, Moon, Sun, +Mercury, Venus, Saturn, Jupiter, Mars. + +There are further considerations which show that the Babylonians could +not have given these planetary names to the days of the week. The order +of the names implies that a twenty-four hour day was used, but the +Babylonian hours were twice the length of those which we use; hence +there were only twelve of them. Further, the Babylonian week was not a +true week running on continuously; it was tied to the month, and hence +did not lend itself to such a notation. + +But the order adopted for the planets is that current amongst the Greek +astronomers of Alexandria, who did use a twenty-four hour day. Hence it +was certainly later than 300 B.C. But the Greeks and Egyptians alike +used a week of ten days, not of seven. How then did the planetary names +come to be assigned to the seven-day week? + +It was a consequence of the power which the Jews possessed of impressing +their religious ideas, and particularly their observance of the sabbath +day, upon their conquerors. They did so with the Romans. We find such +writers as Cicero, Horace, Juvenal and others remarking upon the +sabbath, and, indeed, in the early days of the Empire there was a +considerable observance of it. Much more, then, must the Alexandrian +Greeks have been aware of the Jewish sabbath,--which involved the Jewish +week,--at a time when the Jews of that city were both numerous and +powerful, having equal rights with the Greek inhabitants, and when the +Ptolemies were sanctioning the erection of a Jewish temple in their +dominions, and the translation of the Jewish Scriptures into Greek. It +was after the Alexandrian Greeks had thus learned of the Jewish week +that they assigned the planets to the seven days of that week, since it +suited their astrological purposes better than the Egyptian week of ten +days. That allotment could not possibly have brought either week or +sabbath into existence. Both had been recognized many centuries earlier. +It was foisted upon that which had already a venerable antiquity. As +Professor Schiaparelli well remarks, "we are indebted for these names to +mathematical astrology, the false science which came to be formed after +the time of Alexander the Great from the strange intermarriage between +Chaldean and Egyptian superstitions and the mathematical astronomy of +the Greeks."[139:1] + +There is a widespread notion that early astronomy, whether amongst the +Hebrews or elsewhere, took the form of astrology; that the +fortune-telling came first, and the legitimate science grew out of it. +Indeed, a claim is not infrequently made that no small honour is due to +the early astrologers, since from their efforts, the most majestic of +all the sciences is said to have arisen. + +These ideas are the exact contrary of the truth. Mathematical, or +perhaps as we might better call it, planetary astrology, as we have it +to-day, concerns itself with the apparent movements of the planets in +the sense that it uses them as its material; just as a child playing in +a library might use the books as building blocks, piling, it may be, a +book of sermons on a history, and a novel on a mathematical treatise. +Astrology does not contribute, has not contributed a single observation, +a single demonstration to astronomy. It owes to astronomy all that it +knows of mathematical processes and planetary positions. In astronomical +language, the calculation of a horoscope is simply the calculation of +the "azimuths" of the different planets, and of certain imaginary points +on the ecliptic for a given time. This is an astronomical process, +carried out according to certain simple formulae. The calculation of a +horoscope is therefore a straightforward business, but, as astrologers +all admit, its interpretation is where the skill is required, and no +real rules can be given for that. + +Here is the explanation why the sun and moon are classed together with +such relatively insignificant bodies as the other five planets, and are +not even ranked as their chief. The ancient astrologer, like the modern, +cared nothing for the actual luminary in the heavens; all he cared for +was its written symbol on his tablets, and there Sun and Saturn could be +looked upon as equal, or Saturn as the greater. It is a rare thing for a +modern astrologer to introduce the place of an actual star into a +horoscope; the calculations all refer to the positions of the _Signs_ +of the Zodiac, which are purely imaginary divisions of the heavens; not +to the _Constellations_ of the Zodiac, which are the actual star-groups. + +Until astronomers had determined the apparent orbits of the planets, and +drawn up tables by which their apparent places could be predicted for +some time in advance, it was impossible for astrologers to cast +horoscopes of the present kind. All they could do was to divide up time +amongst the deities supposed to preside over the various planets. To +have simply given a planet to each day would have allowed the astrologer +a very small scope in which to work for his prophecies; the ingenious +idea of giving a planet to each hour as well, gave a wider range of +possible combinations. There seems to have been deliberate spitefulness +in the assignment of the most evil of the planetary divinities to the +sacred day of the Jews--their sabbath. It should be noticed at the same +time that, whilst the Jewish sabbath coincides with the astrological +"Saturn's Day," that particular day is the seventh day of the Jewish +week, but the first of the astrological. For the very nature of the +reckoning by which the astrologers allotted the planets to the days of +the week, implies, as shown in the extract quoted from Proctor, that +they began with Saturn and worked downwards from the "highest +planet"--as they called it--to the "lowest." This detail of itself +should have sufficed to have demonstrated to Proctor, or any other +astronomer, that the astrological week had been foisted upon the already +existing week of the Jews. + +Before astrology took its present mathematical form, astrologers used +as their material for prediction the stars or constellations which +happened to be rising or setting at the time selected, or were upon the +same meridian, or had the same longitude, as such constellations. One of +the earliest of these astrological writers was Zeuchros of Babylon, who +lived about the time of the Christian era, some of whose writings have +been preserved to us. From these it is clear that the astrologers found +twelve signs of the zodiac did not give them enough play. They therefore +introduced the "decans," that is to say the idea of thirty-six +divinities--three to each month--borrowed from the Egyptian division of +the year into thirty-six weeks (of ten days), each under the rule of a +separate god. Of course this Egyptian year bore no fixed relation to the +actual lunar months or solar year, nor therefore to the Jewish year, +which was related to both. But even with this increase of material, the +astrologers found the astronomical data insufficient for their +fortune-telling purposes. Additional figures quite unrepresented in the +heavens, were devised, and were drawn upon, as needed, to supplement the +genuine constellations, and as it was impossible to recognize these +additions in the sky, the predictions were made, not from observation of +the heavens, but from observations on globes, often very inaccurate. + +Earlier still we have astrological tablets from Assyria and Babylon, +many of which show that they had nothing to do with any actual +observation, and were simply invented to give completeness to the tables +of omens. Thus an Assyrian tablet has been found upon which are given +the significations of eclipses falling upon each day of the month +Tammuz, right up to the middle of the month. It is amusing to read the +naive comment of a distinguished Assyriologist, that tablets such as +these prove how careful, and how long continued had been the +observations upon which they were based. It was not recognized that no +eclipses either of sun or moon could possibly occur on most of the dates +given, and that they could never occur "in the north," which is one of +the quarters indicated. They were no more founded on actual observation +than the portent mentioned on another tablet, of a woman giving birth to +a lion, which, after all, is not more impossible than that an eclipse +should occur in the north on the second day of Tammuz. In all ages it +has been the same; the astrologer has had nothing to do with science as +such, even in its most primitive form; he has cared nothing for the +actual appearance of the heavens upon which he pretended to base his +predictions; an imaginary planet, an imaginary eclipse, an imaginary +constellation were just as good for his fortune-telling as real ones. +Such fortune-telling was forbidden to the Hebrews; necessarily +forbidden, for astrology had no excuse unless the stars and planets were +gods, or the vehicles and engines of gods. Further, all attempts to +extort from spirits or from inanimate things a glimpse into the future +was likewise forbidden them. They were to look to God, and to His +revealed will alone for all such light. + + "When they shall say unto you, Seek unto them that have + familiar spirits, and unto wizards that peep, and that mutter: + should not a people seek unto their God?" + +The Hebrews were few in number, their kingdoms very small compared with +the great empires of Egypt, Assyria, or Babylon, but here, in this +question of divination or fortune-telling, they stand on a plane far +above any of the surrounding nations. There is just contempt in the +picture drawn by Ezekiel of the king of Babylon, great though his +military power might be-- + + "The king of Babylon stood at the parting of the way, at the + head of the two ways, to use divination: he shook the arrows + to and fro, he consulted the teraphim, he looked in the + liver." + +And Isaiah calls upon the city of Babylon-- + + "Stand now with thine enchantments, and with the multitude of + thy sorceries, wherein thou hast laboured from thy youth; if + so thou shalt be able to profit, if so be thou mayest prevail. + Thou art wearied in the multitude of thy counsels: let now the + astrologers, the stargazers, the monthly prognosticators stand + up, and save thee from these things that shall come upon + thee." + +Isaiah knew the Lord to be He that "frustrateth the tokens of the liars +and maketh diviners mad." And the word of the Lord to Israel through +Jeremiah was-- + + "Thus saith the Lord. Learn not the way of the heathen, and be + not dismayed at the signs of heaven; for the heathen are + dismayed at them." + +It is to our shame that even to-day, in spite of all our enlightenment +and scientific advances, astrology still has a hold upon multitudes. +Astrological almanacs and treatises are sold by the tens of thousands, +and astrological superstitions are still current. "The star of the god +Chiun" is not indeed openly worshipped; but Saturn is still looked upon +as the planet bringing such diseases as "toothache, agues, and all that +proceeds from cold, consumption, the spleen particularly, and the bones, +rheumatic gouts, jaundice, dropsy, and all complaints arising from fear, +apoplexies, etc."; and charms made of Saturn's metal, lead, are still +worn upon Saturn's finger, in the belief that these will ward off the +threatened evil; a tradition of the time when by so doing the wearers +would have proclaimed themselves votaries of the god, and therefore +under his protection. + +Astrology is inevitably linked with heathenism, and both shut up spirit +and mind against the knowledge of God Himself, which is religion; and +against the knowledge of His works, which is science. And though a man +may be religious without being scientific, or scientific without being +religious, religion and science alike both rest on one and the same +basis--the belief in "One God, Maker of heaven and earth." + +That belief was the reason why Israel of old, so far as it was faithful +to it, was free from the superstitions of astrology. + + "It is no small honour for this nation to have been wise + enough to see the inanity of this and all other forms of + divination. . . . Of what other ancient civilized nation could + as much be said?"[145:1] + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[136:1] R. A. Proctor, _The Great Pyramid_, pp. 274-276. + +[139:1] G. V. Schiaparelli, _Astronomy in the Old Testament_, p. 137. + +[145:1] G. V. Schiaparelli, _Astronomy in the Old Testament_, p. 52. + + +[Illustration: _By permission of the Autotype Co._ + +_74, New Oxford Street, London, W.C._ + +ST. PAUL PREACHING AT ATHENS (_by Raphael_). + +"As certain also of your own poets have said, For we are also His +offspring."] + + + + +BOOK II + +THE CONSTELLATIONS + + + + +CHAPTER I + +THE ORIGIN OF THE CONSTELLATIONS + + +The age of Classical astronomy began with the labours of Eudoxus and +others, about four centuries before the Christian Era, but there was an +Earlier astronomy whose chief feature was the arrangement of the stars +into constellations. + +The best known of all such arrangements is that sometimes called the +"Greek Sphere," because those constellations have been preserved to us +by Greek astronomers and poets. The earliest complete catalogue of the +stars, as thus arranged, that has come down to us was compiled by +Claudius Ptolemy, the astronomer of Alexandria, and completed 137 A.D. +In this catalogue, each star is described by its place in the supposed +figure of the constellation, whilst its celestial latitude and longitude +are added, so that we can see with considerable exactness how the +astronomers of that time imagined the star figures. The earliest +complete description of the constellations, apart from the places of the +individual stars, is given in the poem of Aratus of Soli--_The +Phenomena_, published about 270 B.C. + +Were these constellations known to the Hebrews of old? We can answer +this question without hesitation in the case of St. Paul. For in his +sermon to the Athenians on Mars' Hill, he quotes from the opening verses +of this constellation poem of Aratus:-- + + "God that made the world and all things therein, seeing that + He is Lord of heaven and earth, dwelleth not in temples made + with hands; neither is worshipped with men's hands, as though + He needed anything, seeing He giveth to all life, and breath, + and all things; and hath made of one blood all nations of men + for to dwell on all the face of the earth, and hath determined + the times before appointed, and the bounds of their + habitation; that they should seek the Lord, if haply they + might feel after Him, and find Him, though He be not far from + every one of us: for in Him we live, and move, and have our + being; as certain also of your own poets have said, For we are + also His offspring." + +The poem of Aratus begins thus:-- + + "To God above we dedicate our song; + To leave Him unadored, we never dare; + For He is present in each busy throng, + In every solemn gathering He is there. + The sea is His; and His each crowded port; + In every place our need of Him we feel; + FOR WE HIS OFFSPRING ARE." + +Aratus, like St. Paul himself, was a native of Cilicia, and had been +educated at Athens. His poem on the constellations came, in the opinion +of the Greeks, next in honour to the poems of Homer, so that St. Paul's +quotation from it appealed to his hearers with special force. + +The constellations of Ptolemy's catalogue are forty-eight in number. +Those of Aratus correspond to them in almost every particular, but one +or two minor differences may be marked. According to Ptolemy, the +constellations are divided into three sets:--twenty-one northern, twelve +in the zodiac, and fifteen southern. + +The northern constellations are--to use the names by which they are now +familiar to us--1, _Ursa Minor_, the Little Bear; 2, _Ursa Major_, the +Great Bear; 3, _Draco_, the Dragon; 4, _Cepheus_, the King; 5, _Booetes_, +the Herdsman; 6, _Corona Borealis_, the Northern Crown; 7, _Hercules_, +the Kneeler; 8, _Lyra_, the Lyre or Swooping Eagle; 9, _Cygnus_, the +Bird; 10, _Cassiopeia_, the Throned Queen, or the Lady in the Chair; 11, +_Perseus_; 12, _Auriga_, the Holder of the Reins; 13, _Ophiuchus_, the +Serpent-holder; 14, _Serpens_, the Serpent; 15, _Sagitta_, the Arrow; +16, _Aquila_, the Soaring Eagle; 17, _Delphinus_, the Dolphin; 18, +_Equuleus_, the Horse's Head; 19, _Pegasus_, the Winged Horse; 20, +_Andromeda_, the Chained Woman; 21, _Triangulum_, the Triangle. + +The zodiacal constellations are: 1, _Aries_, the Ram; 2, _Taurus_, the +Bull; 3, _Gemini_, the Twins; 4, _Cancer_, the Crab; 5, _Leo_, the Lion; +6, _Virgo_, the Virgin; 7, _Libra_, the Scales,--also called the Claws, +that is of the Scorpion; 8, _Scorpio_, the Scorpion; 9, _Sagittarius_, +the Archer; 10, _Capricornus_, the Sea-goat, _i. e._ Goat-fish; 11, +_Aquarius_, the Water-pourer; 12, _Pisces_, the Fishes. + +The southern constellations are: 1, _Cetus_, the Sea-Monster; 2, +_Orion_, the Giant; 3, _Eridanus_, the River; 4, _Lepus_, the Hare; 5, +_Canis Major_, the Great Dog; 6, _Canis Minor_, the Little Dog; 7, +_Argo_, the Ship and Rock; 8, _Hydra_, the Water-snake; 9, _Crater_, the +Cup; 10, _Corvus_, the Raven; 11, _Centaurus_, the Centaur; 12, +_Lupus_, the Beast; 13, _Ara_, the Altar; 14, _Corona Australis_, the +Southern Crown; 15, _Piscis Australis_, the Southern Fish. + +Aratus, living four hundred years earlier than Ptolemy, differs only +from him in that he reckons the cluster of the Pleiades--counted by +Ptolemy in Taurus--as a separate constellation, but he has no +constellation of _Equuleus_. The total number of constellations was thus +still forty-eight. Aratus further describes the Southern Crown, but +gives it no name; and in the constellation of the Little Dog he only +mentions one star, _Procyon_, the Dog's Forerunner. He also mentions +that the two Bears were also known as two Wagons or Chariots. + +Were these constellations, so familiar to us to-day, known before the +time of Aratus, and if so, by whom were they devised, and when and +where? + +They were certainly known before the time of Aratus, for his poem was +confessedly a versification of an account of them written by Eudoxus +more than a hundred years previous. At a yet earlier date, Panyasis, +uncle to the great historian Herodotus, incidentally discusses the name +of one of the constellations, which must therefore have been known to +him. Earlier still, Hesiod, in the second book of his _Works and Days_, +refers to several:-- + + "Orion and the Dog, each other nigh, + Together mounted to the midnight sky, + When in the rosy morn Arcturus shines, + Then pluck the clusters from the parent vines. + + * * * * * + + Next in the round do not to plough forget + When the Seven Virgins and Orion set." + +Much the same constellations are referred to by Homer. Thus, in the +fifth book of the _Odyssey_,-- + + "And now, rejoicing in the prosperous gales, + With beating heart Ulysses spreads his sails: + Placed at the helm he sate, and marked the skies, + Nor closed in sleep his ever-watchful eyes. + There view'd the Pleiads and the Northern Team, + And great Orion's more refulgent beam, + To which around the axle of the sky + The Bear, revolving, points his golden eye." + +Thus it is clear that several of the constellations were perfectly +familiar to the Greeks a thousand years before the Christian era; that +is to say, about the time of Solomon. + +We have other evidence that the constellations were known in early +times. We often find on Greek coins, a bull, a ram, or a lion +represented; these may well be references to some of the signs of the +zodiac, but offer no conclusive evidence. But several of the +constellation figures are very unusual in form; thus the Sea-goat has +the head and fore-legs of a goat, but the hinder part of a fish; and the +Archer has the head and shoulders of a man, but the body and legs of a +horse. Pegasus, the horse with wings, not only shows this unnatural +combination, but the constellation figure only gives part of the +animal--the head, neck, wings, breast, and fore-legs. Now some of these +characteristic figures are found on quite early Greek coins, and yet +earlier on what are known as "boundary stones" from Babylonia. These are +little square pillars, covered with inscriptions and sculptures, and +record for the most part the gift, transfer, or sale of land. They are +dated according to the year of the reigning king, so that a clear idea +can be formed as to their age. A great many symbols, which appear to be +astronomical, occur upon them; amongst these such very distinguishing +shapes as the Archer, Sea-goat, and Scorpion (_see_ p. 318). So that, +just as we know from Homer and Hesiod that the principal constellations +were known of old by the same names as those by which we know them +to-day, we learn from Babylonian boundary stones that they were then +known as having the same forms as we now ascribe to them. The date of +the earliest boundary stones of the kind in our possession would show +that the Babylonians knew of our constellations as far back as the +twelfth century B.C., that is to say, whilst Israel was under the +Judges. + +We have direct evidence thus far back as to the existence of the +constellations. But they are older than this, so much older that +tradition as well as direct historical evidence fails us. The only +earlier evidence open to us is that of the constellations themselves. + +A modern celestial globe is covered over with figures from pole to pole, +but the majority of these are of quite recent origin and belong to the +Modern period of astronomy. They have been framed since the invention of +the telescope, and since the progress of geographical discovery brought +men to know the southern skies. If these modern constellations are +cleared off, and only those of Aratus and Ptolemy suffered to remain, it +becomes at once evident that the ancient astronomers were not acquainted +with the entire heavens. For there is a large space in the south, left +free from all the old constellations, and no explanation, why it should +have been so left free, is so simple and satisfactory as the obvious +one, that the ancient astronomers did not map out the stars in that +region because they never saw them; those stars never rose above their +horizon. + +[Illustration: THE ANCIENT CONSTELLATIONS SOUTH OF THE ECLIPTIC.] + +Thus at the present time the heavens for an observer in England are +naturally divided into three parts, as shown in the accompanying +diagram. In the north, round the pole-star are a number of +constellations that never set; they wheel unceasingly around the pole. +On every fine night we can see the Great Bear, the Little Bear, the +Dragon, Cepheus and Cassiopeia. But the stars in the larger portion of +the sky have their risings and settings, and the seasons in which they +are visible or are withdrawn from sight. Thus we see Orion and the +Pleiades and Sirius in the winter, not in the summer, but the Scorpion +and Sagittarius in the summer. Similarly there is a third portion of the +heavens which never comes within our range. We never see the Southern +Cross, and hardly any star in the great constellation of the Ship, +though these are very familiar to New Zealanders. + +[Illustration: THE CELESTIAL SPHERE. + + + Zenith + * * + + * * North Pole + * + * Stars / + . * Always + . Visible + . / + . Visible / + . Hemisphere / + . / + . / + . / + . / + (Earth surface) . / (Earth surface) + South --------------------------------------- North + / . Celestial + / . / Equator + Invisible . + / . + / Hemisphere . + / . + Stars / . + Never . + / Visible + / + South + Pole + + THE CELESTIAL SPHERE.] + +The outline of this unmapped region must therefore correspond roughly to +the horizon of the place where the constellations were originally +designed, or at least be roughly parallel to it, since we may well +suppose that stars which only rose two or three degrees above that +horizon might have been neglected. + +From this we learn that the constellations were designed by people +living not very far from the 40th parallel of north latitude, not +further south than the 37th or 36th. This is important, as it shows that +they did not originate in ancient Egypt or India, nor even in the city +of Babylon, which is in latitude 32-1/2 deg..[157:1] + +But this vacant space reveals another fact of even more importance. It +gives us a hint as to the date when the constellations were designed. + +An observer in north latitude 40 deg. at the present time would be very far +from seeing all the stars included in the forty-eight constellations. He +would see nothing at all of the constellation of the Altar, and a good +deal of that of the Centaur would be hidden from him. + +On the other hand, there are some bright constellations, such as the +Phoenix and the Crane, unknown to the ancients, which would come within +his range of vision. This is due to what is known as "precession;" a +slow movement of the axis upon which the earth rotates. In consequence +of this, the pole of the heavens seems to trace out a circle amongst the +stars which it takes 25,800 years to complete. It is therefore a matter +of very simple calculation to find the position of the south pole of the +heavens at any given date, past or future, and we find that the centre +of the unmapped space was the south pole of the heavens something like +4,600 years ago, that is to say about 2,700 B.C. + +It is, of course, not possible to fix either time or latitude very +closely, since the limits of the unmapped space are a a little vague. +But it is significant that if we take a celestial globe, arranged so as +to represent the heavens for the time 2,700 B.C., and for north latitude +40 deg., we find several striking relations. First of all, the Great Dragon +then linked together the north pole of the celestial equator, and the +north pole of the ecliptic; it was as nearly as possible symmetrical +with regard to the two; it occupied the very crown of the heavens. With +the single exception of the Little Bear, which it nearly surrounds, the +Dragon was the only constellation that never set. Next, the Water-snake +(see diagram, p. 200) lay at this time right along the equator, +extending over 105 deg. of Right Ascension; or, to put it less technically, +it took seven hours out of the twenty-four to cross the meridian. It +covered nearly one-third of the equatorial belt. Thirdly, the +intersection of the equator with one of the principal meridians of the +sky was marked by the Serpent, which is carried by the Serpent-holder +in a very peculiar manner. The meridian at midnight at the time of the +spring equinox is called a "colure,"--the "autumnal colure," because the +sun crosses it in autumn. Now the Serpent was so arranged as to be shown +writhing itself for some distance along the equator, and then struggling +upwards, along the autumnal colure, marking the zenith with its head. +The lower part of the autumnal colure was marked by the Scorpion, and +the foot of the Serpent-holder pressed down the creature's head, just +where the colure, the equator, and the ecliptic intersected (_see_ +diagram, p. 164). + +It is scarcely conceivable that this fourfold arrangement, not suggested +by any natural grouping of the stars, should have come about by +accident; it must have been intentional. For some reason, the equator, +the colure, the zenith and the poles were all marked out by these +serpentine or draconic forms. The unmapped space gives us a clue only to +the date and latitude of the designing of the most southerly +constellations. We now see that a number of the northern hold positions +which were specially significant under the same conditions, indicating +that they were designed at about the same date. There is therefore +little room for doubt that some time in the earlier half of the third +millennium before our era, and somewhere between the 36th and 40th +parallels of north latitude, the constellations were designed, +substantially as we have them now, the serpent forms being intentionally +placed in these positions of great astronomical importance. + +It will have been noticed that Ptolemy makes the Ram the first +constellation of the zodiac. It was so in his days, but it was the Bull +that was the original leader, as we know from a variety of traditions; +the sun at the spring equinox being in the centre of that constellation +about 3000 B.C. At the time when the constellations were designed, the +sun at the spring equinox was near Aldebaran, the brightest star of the +Bull; at the summer solstice it was near Regulus, the brightest star of +the Lion; at the autumnal equinox it was near Antares, the brightest +star of the Scorpion; at the winter solstice it was near Fomalhaut, the +brightest star in the neighbourhood of the Waterpourer. These four stars +have come down to us with the name of the "Royal Stars," probably +because they were so near to the four most important points in the +apparent path of the sun amongst the stars. There is also a celebrated +passage in the first of Virgil's _Georgics_ which speaks of the white +bull with golden horns that opens the year. So when the Mithraic +religion adopted several of the constellation figures amongst its +symbols, the Bull as standing for the spring equinox, the Lion for the +summer solstice, were the two to which most prominence was given, and +they are found thus used in Mithraic monuments as late as the second or +third century A.D., long after the Ram had been recognized as the +leading sign. + +It is not possible to push back the origin of the constellations to an +indefinite antiquity. They cannot at the very outside be more than 5000 +years old; they must be considerably more than 4000. But during the +whole of this millennium the sun at the spring equinox was in the +constellation of the Bull. There is therefore no possible doubt that +the Bull--and not the Twins nor the Ram--was the original leader of the +zodiac. + +The constellations, therefore, were designed long before the nation of +Israel had its origin, indeed before Abraham left Ur of the Chaldees. +The most probable date--2700 B.C.--would take us to a point a little +before the Flood, if we accept the Hebrew chronology, a few centuries +after the Flood, if we accept the Septuagint chronology. Just as the +next great age of astronomical activity, which I have termed the +Classical, began after the close of the canon of the Old Testament +scriptures, so the constellation age began before the first books of +those scriptures were compiled. Broadly speaking, it may be said that +the knowledge of the constellation figures was the chief asset of +astronomy in the centuries when the Old Testament was being written. + +Seeing that the knowledge of these figures was preserved in Mesopotamia, +the country from which Abraham came out, and that they were in existence +long before his day, it is not unreasonable to suppose that both he and +his descendants were acquainted with them, and that when he and they +looked upward to the glories of the silent stars, and recalled the +promise, "So shall thy seed be," they pictured round those glittering +points of light much the same forms that we connect with them to-day. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[157:1] Delitzsch is, therefore, in error when he asserts that "when we +divide the zodiac into twelve signs and style them the Ram, Bull, Twins, +etc. . . . the Sumerian-Babylonian culture is still living and operating +even at the present day" (_Babel and Bible_, p. 67). The constellations +may have been originally designed by the _Akkadians_, but if so it was +before they came down from their native highlands into the Mesopotamian +valley. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +GENESIS AND THE CONSTELLATIONS + + +As we have just shown, the constellations evidently were designed long +before the earliest books of the Old Testament received their present +form. But the first nine chapters of Genesis give the history of the +world before any date that we can assign to the constellations, and are +clearly derived from very early documents or traditions. + +When the constellations are compared with those nine chapters, several +correspondences appear between the two; remarkable, when it is borne in +mind how few are the events that can be plainly set forth in a group of +forty-eight figures on the one hand, and how condensed are the +narratives of those nine chapters on the other. + +Look at the six southern constellations (_see_ pp. 164, 165) which were +seen during the nights of spring in that distant time. The largest of +these six is a great Ship resting on the southern horizon. Just above, a +Raven is perched on the stretched-out body of a reptile. A figure of a +Centaur appears to have just left the Ship, and is represented as +offering up an animal on an Altar. The animal is now shown as a Wolf, +but Aratus, our earliest authority, states that he did not know what +kind of animal it was that was being thus offered up. The cloud of +smoke from the Altar is represented by the bright coiling wreaths of the +Milky Way, and here in the midst of that cloud is set the Bow--the bow +of Sagittarius, the Archer. Is it possible that this can be mere +coincidence, or was it indeed intended as a memorial of the covenant +which God made with Noah, and with his children for ever?--"I do set My +bow in the cloud, and it shall be for a token of a covenant between Me +and the earth." + +Close by this group was another, made up of five constellations. Towards +the south, near midnight in spring, the observer in those ancient times +saw the Scorpion. The figure of a man was standing upon that venomous +beast, with his left foot pressed firmly down upon its head; but the +scorpion's tail was curled up to sting him in the right heel. Ophiuchus, +the Serpent-holder, the man treading on the Scorpion, derives his name +from the Serpent which he holds in his hands and strangles; the Serpent +that, as we have seen in the preceding chapter, marked the autumnal +colure. The head of Ophiuchus reached nearly to the zenith, and there +close to it was the head of another hero, so close that to complete the +form of the two heads the same stars must be used to some extent twice +over. Facing north, this second hero, now known to us as Hercules, but +to Aratus simply as the "Kneeler," was seen kneeling with his foot on +the head of the great northern Dragon. This great conflict between the +man and the serpent, therefore, was presented in a twofold form. Looking +south there was the picture of Ophiuchus trampling on the scorpion and +strangling the snake, yet wounded in the heel by the scorpion's sting; +looking north, the corresponding picture of the kneeling figure of +Hercules treading down the dragon's head. Here there seems an evident +reference to the word spoken by God to the serpent in the garden in +Eden: "I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy +seed and her Seed; It shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise His +heel." + +[Illustration: THE MIDNIGHT CONSTELLATIONS OF SPRING, B.C. 2700.] + +These two groups of star-figures seem therefore to point to the two +great promises made to mankind and recorded in the early chapters of +Genesis; the Promise of the Deliverer, Who, "Seed of the woman," should +bruise the serpent's head, and the promise of the "Bow set in the +cloud," the pledge that the world should not again be destroyed by a +flood. + +[Illustration: THE MIDNIGHT CONSTELLATIONS OF WINTER, B.C. 2700.] + +One or two other constellations appear, less distinctly, to refer to the +first of these two promises. The Virgin, the woman of the zodiac, +carries in her hand a bright star, the ear of corn, the seed; whilst, +immediately under her, the great Water-snake, Hydra, is drawn out at +enormous length, "going on its belly;" not writhing upwards like the +Serpent, nor twined round the crown of the sky like the Dragon. + +Yet again, the narrative in Genesis tells us that God "drove out the +man" (_i. e._ Adam), "and He placed at the east of the garden of Eden +the cherubim, and the flame of a sword which turned every way, to keep +the way of the tree of life." No description is given of the form of the +cherubim in that passage, but they are fully described by Ezekiel, who +saw them in vision when he was by the river Chebar, as "the likeness of +four living creatures." The same beings were also seen in vision by St. +John, and are described by him in the Apocalypse as "four living +creatures" (_Z[=o]a_). "The first creature was like a lion, and the +second creature like a calf, and the third creature had a face as of a +man, and the fourth creature was like a flying eagle." Ezekiel gives a +fuller and more complex description, but agreeing in its essential +elements with that given by the Apostle, and, at the close of one of +these descriptions, he adds, "This is the living creature that I saw +under the God of Israel by the river of Chebar; and I knew that they +were cherubim"--no doubt because as a priest he had been familiar with +the cherubic forms as they were embroidered upon the curtains of the +Temple, and carved upon its walls and doors. + +The same four forms were seen amongst the constellation figures; not +placed at random amongst them, but as far as possible in the four most +important positions in the sky. For the constellations were originally +so designed that the sun at the time of the summer solstice was in the +middle of the constellation _Leo_, the Lion; at the time of the spring +equinox in the middle of _Taurus_, the Bull; and at the time of the +winter solstice, in the middle of _Aquarius_, the Man bearing the +waterpot. The fourth point, that held by the sun at the autumnal +equinox, would appear to have been already assigned to the foot of the +Serpent-holder as he crushes down the Scorpion's head; but a flying +eagle, _Aquila_, is placed as near the equinoctial point as seems to +have been consistent with the ample space that it was desired to give to +the emblems of the great conflict between the Deliverer and the Serpent. +Thus, as in the vision of Ezekiel, so in the constellation figures, the +Lion, the Ox, the Man, and the Eagle, stood as the upholders of the +firmament, as "the pillars of heaven." They looked down like watchers +upon all creation; they seemed to guard the four quarters of the sky. + +If we accept an old Jewish tradition, the constellations may likewise +give us some hint of an event recorded in the tenth chapter of Genesis. +For it has been supposed that the great stellar giant Orion is none +other than "Nimrod, the mighty hunter before the Lord," and the founder +of the Babylonian kingdom; identified by some Assyriologists with +Merodach, the tutelary deity of Babylon: and by others with Gilgamesh, +the tyrant of Erech, whose exploits have been preserved to us in the +great epic now known by his name. Possibly both identifications may +prove to be correct. + +More than one third of the constellation figures thus appear to have a +close connection with some of the chief incidents recorded in the first +ten chapters of Genesis as having taken place in the earliest ages of +the world's history. If we include the Hare and the two Dogs as adjuncts +of Orion, and the Cup as well as the Raven with Hydra, then no fewer +than twenty-two out of the forty-eight are directly or indirectly so +connected. But the constellation figures only deal with a very few +isolated incidents, and these are necessarily such as lend themselves to +graphic representation. The points in common with the Genesis narrative +are indeed striking, but the points of independence are no less +striking. The majority of the constellation figures do not appear to +refer to any incidents in Genesis; the majority of the incidents in the +Genesis narrative find no record in the sky. Even in the treatment of +incidents common to both there are differences, which make it impossible +to suppose that either was directly derived from the other. + +But it is clear that when the constellations were devised,--that is to +say, roughly speaking, about 2,700 B.C.,--the promise of the Deliverer, +the "Seed of the woman" who should bruise the serpent's head, was well +known and highly valued; so highly valued that a large part of the sky +was devoted to its commemoration and to that of the curse on the +serpent. The story of the Flood was also known, and especially the +covenant made with those who were saved in the ark, that the world +should not again be destroyed by water, the token of which covenant was +the "Bow set in the cloud." The fourfold cherubic forms were known, the +keepers of the way of the tree of life, the symbols of the presence of +God; and they were set in the four parts of the heaven, marking it out +as the tabernacle which He spreadeth abroad, for He dwelleth between the +cherubim. + + + + +CHAPTER III + +THE STORY OF THE DELUGE + + +Beside the narrative of the Flood given to us in Genesis, and the +pictorial representation of it preserved in the star figures, we have +Deluge stories from many parts of the world. But in particular we have a +very striking one from Babylonia. In the _Epic of Gilgamesh_, already +alluded to, the eleventh tablet is devoted to an interview between the +hero and Pir-napistim, the Babylonian Noah, who recounts to him how he +and his family were saved at the time of the great flood. + +This Babylonian story of the Deluge stands in quite a different relation +from the Babylonian story of Creation in its bearing on the account +given in Genesis. As we have already seen, the stories of Creation have +practically nothing in common; the stories of the Deluge have many most +striking points of resemblance, and may reasonably be supposed to have +had a common origin. + +Prof. Friedrich Delitzsch, in his celebrated lectures _Babel and Bible_, +refers to this Babylonian Deluge story in the following terms:-- + + "The Babylonians divided their history into two great periods: + the one before, the other after the Flood. Babylon was in + quite a peculiar sense the land of deluges. The alluvial + lowlands along the course of all great rivers discharging into + the sea are, of course, exposed to terrible floods of a + special kind--cyclones and tornadoes accompanied by + earthquakes and tremendous downpours of rain." + +After referring to the great cyclone and tidal wave which wrecked the +Sunderbunds at the mouths of the Ganges in 1876, when 215,000 persons +met their death by drowning, Prof. Delitzsch goes on-- + + "It is the merit of the celebrated Viennese geologist, Eduard + Suess, to have shown that there is an accurate description of + such a cyclone, line for line, in the Babylonian Deluge + story. . . . The whole story, precisely as it was written + down, travelled to Canaan. But, owing to the new and entirely + different local conditions, it was forgotten that the sea was + the chief factor, and so we find in the Bible two accounts of + the Deluge, which are not only scientifically impossible, but, + furthermore, mutually contradictory--the one assigning to it a + duration of 365 days, the other of [40 + (3 x 7)] = 61 days. + Science is indebted to Jean Astruc, that strictly orthodox + Catholic physician of Louis XIV., for recognizing that two + fundamentally different accounts of a deluge have been worked + up into a single story in the Bible."[171:1] + +The importance of the Babylonian Deluge story does not rest in anything +intrinsic to itself, for there are many deluge stories preserved by +other nations quite as interesting and as well told. It derives its +importance from its points of resemblance to the Genesis story, and from +the deduction that some have drawn from these that it was the original +of that story--or rather of the two stories--that we find imperfectly +recombined in Genesis. + +The suggestion of Jean Astruc that "two fundamentally different +accounts of a deluge have been worked up into a single story in the +Bible" has been generally accepted by those who have followed him in the +minute analysis of the literary structure of Holy Scripture; and the +names of the "Priestly Narrative" and of the "Jehovistic Narrative" +have, for the sake of distinctness, been applied to them. The former is +so called because the chapters in Exodus and the two following books, +which treat with particular minuteness of the various ceremonial +institutions of Israel, are considered to be by the same writer. The +latter has received its name from the preference shown by the writer for +the use, as the Divine name, of the word _Jehovah_,--so spelt when given +in our English versions, but generally translated "the LORD." + +There is a very close accord between different authorities as to the way +in which Genesis, chapters vi.-ix., should be allotted to these two +sources. The following is Dr. Driver's arrangement:-- + + PRIESTLY NARRATIVE. | JEHOVISTIC NARRATIVE. + | + Chap. Verse. | Chap. Verse. + Genesis vi. 9-22. |Genesis vii. 1-5. + vii. 6. | 7-10. + 11. | 12. + 13-16a. | 16b. + 17a. | 17b. + 18-21. | 22-23. + 24. | viii. 2b-3a. + viii. 1-2a. | 6-12. + 3b-5. | 13b. + 13a. | 20-22. + 14-19. | + ix. 1-17. | + +The Priestly narrative therefore tells us the cause of the Flood--that +is to say, the corruption of mankind; describes the dimensions of the +ark, and instructs Noah to bring "of every living thing of all flesh, +two of every sort shalt thou bring into the ark, to keep them alive with +thee; they shall be male and female." It further supplies the dates of +the chief occurrences during the Flood, states that the waters prevailed +above the tops of the mountains, that when the Flood diminished the ark +rested upon the mountains of Ararat; and gives the account of Noah and +his family going forth from the ark, and of the covenant which God made +with them, of which the token was to be the bow seen in the cloud. + +The most striking notes of the Jehovistic narrative are,--the incident +of the sending out of the raven and the dove; the account of Noah's +sacrifice; and the distinction made between clean beasts and beasts that +are not clean--the command to Noah being, "Of every clean beast thou +shalt take to thee by sevens, the male and his female: and of beasts +that are not clean by two, the male and his female." The significant +points of distinction between the two accounts are that the Priestly +writer gives the description of the ark, the Flood prevailing above the +mountains, the grounding on Mount Ararat, and the bow in the cloud; the +Jehovistic gives the sending out of the raven and the dove, and the +account of Noah's sacrifice, which involves the recognition of the +distinction between the clean and unclean beasts and the more abundant +provision of the former. He also lays emphasis on the Lord's "smelling a +sweet savour" and promising never again to smite everything living, +"for the imagination of man's heart is evil from his youth." + +The chief features of the Babylonian story of the Deluge are as +follows:--The God Ae spoke to Pir-napistim, the Babylonian Noah-- + + "'Destroy the house, build a ship, + Leave what thou hast, see to thy life. + Destroy the hostile and save life. + Take up the seed of life, all of it, into the midst of the ship. + The ship which thou shalt make, even thou. + Let its size be measured; + Let it agree as to its height and its length.'" + +The description of the building of the ship seems to have been very +minute, but the record is mutilated, and what remains is difficult to +translate. As in the Priestly narrative, it is expressly mentioned that +it was "pitched within and without." + +The narrative proceeds in the words of Pir-napistim:-- + + "All I possessed, I collected it, + All I possessed I collected it, of silver; + All I possessed I collected it, of gold; + All I possessed I collected it, the seed of life, the whole. + I caused to go up into the midst of the ship, + All my family and relatives, + The beasts of the field, the animals of the field, the sons of the + artificers--all of them I sent up. + The God [vS]ama[vs] appointed the time-- + Muir Kukki--'In the night I will cause the heavens to rain + destruction, + Enter into the midst of the ship, and shut thy door.' + That time approached-- + Muir Kukki--In the night the heavens rained destruction + I saw the appearance of the day: + I was afraid to look upon the day-- + I entered into the midst of the ship, and shut my door + + * * * * * + + At the appearance of dawn in the morning, + There arose from the foundation of heaven a dark cloud: + + * * * * * + + The first day, the storm? . . . . + Swiftly it swept, and . . . . + Like a battle against the people it sought. + Brother saw not brother. + The people were not to be recognized. In heaven + The gods feared the flood, and + They fled, they ascended to the heaven of Anu. + The gods kenneled like dogs, crouched down in the enclosures. + + * * * * * + + The gods had crouched down, seated in lamentation, + Covered were their lips in the assemblies, + Six days and nights + The wind blew, the deluge and flood overwhelmed the land. + The seventh day, when it came, the storm ceased, the raging flood, + Which had contended like a whirlwind, + Quieted, the sea shrank back, and the evil wind and deluge ended. + I noticed the sea making a noise, + And all mankind had turned to corruption. + + * * * * * + + I noted the regions, the shore of the sea, + For twelve measures the region arose. + The ship had stopped at the land of Nisir. + The mountain of Nisir seized the ship, and would not let it pass. + The first day and the second day the mountains of Nisir seized the + ship, and would not let it pass. + + * * * * * + + The seventh day, when it came + I sent forth a dove, and it left; + The dove went, it turned about, + But there was no resting-place, and it returned. + I sent forth a swallow, and it left, + The swallow went, it turned about, + But there was no resting-place, and it returned. + I sent forth a raven, and it left, + The raven went, the rushing of the waters it saw, + It ate, it waded, it croaked, it did not return. + I sent forth (the animals) to the four winds, I poured out a + libation, + I made an offering on the peak of the mountain, + Seven and seven I set incense-vases there, + In their depths I poured cane, cedar, and rosewood (?). + The gods smelled a savour; + The gods smelled a sweet savour. + The gods gathered like flies over the sacrificer. + Then the goddess Sirtu, when she came, + Raised the great signets that Anu had made at her wish: + 'These gods--by the lapis-stone of my neck--let me not forget; + These days let me remember, nor forget them for ever! + Let the gods come to the sacrifice, + But let not Bel come to the sacrifice, + For he did not take counsel, and made a flood, + And consigned my people to destruction.' + Then Bel, when he came, + Saw the ship. And Bel stood still, + Filled with anger on account of the gods and the spirits of + heaven. + 'What, has a soul escaped? + Let not a man be saved from the destruction.' + Ninip opened his mouth and spake. + He said to the warrior Bel: + 'Who but Ae has done the thing? + And Ae knows every event.' + Ae opened his mouth and spake, + He said to the warrior Bel: + 'Thou sage of the gods, warrior, + Verily thou hast not taken counsel, and hast made a flood. + The sinner has committed his sin, + The evil-doer has committed his misdeed, + Be merciful--let him not be cut off--yield, let not perish. + Why hast thou made a flood? + Let the lion come, and let men diminish. + Why hast thou made a flood? + Let the hyena come, and let men diminish. + Why hast thou made a flood? + Let a famine happen, and let the land be (?) + Why hast thou made a flood? + Let Ura (pestilence) come, and let the land be (?)'"[176:1] + +Of the four records before us, we can only date one approximately. The +constellations, as we have already seen, were mapped out some time in +the third millennium before our era, probably not very far from 2700 +B.C. + +When was the Babylonian story written? Does it, itself, afford any +evidence of date? It occurs in the eleventh tablet of the _Epic of +Gilgamesh_, and the theory has been started that as Aquarius, a watery +constellation, is now the eleventh sign of the zodiac, therefore we have +in this epic of twelve tablets a series of solar myths founded upon the +twelve signs of the zodiac, the eleventh giving us a legend of a flood +to correspond to the stream of water which the man in Aquarius pours +from his pitcher. + +If this theory be accepted we can date the _Epic of Gilgamesh_ with much +certainty: it must be later, probably much later, than 700 B.C. For it +cannot have been till about that time that the present arrangement of +the zodiacal signs--that is to say with Aries as the first and Aquarius +as the eleventh--can have been adopted. We have then to allow for the +growth of a mythology with the twelve signs as its _motif_. Had this +supposed series of zodiacal myths originated before 700 B.C., before +Aries was adopted as the leading sign, then the Bull, Taurus, would have +given rise to the myth of the first tablet and Aquarius to the tenth, +not to the eleventh where we find the story of the flood. + +Assyriologists do not assign so late a date to this poem, and it must be +noted that the theory supposes, not merely that the tablet itself, but +that the poem and the series of myths upon which it was based, were all +later in conception than 700 B.C. One conclusive indication of its early +date is given by the position in the pantheon of Ae and Bel. Ae has not +receded into comparative insignificance, nor has Bel attained to that +full supremacy which, as Merodach, he possesses in the Babylonian +Creation story. We may therefore put on one side as an unsupported and +unfortunate guess the suggestion that the _Epic of Gilgamesh_ is the +setting forth of a series of zodiacal myths. + +Any legends, any mythology, any pantheon based upon the zodiac must +necessarily be more recent than the zodiac; any system involving Aries +as the first sign of the zodiac must be later than the adoption of Aries +as the first sign, that is to say, later than 700 B.C. Systems arising +before that date would inevitably be based upon Taurus as first +constellation. + +We cannot then, from astronomical relationships, fix the date of the +Babylonian story of the Flood. Is it possible, however, to form any +estimate of the comparative ages of the Babylonian legend and of the two +narratives given in Genesis, or of either of these two? Does the +Babylonian story connect itself with one of the Genesis narratives +rather than the other? + +The significant points in the Babylonian story are these:--the command +to Pir-napistim to build a ship, with detailed directions; the great +rise of the flood so that even the gods in the heaven of Anu feared it; +the detailed dating of the duration of the flood; the stranding of the +ship on the mountain of Nisir; the sending forth of the dove, the +swallow, and their return; the sending forth of the raven, and its +non-return; the sacrifice; the gods smelling its sweet savour; the vow +of remembrance of the goddess by the lapis-stone necklace; the +determination of the gods not to send a flood again upon the earth, +since sin is inevitable from the sinner. To all these points we find +parallels in the account as given in Genesis. + +But it is in the Priestly narrative that we find the directions for the +building of the ship; the great prevalence of the flood even to the +height of the mountains; the stranding of the ship on a mountain; and +the bow in the clouds as a covenant of remembrance--this last being +perhaps paralleled in the Babylonian story by the mottled +(blue-and-white) lapis necklace of the goddess which she swore by as a +remembrancer. There is therefore manifest connection with the narrative +told by the Priestly writer. + +But it is in the Jehovistic narrative, on the other hand, that we find +the sending forth of the raven, and its non-return; the sending forth of +the dove, and its return; the sacrifice, and the sweet savour that was +smelled of the Lord; and the determination of the Lord not to curse the +earth any more for man's sake, nor smite any more every living thing, +"for the imagination of man's heart is evil from his youth." There is, +therefore, no less manifest connection with the narrative told by the +Jehovistic writer. + +But the narrative told by the writer of the Babylonian story is one +single account; even if it were a combination of two separate +traditions, they have been so completely fused that they cannot now be +broken up so as to form two distinct narratives, each complete in +itself. + +"The whole story precisely as it was written down travelled to +Canaan,"--so we are told. And there,--we are asked to believe,--two +Hebrew writers of very different temperaments and schools of thought, +each independently worked up a complete story of the Deluge from this +Gilgamesh legend. They chose out different incidents, one selecting what +the other rejected, and _vice versa_, so that their two accounts were +"mutually contradictory." They agreed, however, in cleansing it from its +polytheistic setting, and giving it a strictly monotheistic tone. Later, +an "editor" put the two narratives together, with all their +inconsistencies and contradictions, and interlocked them into one, which +presents all the main features of the original Gilgamesh story except +its polytheism. In other words, two Hebrew scribes each told in his own +way a part of the account of the Deluge which he had derived from +Babylon, and a third unwittingly so recombined them as to make them +represent the Babylonian original! + +The two accounts of the Deluge, supposed to be present in Genesis, +therefore cannot be derived from the Gilgamesh epic, nor be later than +it, seeing that what is still plainly separable in Genesis is +inseparably fused in the epic. + +On the other hand, can the Babylonian narrative be later than, and +derived from, the Genesis account? Since so many of the same +circumstances are represented in both, this is a more reasonable +proposition, if we assume that the Babylonian narrator had the Genesis +account as it now stands, and did not have to combine two separate +statements. For surely if he had the separate Priestly and Jehovistic +narratives we should now be able to decompose the Babylonian narrative +just as easily as we do the one in Genesis. The Babylonian adapter of +the Genesis story must have either been less astute than ourselves, and +did not perceive that he had really two distinct (and "contradictory") +narratives to deal with, or he did not consider this circumstance of the +slightest importance, and had no objection to merging them inextricably +into one continuous account. + +It is therefore possible that the Babylonian account was derived from +that in Genesis; but it is not probable. The main circumstances are the +same in both, but the details, the presentment, the attitude of mind are +very different. We can better explain the agreement in the general +circumstances, and even in many of the details, by presuming that both +are accounts--genuine traditions--of the same actual occurrence. The +differences in detail, presentment, and attitude, are fully and +sufficiently explained by supposing that we have traditions from two, if +not three, witnesses of the event. + +We have also the pictorial representation of the Flood given us in the +constellations. What evidence do they supply? + +Here the significant points are: the ship grounded upon a high rock; the +raven above it, eating the flesh of a stretched-out reptile; a sacrifice +offered up by a person, who has issued forth from the ship, upon an +altar, whose smoke goes up in a cloud, in which a bow is set. + +In this grouping of pictures we have two characteristic features of the +Priestly narrative, in the ship grounded on a rock, and in the bow set +in the cloud; we have also two characteristic features of the Jehovistic +narrative, in the smoking altar of sacrifice, and in the carrion bird. +There is therefore manifest connection between the constellation +grouping and _both_ the narratives given in Genesis. + +But the constellational picture story is the only one of all these +narratives that we can date. It must have been designed--as we have +seen--about 2700 B.C. + +The question again comes up for answer. Were the Genesis and Babylonian +narratives, any or all of them, derived from the pictured story in the +constellations; or, on the other hand, was this derived from any or all +of them? + +The constellations were mapped out near the north latitude of 40 deg., far +to the north of Babylonia, so the pictured story cannot have come from +thence. We do not know where the Genesis narratives were written, but if +the Flood of the constellations was pictured from them, then they must +have been already united into the account that is now presented to us in +Genesis, very early in the third millennium before Christ. + +Could the account in Genesis have been derived from the constellations? +If it is a double account, most decidedly not; since the pictured story +in the constellations is one, and presents impartially the +characteristic features of _both_ the narratives. + +And (as in comparing the Genesis and the Babylonian narratives) we see +that though the main circumstances are the same--in so far as they lend +themselves to pictorial representations--the details, the presentment, +the attitude are different. In the Genesis narrative, the bow set in the +cloud is a rainbow in a cloud of rain; in the constellation picture, the +bow set in the cloud is the bow of an archer, and the cloud is the +pillar of smoke from off the altar of sacrifice. In the narratives of +Genesis and Babylonia, Noah and Pir-napistim are men: no hint is given +anywhere that by their physical form or constitution they were marked +off from other men; in the storied picture, he who issues from the ship +is a centaur: his upper part is the head and body of a man, his lower +part is the body of a horse. + +As before, there is no doubt that we can best explain the agreement in +circumstance of all the narratives by presuming that they are +independent accounts of the same historical occurrence. We can, at the +same time, explain the differences in style and detail between the +narratives by presuming that the originals were by men of different +qualities of mind who each wrote as the occurrence most appealed to him. +The Babylonian narrator laid hold of the promise that, though beast, or +famine, or pestilence might diminish men, a flood should not again sweep +away every living thing, and connected the promise with the signets--the +lapis necklace of the goddess Sirtu that she touched as a remembrancer. +The picturer of the constellations saw the pledge in the smoke of the +sacrifice, in the spirit of the words of the Lord as given by Asaph, +"Gather My saints together unto me; those that have made a covenant with +Me by sacrifice." The writer in Genesis saw the promise in the +rain-cloud, for the rainbow can only appear with the shining of the sun. +The writer in Genesis saw in Noah a righteous man, worthy to escape the +flood of desolation that swept away the wickedness around; there is no +explanation apparent, at least on the surface, as to why the designer of +the constellations made him, who issued from the ship and offered the +sacrifice, a centaur--one who partook of two natures. + +The comparison of the Deluge narratives from Genesis, from the +constellations, and from Babylonia, presents a clear issue. If all the +accounts are independent, and if there are two accounts intermingled +into one in Genesis, then the chief facts presented in both parts of +that dual narrative must have been so intermingled at an earlier date +than 2700 B.C. The editor who first united the two stories into one must +have done his work before that date. + +But if the accounts are not independent histories, and the narrative as +we have it in Genesis is derived either in whole or in part from +Babylonia or from the constellations--if, in short, the Genesis story +came from a Babylonian or a stellar myth--then we cannot escape from +this conclusion: that the narrative in Genesis is not, and never has +been, two separable portions; that the scholars who have so divided it +have been entirely in error. But we cannot so lightly put on one side +the whole of the results which the learning and research of so many +scholars have given us in the last century-and-a-half. We must therefore +unhesitatingly reject the theory that the Genesis Deluge story owes +anything either to star myth or to Babylonian mythology. And if the +Genesis Deluge story is not so derived, certainly no other portion of +Holy Scripture. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[171:1] _Babel and Bible_, Johns' translation, pp. 42-46. + +[176:1] T. G. Pinches, _The Old Testament in the Light of the Historical +Records of Assyria and Babylonia_, pp. 102-107. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +THE TRIBES OF ISRAEL AND THE ZODIAC + + +The earliest reference in Scripture to the constellations of the zodiac +occurs in the course of the history of Joseph. In relating his second +dream to his brethren he said-- + + "Behold, I have dreamed a dream more; and, behold, the sun and + the moon, and the eleven stars made obeisance to me." + +The word "_Kochab_" in the Hebrew means both "star" and "constellation." +The significance, therefore, of the reference to the "eleven stars" is +clear. Just as Joseph's eleven brethren were eleven out of the twelve +sons of Jacob, so Joseph saw eleven constellations out of the twelve +come and bow down to him. And the twelve constellations can only mean +the twelve of the zodiac. + +There can be no reasonable doubt that the zodiac in question was +practically the same as we have now, the one transmitted to us through +Aratus and Ptolemy. It had been designed quite a thousand years earlier +than the days of Joseph; it was known in Mesopotamia from whence his +ancestors had come; it was known in Egypt; that is to say it was known +on both sides of Canaan. There have been other zodiacs: thus the +Chinese have one of their own: but we have no evidence of any zodiac, +except the one transmitted to us by the Greeks, as having been at any +time adopted in Canaan or the neighbouring countries. + +There is no need to suppose that each of the brethren had a zodiacal +figure already assigned to him as a kind of armorial bearing or device. +The dream was appropriate, and perfectly intelligible to Jacob, to +Joseph, and his brethren, without supposing that any such arrangement +had then been made. It is quite true that there are Jewish traditions +assigning a constellation to each of the tribes of Israel, but it does +not appear that any such traditions can be distinctly traced to a great +antiquity, and they are mostly somewhat indefinite. Josephus, for +instance, makes a vague assertion about the twelve precious stones of +the High Priest's breast-plate, each of which bore the name of one of +the tribes, connecting them with the signs of the zodiac:-- + + "Now the names of all those sons of Jacob were engraven in + these stones, whom we esteem the heads of our tribes, each + stone having the honour of a name, in the order according to + which they were born. . . . And for the twelve stones whether + we understand by them the months, or whether we understand the + like number of the signs of that circle which the Greeks call + the Zodiac, we shall not be mistaken in their meaning."[187:1] + +But whilst there is no sufficient evidence that each of the sons of +Jacob had a zodiacal figure for his coat-of-arms, nor even that the +tribes deriving their names from them were so furnished, there is +strong and harmonious tradition as to the character of the devices borne +on the standards carried by the four divisions of the host in the march +through the wilderness. The four divisions, or camps, each contained +three tribes, and were known by the name of the principal tribe in each. +The camp of Judah was on the east, and the division of Judah led on the +march. The camp of Reuben was on the south. The camp of Ephraim was on +the west. The camp of Dan was on the north, and the division of Dan +brought up the rear. And the traditional devices shown on the four +standards were these:--For Judah, a lion; for Reuben, a man and a river; +for Ephraim, a bull; for Dan, an eagle and a serpent. + +In these four standards we cannot fail to see again the four cherubic +forms of lion, man, ox and eagle; but in two cases an addition was made +to the cherubic form, an addition recalling the constellation figure. +For just as the crest of Reuben was not a man only, but a man and a +river, so Aquarius is not a man only, but a man pouring out a stream of +water. And as the crest of Dan was not an eagle only, but an eagle and a +serpent, so the great group of constellations, clustering round the +autumnal equinox, included not only the Eagle, but also the Scorpion and +the Serpent (_see_ diagram, p. 189). + +There appears to be an obvious connection between these devices and the +blessings pronounced by Jacob upon his sons, and by Moses upon the +tribes; indeed, it would seem probable that it was the former that +largely determined the choice of the devices adopted by the four great +divisions of the host in the wilderness. + +The blessing pronounced by Jacob on Judah runs, "Judah is a lion's +whelp: from the prey, my son, thou art gone up: he stooped down, he +couched as a lion, and as an old lion; who shall rouse him up?" "The +Lion of the tribe of Judah" is the title given to our Lord Himself in +the Apocalypse of St. John. + +[Illustration: OPHIUCHUS AND THE NEIGHBOURING CONSTELLATIONS.] + +The blessing pronounced upon Joseph by Moses bears as emphatic a +reference to the bull. "The firstling of his bullock, majesty is his; +and his horns are the horns of the wild-ox." + +Jacob's blessing upon Joseph does not show any reference to the ox or +bull in our Authorized Version. But in our Revised Version Jacob says of +Simeon and Levi-- + + "In their anger they slew a man, + And in their self-will they houghed an ox." + +The first line appears to refer to the massacre of the Shechemites; the +second is interpreted by the Jerusalem Targum, "In their wilfulness they +sold Joseph their brother, who is likened to an ox." And in the blessing +of Joseph it is said that his "branches (_margin_, daughters), run over +the wall." Some translators have rendered this, "The daughters walk upon +the bull," "wall" and "bull" being only distinguishable in the original +by a slight difference in the pointing. + +Of Reuben, his father said, "Unstable as water, thou shalt not excel;" +and of Dan, "Dan shall be a serpent by the way, an adder in the path, +that biteth the horse heels, so that his rider shall fall backward." + +These two last prophecies supply the "water" and the "serpent," which, +added to the "man" and "eagle" of the cherubic forms, are needed to +complete the traditional standards, and are needed also to make them +conform more closely to the constellation figures. + +No such correspondence can be traced between the eight remaining tribes +and the eight remaining constellations. Different writers combine them +in different ways, and the allusions to constellation figures in the +blessings of those tribes are in most cases very doubtful and obscure, +even if it can be supposed that any such allusions are present at all. +The connection cannot be pushed safely beyond the four chief tribes, and +the four cherubic forms as represented in the constellations of the four +quarters of the sky. + +These four standards, or rather, three of them, meet us again in a very +interesting connection. When Israel reached the borders of Moab, Balak, +the king of Moab, sent for a seer of great reputation, Balaam, the son +of Beor, to "Come, curse me Jacob, and come, defy Israel." Balaam came, +but instead of cursing Jacob, blessed the people in four prophecies, +wherein he made, what would appear to be, distinct references to the +standards of Judah, Joseph and Reuben. + + "Behold the people riseth up as a lioness, + And as a lion doth he lift himself up." + +Then again-- + + "He couched, he lay down as a lion, + And as a lioness; who shall rouse him up?" + +And in two passages-- + + "God bringeth him forth out of Egypt; + He hath as it were the strength of the wild ox." + +The wild ox and lion are obvious similes to use concerning a powerful +and warlike people. These two similes are, therefore, not sufficient by +themselves to prove that the tribal standards are being referred to. But +the otherwise enigmatical verse-- + + "Water shall flow from his buckets," + +appears more expressly as an allusion to the standard of Reuben, the +"man with the river," Aquarius pouring water from his pitcher; and if +one be a reference to a standard, the others may also well be. + +[Illustration: AQUARIUS AND THE NEIGHBOURING CONSTELLATIONS.] + +It is surely something more than coincidence that Joseph, who by his +father's favour and his own merit was made the leader of the twelve +brethren, should be associated with the bull or wild ox, seeing that +Taurus was the leader of the zodiac in those ages. It may also well be +more than coincidence, that when Moses was in the mount and "the people +gathered themselves unto Aaron, and said unto him, Up, make us gods, +which shall go before us; for as for this Moses, the man that brought us +up out of the land of Egypt, we wot not what is become of him," Aaron +fashioned the golden earrings given him into the form of a molten calf; +into the similitude, that is to say, of Taurus, then Prince of the +Zodiac. If we turn to St. Stephen's reference to this occurrence, we +find that he says-- + + "And they made a calf in those days, and offered sacrifice + unto the idol, and rejoiced in the works of their own hands. + Then God turned, and gave them up to worship the host of + heaven." + +In other words, their worship of the golden calf was star worship. + +It has been often pointed out that this sin of the Israelites, deep as +it was, was not in itself a breach of the first commandment-- + + "Thou shalt have no other gods before me." + +It was a breach of the second-- + + "Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any + likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in + the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth: + thou shalt not bow down thyself to them nor serve them." + +The Israelites did not conceive that they were abandoning the worship of +Jehovah; they still considered themselves as worshipping the one true +God. They were monotheists still, not polytheists. But they had taken +the first false step that inevitably leads to polytheism; they had +forgotten that they had seen "no manner of similitude on the day that +the Lord spake unto" them "in Horeb out of the midst of the fire," and +they had worshipped this golden calf as the similitude of God; they had +"changed their glory into the similitude of an ox that eateth grass." +And that was treason against Him; therefore St. Stephen said, "God +turned, and gave them up to worship the host of heaven;" the one sin +inevitably led to the other, indeed, involved it. In a later day, when +Jeroboam, who had been appointed by Solomon ruler over all the charge of +the house of Joseph, led the rebellion of the ten tribes against +Rehoboam, king of Judah, he set up golden calves at Dan and Bethel, and +said unto his people, "It is too much for you to go up to Jerusalem: +behold thy gods, O Israel, which brought thee up out of the land of +Egypt." There can be little doubt that, in this case, Jeroboam was not +so much recalling the transgression in the wilderness--it was not an +encouraging precedent--as he was adopting the well-known cognizance of +the tribe of Joseph, that is to say, of the two tribes of Ephraim and +Manasseh, which together made up the more important part of his kingdom, +as the symbol of the presence of Jehovah. + +The southern kingdom would naturally adopt the device of its predominant +tribe, Judah, and it was as the undoubted cognizance of the kingdom of +Judah that our Richard I., the Crusader, placed the Lion on his shield. + +More definitely still, we find this one of the cherubic forms applied +to set forth Christ Himself, as "The Root of David," Prince of the house +of Judah-- + + "Behold, the Lion of the tribe of Juda, the Root of David, + hath prevailed to open the book, and to loose the seven seals + thereof." + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[187:1] Josephus, _Antiquities of the Jews_, III. vii. 5-7. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +LEVIATHAN + + +There are amongst the constellations four great draconic or serpent-like +forms. Chief of these is the great dragon coiled round the pole of the +ecliptic and the pole of the equator as the latter was observed some +4600 years ago. This is the dragon with which the Kneeler, _Hercules_, +is fighting, and whose head he presses down with his foot. The second is +the great watersnake, _Hydra_, which 4600 years ago stretched for 105 deg. +along the celestial equator of that day. Its head was directed towards +the ascending node, that is to say the point where the ecliptic, the +sun's apparent path, crosses the equator at the spring equinox; and its +tail stretched nearly to the descending node, the point where the +ecliptic again meets the equator at the autumn equinox. The third was +the Serpent, the one held in the grip of the Serpent-holder. Its head +erected itself just above the autumn equinox, and reached up as far as +the zenith; its tail lay along the equator. The fourth of these draconic +forms was the great Sea-monster, stretched out along the horizon, with a +double river--_Eridanus_--proceeding from it, just below the spring +equinox. + +[Illustration: HERCULES AND DRACO.] + +None of these four figures was suggested by the natural grouping of the +stars. Very few of the constellation-figures were so suggested, and +these four in particular, as so high an authority as Prof. Schiaparelli +expressly points out, were not amongst that few. Their positions show +that they were designed some 4600 years ago, and that they have not been +materially altered down to the present time. Though no forms or +semblances of forms are there in the heavens, yet we still seem to see, +as we look upwards, not merely the stars themselves, but the same snakes +and dragons, first imagined so many ages ago as coiling amongst them. + +The tradition of these serpentine forms and of their peculiar placing in +the heavens was current among the Babylonians quite 1500 years after the +constellations were devised. For the little "boundary stones" often +display, amongst many other astronomical symbols, the coiled dragon +round the top of the stone, the extended snake at its base (_see_ p. +318), and at one or other corner the serpent bent into a right angle +like that borne by the Serpent-holder--that is to say, the three out of +the four serpentine forms that hold astronomically important positions +in the sky. + +The positions held by these three serpents or dragons have given rise to +a significant set of astronomical terms. The Dragon marked the poles of +both ecliptic and equator; the Watersnake marked the equator almost from +node to node; the Serpent marked the equator at one of the nodes. The +"Dragon's Head" and the "Dragon's Tail" therefore have been taken as +astronomical symbols of the ascending and descending nodes of the sun's +apparent path--the points where he seems to ascend above the equator in +the spring, and to descend below it again in the autumn. + +The moon's orbit likewise intersects the apparent path of the sun in two +points, its two nodes; and the interval of time between its passage +through one of these nodes and its return to that same node again is +called a Draconic month, a month of the Dragon. The same symbols are +applied by analogy to the moon's nodes. + +Indeed the "Dragon's Head," [symbol], is the general sign for the +ascending node of any orbit, whether of moon, planet or comet, and the +"Dragon's Tail," [symbol], for the descending node. We not only use +these signs in astronomical works to-day, but the latter sign frequently +occurs, figured exactly as we figure it now, on Babylonian boundary +stones 3000 years old. + +But an eclipse either of the sun or of the moon can only take place when +the latter is near one of its two nodes--is in the "Dragon's Head" or in +the "Dragon's Tail." This relation might be briefly expressed by saying +that the Dragon--that is of the nodes--causes the eclipse. Hence the +numerous myths, found in so many nations, which relate how "a dragon +devours the sun (or moon)" at the time of an eclipse. + +[Illustration: HYDRA AND THE NEIGHBOURING CONSTELLATIONS.] + +The dragon of eclipse finds its way into Hindoo mythology in a form +which shows clearly that the myth arose from a misunderstanding of the +constellations. The equatorial Water-snake, stretching from one node +nearly to the other, has resting upon it, _Crater_, the Cup. Combining +this with the expression for the two nodes, the Hindu myth has taken +the following form. The gods churned the surface of the sea to make the +Amrita Cup, the cup of the water of life. "And while the gods were +drinking that nectar after which they had so much hankered, a Danava, +named Rahu, was drinking it in the guise of a god. And when the nectar +had only reached Rahu's throat, the sun and the moon discovered him, and +communicated the fact to the gods." Rahu's head was at once cut off, +but, as the nectar had reached thus far, it was immortal, and rose to +the sky. "From that time hath arisen a long-standing quarrel between +Rahu's head and the sun and moon," and the head swallows them from time +to time, causing eclipses. Rahu's head marks the ascending, Ketu, the +tail, the descending node. + +This myth is very instructive. Before it could have arisen, not only +must the constellations have been mapped out, and the equator and +ecliptic both recognized, but the inclination of the moon's orbit to +that of the sun must also have been recognized, together with the fact +that it was only when the moon was near its node that the eclipses, +either of the sun or moon, could take place. In other words, the cause +of eclipses must have been at one time understood, but that knowledge +must have been afterwards lost. We have seen already, in the chapter on +"The Deep," that the Hebrew idea of _teh[=o]m_ could not possibly have +been derived from the Babylonian myth of _Tiamat_, since the knowledge +of the natural object must precede the myth founded upon it. If, +therefore, Gen. i. and the Babylonian story of Creation be connected, +the one as original, the other as derived from that original, it is the +Babylonian story that has been borrowed from the Hebrew, and it has +been degraded in the borrowing. + +So in this case, the myth of the Dragon, whose head and tail cause +eclipses, must have been derived from a corruption and misunderstanding +of a very early astronomical achievement. The myth is evidence of +knowledge lost, of science on the down-grade. + +Some may object that the myth may have brought about the conception of +the draconic constellations. A very little reflection will show that +such a thing was impossible. If the superstition that an eclipse is +caused by an invisible dragon swallowing the sun or moon had really been +the origin of the constellational dragons, they would certainly have all +been put in the zodiac, the only region of the sky where sun or moon can +be found; not outside it, where neither can ever come, and in +consequence where no eclipse can take place. Nor could such a +superstition have led on to the discoveries above-mentioned: that the +moon caused eclipses of the sun, the earth those of the moon; that the +moon's orbit was inclined to the ecliptic, and that eclipses took place +only near the nodes. The idea of an unseen spiritual agent being at work +would prevent any search for a physical explanation, since polytheism is +necessarily opposed to science. + +There is a word used in Scripture to denote a reptilian monster, which +appears in one instance at least to refer to this dragon of eclipse, and +so to be used in an astronomical sense. Job, in his first outburst of +grief cursed the day in which he was born, and cried-- + + "Let them curse it that curse the day, + Who are ready (_margin_, skilful) to rouse up Leviathan. + Let the stars of the twilight thereof be dark + Let it look for light, but have none; + Neither let it behold the eyelids of the morning." + +"_Leviathan_" denotes an animal wreathed, gathering itself in coils: +hence a serpent, or some great reptile. The description in Job xli. is +evidently that of a mighty crocodile, though in Psalm civ. leviathan is +said to play in "the great and wide sea," which has raised a difficulty +as to its identification in the minds of some commentators. In the +present passage it is supposed to mean one of the stellar dragons, and +hence the mythical dragon of eclipse. Job desired that the day of his +birth should have been cursed by the magicians, so that it had been a +day of complete and entire eclipse, not even the stars that preceded its +dawn being allowed to shine. + +The astronomical use of the word _leviathan_ here renders it possible +that there may be in Isa. xxvii. an allusion--quite secondary and +indirect however--to the chief stellar dragons. + + "In that day the Lord with His sore and great and strong sword + shall punish leviathan the piercing serpent, even leviathan + that crooked serpent; and He shall slay the dragon that is in + the sea." + +The marginal reading gives us instead of "piercing," "crossing like a +bar"; a most descriptive epithet for the long-drawn-out constellation of +_Hydra_, the Water-snake, which stretched itself for one hundred and +five degrees along the primitive equator, and "crossed" the meridian +"like a bar" for seven hours out of every twenty-four. "The crooked +serpent" would denote the dragon coiled around the poles, whilst "the +dragon which is in the sea" would naturally refer to _Cetus_, the +Sea-monster. The prophecy would mean then, that "in that day" the Lord +will destroy all the powers of evil which have, as it were, laid hold of +the chief places, even in the heavens. + +In one passage "the crooked serpent," here used as a synonym of +_leviathan_, distinctly points to the dragon of the constellations. In +Job's last answer to Bildad the Shuhite, he says-- + + "He divideth the sea with His power, + And by His understanding He smiteth through the proud. (R.V. + _Rahab_.) + By His spirit He hath garnished the heavens; + His hand hath formed the crooked serpent." + +The passage gives a good example of the parallelism of Hebrew poetry; +the repetition of the several terms of a statement, term by term, in a +slightly modified sense; a rhyme, if the expression may be used, not of +sound, but of signification. + +Thus in the four verses just quoted, we have three terms in each--agent, +action, object;--each appears in the first statement, each appears +likewise in the second. The third statement, in like manner, has its +three terms repeated in a varied form in the fourth. + +Thus-- + + His power = His understanding. + Divideth = Smiteth through. + The sea = _Rahab_ (the proud). + +And-- + + His spirit = His hand. + Hath garnished = Hath formed. + The heavens = The crooked serpent. + +There can be no doubt as to the significance of the two parallels. In +the first, dividing the sea, _i. e._ the Red Sea, is the correlative of +smiting through _Rahab_, "the proud one," the name often applied to +Egypt, as in Isa. xxx. 7: "For Egypt helpeth in vain, and to no purpose: +therefore have I called her Rahab that sitteth still." In the second, +"adorning the heavens" is the correlative of "forming the crooked +serpent." The great constellation of the writhing dragon, emphatically a +"crooked serpent," placed at the very crown of the heavens, is set for +all the constellations of the sky. + +There are several references to _Rahab_, as "the dragon which is in the +sea," all clearly referring to the kingdom of Egypt, personified as one +of her own crocodiles lying-in-wait in her own river, the Nile, or +transferred, by a figure of speech, to the Red Sea, which formed her +eastern border. Thus in chapter li. Isaiah apostrophizes "the arm of the +Lord." + + "Art Thou not It that cut Rahab in pieces, + That pierced the dragon? + Art Thou not It that dried up the sea, + The waters of the great deep; + That made the depths of the sea a way for the redeemed to pass + over?" + +And in Psalm lxxxix. we have-- + + "Thou rulest the raging of the sea; + When the waves thereof arise Thou stillest them. + Thou hast broken Rahab in pieces as one that is slain, + Thou hast scattered Thine enemies with Thy strong arm." + +So the prophet Ezekiel is directed-- + + "Son of man, take up a lamentation for Pharaoh, king of Egypt, + and say unto him, thou wast likened unto a young lion of the + nations: yet art thou as a dragon in the seas." + +In all these passages it is only in an indirect and secondary sense that +we can see any constellational references in the various descriptions of +"the dragon that is in the sea." It is the crocodile of Egypt that is +intended; Egypt the great oppressor of Israel, and one of the great +powers of evil, standing as a representative of them all. The serpent or +dragon forms in the constellations also represented the powers of evil; +especially the great enemy of God and man, "the dragon, that old +serpent, which is the Devil, and Satan." So there is some amount of +appropriateness to the watery dragons of the sky--_Hydra_ and +_Cetus_--in these descriptions of _Rahab_, the dragon of Egypt, without +there being any direct reference. Thus it is said of the Egyptian +"dragon in the seas," "I have given thee for meat to the beasts of the +earth, and to the fowls of the heaven;" and again, "I will cause all the +fowls of the heaven to settle upon thee," just as _Corvus_, the Raven, +is shown as having settled upon _Hydra_, the Water-snake, and is +devouring its flesh. Again, Pharaoh, the Egyptian dragon, says, "My +river is mine own, and I have made it for myself;" just as _Cetus_, the +Sea-monster, is represented as pouring forth _Eridanus_, the river, from +its mouth. + +[Illustration: ANDROMEDA AND CETUS.] + +But a clear and direct allusion to this last grouping of the +constellations occurs in the Apocalypse. In the twelfth chapter, the +proud oppressor dragon from the sea is shown us again with much fulness +of detail. There the Apostle describes his vision of a woman, who +evidently represents the people of God, being persecuted by a dragon. +There is still a reminiscence of the deliverance of Israel in the Exodus +from Egypt, for "the woman _fled into the wilderness_, where she hath a +place prepared of God, that there they may nourish her a thousand two +hundred and threescore days." And the vision goes on:-- + + "And the serpent cast out of his mouth, after the woman water + as a river, that he might cause her to be carried away by the + stream. And the earth helped the woman, and the earth opened + her mouth, and swallowed up the river which the dragon cast + out of his mouth." + +This appears to be precisely the action which is presented to us in the +three constellations of _Andromeda_, _Cetus_, and _Eridanus_. Andromeda +is always shown as a woman in distress, and the Sea-monster, though +placed far from her in the sky, has always been understood to be her +persecutor. Thus Aratus writes-- + + "Andromeda, though far away she flies, + Dreads the Sea-monster, low in southern skies." + +The latter, baffled in his pursuit of his victim, has cast the river, +_Eridanus_, out of his mouth, which, flowing down below the southern +horizon, is apparently swallowed up by the earth. + +It need occasion no surprise that we should find imagery used by St. +John in his prophecy already set forth in the constellations nearly +3,000 years before he wrote. Just as, in this same book, St. John +repeated Daniel's vision of the fourth beast, and Ezekiel's vision of +the living creatures, as he used the well-known details of the Jewish +Temple, the candlesticks, the laver, the altar of incense, so he used a +group of stellar figures perfectly well known at the time when he wrote. +In so doing the beloved disciple only followed the example which his +Master had already set him. For the imagery in the parables of our Lord +is always drawn from scenes and objects known and familiar to all men. + +In two instances in which _leviathan_ is mentioned, a further expression +is used which has a distinct astronomical bearing. In the passage +already quoted, where Job curses the day of his birth, he desires that +it may not "behold the eyelids of the morning." And in the grand +description of _leviathan_, the crocodile, in chapter xli., we have-- + + "His neesings flash forth light, + And his eyes are like the eyelids of the morning." + +Canon Driver considers this as an "allusion, probably to the reddish +eyes of the crocodile, which are said to appear gleaming through the +water before the head comes to the surface." This is because of the +position of the eyes on the animal's head, not because they have any +peculiar brilliancy. + + "It is an idea exclusively Egyptian, and is another link in + the chain of evidence which connects the author of the poem + with Egypt. The crocodile's head is so formed that its highest + points are the eyes; and when it rises obliquely to the + surface the eyes are the first part of the whole animal to + emerge. The Egyptians observing this, compared it to the sun + rising out of the sea, and made it the hieroglyphic + representative of the idea of sunrise. Thus Horus Apollo says: + When the Egyptians represent the sunrise, they paint the eye + of the crocodile, because it is first seen as that animal + emerges from the water."[209:1] + +In this likening of the eyes of the crocodile to the eyelids of the +morning, we have the comparison of one natural object with another. Such +comparison, when used in one way and for one purpose, is the essence of +poetry; when used in another way and for another purpose, is the essence +of science. Both poetry and science are opposed to myth, which is the +confusion of natural with imaginary objects, the mistaking the one for +the other. + +Thus it is poetry when the Psalmist speaks of the sun "as a bridegroom +coming out of his chamber"; for there is no confusion in his thought +between the two natural objects. The sun is like the bridegroom in the +glory of his appearance. The Psalmist does not ascribe to him a bride +and children. + +It is science when the astronomer compares the spectrum of the sun with +the spectra of various metals in the laboratory. He is comparing natural +object with natural object, and is enabled to draw conclusions as to the +elements composing the sun, and the condition in which they there exist. + +But it is myth when the Babylonian represents Bel or Merodach as the +solar deity, destroying Tiamat, the dragon of darkness, for there is +confusion in the thought. The imaginary god is sometimes given solar, +sometimes human, sometimes superhuman characteristics. There is no +actuality in much of what is asserted as to the sun or as to the wholly +imaginary being associated with it. The mocking words of Elijah to the +priests of Baal were justified by the intellectual confusion of their +ideas, as well as by the spiritual degradation of their idolatry. + + "Cry aloud: for he is a god; either he is talking, or he is + pursuing, or he is in a journey, or peradventure he sleepeth, + and must be awakened." + +Such nature-myths are not indications of the healthy mental development +of a primitive people; they are the clear signs of a pathological +condition, the symptoms of intellectual disease. + +It is well to bear in mind this distinction, this opposition between +poetry and myth, for ignoring it has led to not a little misconception +as to the occurrence of myth in Scripture, especially in connection with +the names associated with the crocodile. Thus it has been broadly +asserted that "the original mythical signification of the monsters +_tehom_, _livy[=a]th[=a]n_, _tannim_, _rahab_, is unmistakably evident." + +Of these names the first signifies the world of waters; the second and +third real aquatic animals; and the last, "the proud one," is simply an +epithet of Egypt, applied to the crocodile as the representation of the +kingdom. There is no more myth in setting forth Egypt by the crocodile +or leviathan than in setting forth Great Britain by the lion, or Russia +by the bear. + +The Hebrews in setting forth their enemies by crocodile and other +ferocious reptiles were not describing any imaginary monsters of the +primaeval chaos, but real oppressors. The Egyptian, with his "house of +bondage," the Assyrian, "which smote with a rod," the Chaldean who made +havoc of Israel altogether, were not dreams. And in beseeching God to +deliver them from their latest oppressor the Hebrews naturally recalled, +not some idle tale of the fabulous achievements of Babylonian deities, +but the actual deliverance God had wrought for them at the Red Sea. +There the Egyptian crocodile had been made "meat to the people +inhabiting the wilderness" when the corpses of Pharaoh's bodyguard, cast +up on the shore, supplied the children of Israel with the weapons and +armour of which they stood in need. So in the day of their utter +distress they could still cry in faith and hope-- + + "Yet God is my King of old, + Working salvation in the midst of the earth. + Thou didst divide the sea by Thy strength: + Thou brakest the heads of the dragons in the waters. + Thou brakest the heads of leviathan in pieces, + And gavest him to be meat to the people inhabiting the wilderness. + Thou didst cleave the fountain and the flood: + Thou driedst up mighty rivers. + The day is Thine, the night also is Thine: + Thou hast prepared the light and the sun. + Thou hast set all the borders of the earth: + Thou hast made summer and winter." + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[209:1] P. H. Gosse, in the _Imperial Bible-Dictionary_. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +THE PLEIADES + + +The translators of the Bible, from time to time, find themselves in a +difficulty as to the correct rendering of certain words in the original. +This is especially the case with the names of plants and animals. Some +sort of clue may be given by the context, as, for instance, if the +region is mentioned in which a certain plant is found, or the use that +is made of it; or, in the case of an animal, whether it is "clean" or +"unclean," what are its habits, and with what other animals it is +associated. But in the case of the few Scripture references to special +groups of stars, we have no such help. We are in the position in which +Macaulay's New Zealander might be, if, long after the English nation had +been dispersed, and its language had ceased to be spoken amongst men, he +were to find a book in which the rivers "Thames," "Trent," "Tyne," and +"Tweed" were mentioned by name, but without the slightest indication of +their locality. His attempt to fit these names to particular rivers +would be little more than a guess--a guess the accuracy of which he +would have no means for testing. + +This is somewhat our position with regard to the four Hebrew names, +_K[=i]mah_, _K[)e]s[=i]l_, _`Ayish_, and _Mazzaroth_; yet in each case +there are some slight indications which have given a clue to the +compilers of our Revised Version, and have, in all probability, guided +them correctly. + +The constellations are not all equally attractive. A few have drawn the +attention of all men, however otherwise inattentive. North-American +Indians and Australian savages have equally noted the flashing +brilliancy of Orion, and the compact little swarm of the Pleiades. All +northern nations recognize the seven bright stars of the Great Bear, and +they are known by a score of familiar names. They are the "Plough," or +"Charles's Wain" of Northern Europe; the "Seven Plough Oxen" of ancient +Rome; the "Bier and Mourners" of the Arabs; the "Chariot," or "Waggon," +of the old Chaldeans; the "Big Dipper" of the prosaic New England +farmer. These three groups are just the three which we find mentioned in +the earliest poetry of Greece. So Homer writes, in the Fifth Book of the +_Odyssey_, that Ulysses-- + + "There view'd the Pleiads, and the Northern Team, + And Great Orion's more refulgent beam, + To which, around the axle of the sky, + The Bear, revolving, points his golden eye." + +It seems natural to conclude that these constellations, the most +striking, or at all events the most universally recognized, would be +those mentioned in the Bible. + +The passages in which the Hebrew word _K[=i]mah_, is used are the +following-- + + (God) "maketh Arcturus, Orion, and Pleiades (_K[=i]mah_), and + the chambers of the south" (Job ix. 9). + + "Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades + (_K[=i]mah_), or loose the bands of Orion?" (Job xxxviii. 31). + + "Seek Him that maketh the seven stars (_K[=i]mah_) and Orion" + (Amos v. 8). + +In our Revised Version, _K[=i]mah_ is rendered "Pleiades" in all three +instances, and of course the translators of the Authorized Version meant +the same group by the "seven stars" in their free rendering of the +passage from Amos. The word _k[=i]mah_ signifies "a heap," or "a +cluster," and would seem to be related to the Assyrian word _kimtu_, +"family," from a root meaning to "tie," or "bind"; a family being a +number of persons bound together by the very closest tie of +relationship. If this be so we can have no doubt that our translators +have rightly rendered the word. There is one cluster in the sky, and one +alone, which appeals to the unaided sight as being distinctly and +unmistakably a family of stars--the Pleiades. + +The names _`Ash_, or _`Ayish_, _K[)e]s[=i]l_, and _K[=i]mah_ are +peculiar to the Hebrews, and are not, so far as we have any evidence at +present, allied to names in use for any constellation amongst the +Babylonians and Assyrians; they have, as yet, not been found on any +cuneiform inscription. Amos, the herdsman of Tekoa, living in the eighth +century B.C., two centuries before the Jews were carried into exile to +Babylon, evidently knew well what the terms signified, and the writer of +the Book of Job was no less aware of their signification. But the +"Seventy," who translated the Hebrew Scriptures into Greek, were not at +all clear as to the identification of these names of constellations; +though they made their translation only two or three centuries after the +Jews returned to Jerusalem under Ezra and Nehemiah, when oral tradition +should have still supplied the meaning of such astronomical terms. Had +these names been then known in Babylon, they could not have been unknown +to the learned men of Alexandria in the second century before our era, +since at that time there was a very direct scientific influence of the +one city upon the other. This Hebrew astronomy was so far from being due +to Babylonian influence and teaching, that, though known centuries +before the exile, after the exile we find the knowledge of its technical +terms was lost. On the other hand, _k[=i]ma_ was the term used in all +Syriac literature to denominate the Pleiades, and we accordingly find in +the Peschitta, the ancient Syriac version of the Bible, made about the +second century A.D., the term _k[=i]ma_ retained throughout, but _kesil_ +and _`ayish_ were reduced to their supposed Syriac equivalents. + +Whatever uncertainty was felt as to the meaning of _k[=i]mah_ by the +early translators, it is not now seriously disputed that the Pleiades is +the group of stars in question. + +The word _k[=i]mah_ means, as we have seen, "cluster" or "heap," so also +the word _Pleiades_, which we use to-day, is probably derived from the +Greek _Pleiones_, "many." Several Greek poets--Athenaeus, Hesiod, Pindar, +and Simonides--wrote the word _Peleiades_, i. e. "rock pigeons," +considered as flying from the Hunter Orion; others made them the seven +doves who carried ambrosia to the infant Zeus. D'Arcy Thompson says, +"The Pleiad is in many languages associated with bird-names, . . . and I +am inclined to take the bird on the bull's back in coins of Eretria, +Dicaea, and Thurii for the associated constellation of the +Pleiad"[217:1]--the Pleiades being situated on the shoulder of Taurus +the Bull. + +The Hyades were situated on the head of the Bull, and in the Euphrates +region these two little groups of stars were termed together, +_Mas-tab-ba-gal-gal-la_, the Great Twins of the ecliptic, as Castor and +Pollux were the Twins of the zodiac. In one tablet _'Imina bi_, "the +sevenfold one," and _Gut-dua_, "the Bull-in-front," are mentioned side +by side, thus agreeing well with their interpretation of "Pleiades and +Hyades." The Semitic name for the Pleiades was also _Temennu_; and these +groups of stars, worshipped as gods by the Babylonians, may possibly +have been the _Gad_ and _Meni_, "that troop," and "that number," +referred to by the prophet Isaiah (lxv. 11). + +On many Babylonian cylinder seals there are engraved seven small discs, +in addition to other astronomical symbols. These seven small stellar +discs are almost invariably arranged in the form :::' or:::. much as we +should now-a-days plot the cluster of the Pleiades when mapping on a +small scale the constellations round the Bull. It is evident that these +seven little stellar discs do not mean the "seven planets," for in many +cases the astronomical symbols which accompany them include both those +of the sun and moon. It is most probable that they signify the Pleiades, +or perhaps alternatively the Hyades. + +Possibly, reference is made to the worship of the Pleiades when the +king of Assyria, in the seventh century B.C., brought men from Babylon +and other regions to inhabit the depopulated cities of Samaria, "and the +men of Babylon made Succoth-benoth." The Rabbis are said to have +rendered this by the "booths of the Maidens," or the "tents of the +Daughters,"--the Pleiades being the maidens in question. + +Generally they are the Seven Sisters. Hesiod calls them the Seven +Virgins, and the Virgin Stars. The names given to the individual stars +are those of the seven daughters of Atlas and Pleione; thus Milton terms +them the Seven Atlantic Sisters. + +As we have seen (p. 189), the device associated expressly with Joseph is +the Bull, and Jacob's blessing to his son has been sometimes rendered-- + + "Joseph is a fruitful bough, even a fruitful bough by a well; + _the daughters walk upon the bull_." + +That is, "the Seven Sisters," the Pleiades, are on the shoulder of +Taurus. + +Aratus wrote of the number of the Pleiades-- + + "Seven paths aloft men say they take, + Yet six alone are viewed by mortal eyes. + From Zeus' abode no star unknown is lost, + Since first from birth we heard, but thus the tale is told." + +[Illustration: STARS OF THE PLEIADES.] + +Euripides speaks of these "seven paths," and Eratosthenes calls them +"the seven-starred Pleiad," although he describes one as +"All-Invisible." There is a surprisingly universal tradition that they +"were seven who now are six." We find it not only in ancient Greece and +Italy, but also among the black fellows of Australia, the Malays of +Borneo, and the negroes of the Gold Coast. There must be some reason to +account for this widespread tradition. Some of the stars are known to be +slightly variable, and one of the fainter stars in the cluster may have +shone more brightly in olden time;--the gaseous spectrum of Pleione +renders it credible that this star may once have had great brilliancy. +Alcyone, now the brightest star in the cluster, was not mentioned by +Ptolemy among the four brightest Pleiads of his day. The six now visible +to ordinary sight are Alcyone, Electra, Atlas, Maia, Merope and Taygeta. +Celoeno is the next in brightness, and the present candidate for the +seventh place. By good sight, several more may be made out: thus +Maestlin, the tutor of Kepler, mapped eleven before the invention of the +telescope, and in our own day Carrington and Denning have counted +fourteen with the naked eye. + +In clear mountain atmosphere more than seven would be seen by any +keen-sighted observer. Usually six stars may be made out with the naked +eye in both the Pleiades and the Hyades, or, if more than six, then +several more; though with both groups the number of "seven" has always +been associated. + +In the New Testament we find the "Seven Stars" also mentioned. In the +first chapter of the Revelation, the Apostle St. John says that he "saw +seven golden candlesticks; and in the midst of the seven candlesticks +one like unto the Son of Man, . . . and He had in His right hand seven +stars." Later in the same chapter it is explained that "the seven stars +are the angels of the seven churches; and the seven candlesticks which +thou sawest are the seven churches." The seven stars in a single compact +cluster thus stand for the Church in its many diversities and its +essential unity. + +This beautiful little constellation has become associated with a foolish +fable. When it was first found that not only did the planets move round +the sun in orbits, but that the sun itself also was travelling rapidly +through space, a German astronomer, Maedler, hazarded the suggestion that +the centre of the sun's motion lay in the Pleiades. It was soon evident +that there was no sufficient ground for this suggestion, and that many +clearly established facts were inconsistent with it. Nevertheless the +idea caught hold of the popular mind, and it has acquired an amazing +vogue. Non-astronomical writers have asserted that Alcyone, the +brightest Pleiad, is the centre of the entire universe; some have even +been sufficiently irreverent to declare that it is the seat of heaven, +the throne of God. A popular London divine, having noticed a bright ring +round Alcyone on a photograph of the group, took that halo, which every +photographer would at once recognize as a mere photographic defect, as a +confirmation of this baseless fancy. Foolishness of this kind has +nothing to support it in science or religion; it is an offence against +both. We have no reason to regard the Pleiades as the centre of the +universe, or as containing the attracting mass which draws our sun +forward in its vast mysterious orbit. + +R. H. Allen, in his survey of the literature of the Pleiades, mentions +that "Drach surmised that their midnight culmination in the time of +Moses, ten days after the autumnal equinox, may have fixed the Day of +Atonement on the 10th of Tishri."[221:1] This is worth quoting as a +sample of the unhappy astronomical guesses of commentators. Drach +overlooked that his suggestion necessitated the assumption that in the +time of Moses astronomers had already learned, first, to determine the +actual equinox; next, to observe the culmination of stars on the +meridian rather than their risings and settings; and, third and more +important, to determine midnight by some artificial measurement of time. +None of these can have been primitive operations; we have no knowledge +that any of the three were in use in the time of Moses; certainly they +were not suitable for a people on the march, like the Israelites in the +wilderness. Above all, Drach ignored in this suggestion the fact that +the Jewish calendar was a lunar-solar one, and hence that the tenth day +of the seventh month could not bear any fixed relation either to the +autumnal equinox, or to the midnight culmination of the Pleiades; any +more than our Easter Sunday is fixed to the spring equinox on March 22. + +The Pleiades were often associated with the late autumn, as Aratus +writes-- + + "Men mark them rising with Sol's setting light, + Forerunners of the winter's gloomy night." + +This is what is technically known as the "acronical rising" of the +Pleiades, their rising at sunset; in contrast to their "heliacal +rising," their rising just before daybreak, which ushered in the spring +time. This acronical rising has led to the association of the group with +the rainy season, and with floods. Thus Statius called the cluster +"Pliadum nivosum sidus," and Valerius Flaccus distinctly used the word +"Pliada" for the showers. Josephus says that during the siege of +Jerusalem by Antiochus Epiphanes in 170 B.C., the besieged wanted for +water until relieved "by a large shower of rain which fell at the +setting of the Pleiades." R. H. Allen, in his _Star-Names and their +Meanings_, states that the Pleiades "are intimately connected with +traditions of the flood found among so many and widely separated +nations, and especially in the Deluge-myth of Chaldaea," but he does not +cite authorities or instances. + +The Talmud gives a curious legend connecting the Pleiades with the +Flood:-- + + "When the Holy One, blessed be He! wished to bring the Deluge + upon the world, He took two stars out of Pleiades, and thus + let the Deluge loose. And when He wished to arrest it, He took + two stars out of Arcturus and stopped it."[223:1] + +It would seem from this that the Rabbis connected the number of visible +stars with the number of the family in the Ark--with the "few, that +is, eight souls . . . saved by water," of whom St. Peter speaks. Six +Pleiades only are usually seen by the naked eye; traditionally seven +were seen; but the Rabbis assumed that two, not one, were lost. + +Perhaps we may trace a reference to this supposed association of +_K[=i]mah_ with the Flood in the passage from Amos already quoted:-- + + "Seek Him that maketh the seven stars and Orion, . . . that + calleth for the waters of the sea, and poureth them out upon + the face of the earth: the Lord is His name." + +Many ancient nations have set apart days in the late autumn in honour of +the dead, no doubt because the year was then considered as dead. This +season being marked by the acronical rising of the Pleiades, that group +has become associated with such observances. There is, however, no +reference to any custom of this kind in Scripture. + +What is the meaning of the inquiry addressed to Job by the Almighty? + + "Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades?" + +What was the meaning which it possessed in the thought of the writer of +the book? What was the meaning which we should now put on such an +inquiry, looking at the constellations from the standpoint which the +researches of modern astronomy have given us? + +The first meaning of the text would appear to be connected with the +apparent movement of the sun amongst the stars in the course of the +year. We cannot see the stars by daylight, or see directly where the sun +is situated with respect to them; but, in very early times, men learnt +to associate the seasons of the year with the stars which were last seen +in the morning, above the place where the sun was about to rise; in the +technical term once in use, with the heliacal risings of stars. When the +constellations were first designed, the Pleiades rose heliacally at the +beginning of April, and were the sign of the return of spring. Thus +Aratus, in his constellation poem writes-- + + "Men mark them (_i. e._ the Pleiades) rising with the solar ray, + The harbinger of summer's brighter day." + +They heralded, therefore, the revival of nature from her winter sleep, +the time of which the kingly poet sang so alluringly-- + + "For, lo, the winter is past, + The rain is over and gone; + The flowers appear on the earth; + The time of the singing of birds is come, + And the voice of the turtle is heard in our land; + The fig-tree ripeneth her green figs, + And the vines are in blossom, + They give forth their fragrance." + +The constellation which thus heralded the return of this genial season +was poetically taken as representing the power and influence of spring. +Their "sweet influences" were those that had rolled away the gravestone +of snow and ice which had lain upon the winter tomb of nature. Theirs +was the power that brought the flowers up from under the turf; earth's +constellations of a million varied stars to shine upwards in answer to +the constellations of heaven above. Their influences filled copse and +wood with the songs of happy birds. Theirs stirred anew the sap in the +veins of the trees, and drew forth their reawakened strength in bud and +blossom. Theirs was the bleating of the new-born lambs; theirs the +murmur of the reviving bees. + +Upon this view, then, the question to Job was, in effect, "What control +hast thou over the powers of nature? Canst thou hold back the sun from +shining in spring-time--from quickening flower, and herb, and tree with +its gracious warmth? This is God's work, year by year over a thousand +lands, on a million hills, in a million valleys. What canst thou do to +hinder it?" + +The question was a striking one; one which must have appealed to the +patriarch, evidently a keen observer and lover of nature; and it was +entirely in line with the other inquiries addressed to him in the same +chapter. + + "Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth?" + +The Revised Version renders the question-- + + "Canst thou bind the _cluster_ of the Pleiades?" + +reading the Hebrew word _Ma`anaddoth_, instead of _Ma'adannoth_, +following in this all the most ancient versions. On this view, Job is, +in effect, asked, "Canst thou gather together the stars in the family of +the Pleiades and keep them in their places?" + +The expression of a chain or band is one suggested by the appearance of +the group to the eye, but it is no less appropriate in the knowledge +which photography and great telescopes have given us. To quote from Miss +Clerke's description of the nebula discovered round the brighter stars +of the Pleiades--Alcyone, Asterope, Celoeno, Electra, Maia, Merope and +Taygeta:-- + + "Besides the Maia vortex, the Paris photographs depicted a + series of nebulous bars on either side of Merope, and a + curious streak extending like a finger-post from Electra + towards Alcyone . . . Streamers and fleecy masses of cosmical + fog seem almost to fill the spaces between the stars, as + clouds choke a mountain valley. The chief points of its + concentration are the four stars Alcyone, Merope, Maia, and + Electra; but it includes as well Celoeno and Taygeta, and is + traceable southward from Asterope over an arc of 1 deg. 10'. . . . + The greater part of the constellation is shown as veiled in + nebulous matter of most unequal densities. In some places it + lies in heavy folds and wreaths, in others it barely qualifies + the darkness of the sky-ground. The details of its + distribution come out with remarkable clearness, and are + evidently to a large extent prescribed by the relative + situations of the stars. Their lines of junction are + frequently marked by nebulous rays, establishing between them, + no doubt, relations of great physical importance; and masses + of nebula, in numerous instances, seem as if _pulled out of + shape_ and drawn into festoons by the attractions of + neighbouring stars. But the strangest exemplification of + this filamentous tendency is in a fine, thread-like process, + 3'' or 4'' wide, but 35' to 40' long, issuing in an easterly + direction from the edge of the nebula about Maia, and + stringing together seven stars, met in its advance, like beads + on a rosary. The largest of these is apparently the occasion + of a slight deviation from its otherwise rectilinear course. A + second similar but shorter streak runs, likewise east and + west, through the midst of the formation."[229:1] + +[Illustration: NEBULOSITIES OF THE PLEIADES. + +Photographed by Dr. Max Wolf, Heidelberg.] + +Later photographs have shown that not only are the several stars of the +Pleiades linked together by nebulous filaments, but the whole cluster is +embedded in a nebulous net that spreads its meshes far out into space. +Not only is the group thus tied or bound together by nebulous clouds, it +has other tokens of forming but a single family. The movements of the +several stars have been carefully measured, and for the most part the +entire cluster is drifting in the same direction; a few stars do not +share in the common motion, and are probably apparent members, seen in +perspective projected on the group, but in reality much nearer to us. +The members of the group also show a family likeness in constitution. +When the spectroscope is turned upon it, the chief stars are seen to +closely resemble each other; the principal lines in their spectra being +those of hydrogen, and these are seen as broad and diffused bands, so +that the spectrum we see resembles that of the brightest star of the +heavens, Sirius. + +There can be little doubt but that the leaders of the group are actually +greater, brighter suns than Sirius itself. We do not know the exact +distance of the Pleiades, they are so far off that we can scarcely do +more than make a guess at it; but it is probable that they are so far +distant that our sun at like distance would prove much too faint to be +seen at all by the naked eye. The Pleiades then would seem to be a most +glorious star-system, not yet come to its full growth. From the +standpoint of modern science we may interpret the "chain" or "the sweet +influences" of the Pleiades as consisting in the enfolding wisps of +nebulosity which still, as it were, knit together those vast young suns; +or, and in all probability more truly, as that mysterious force of +gravitation which holds the mighty system together, and in obedience to +which the group has taken its present shape. The question, if asked us +to-day, would be, in effect, "Canst thou bind together by nebulous +chains scores of suns, far more glorious than thine own, and scattered +over many millions of millions of miles of space; or canst thou loosen +the attraction which those suns exercise upon each other, and move them +hither and thither at thy will?" + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[217:1] _Glossary of Greek Birds_, pp. 28, 29. + +[221:1] R. H. Allen, _Star Names and their Meanings_, p. 401. + +[223:1] _Berachoth_, fol. 59, col. 1. + +[229:1] _The System of the Stars_, 1st edit., pp. 230-232. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +ORION + + +_K[)e]s[=i]l_, the word rendered by our translators "Orion," occurs in +an astronomical sense four times in the Scriptures; twice in the Book of +Job, once in the prophecy of Amos, and once, in the plural, in the +prophecy of Isaiah. In the three first cases the word is used in +conjunction with _K[=i]mah_, "the Pleiades," as shown in the preceding +chapter. The fourth instance is rendered in the Authorized Version-- + + "For the stars of heaven and the constellations + (_K[)e]s[=i]lim_) thereof shall not give their light." + +The Hebrew word _K[)e]s[=i]l_ signifies "a fool," and that in the +general sense of the term as used in Scripture; not merely a silly, +untaught, feckless person, but a godless and an impious one. Thus, in +the Book of Proverbs, Divine Wisdom is represented as appealing-- + + "How long, ye simple ones, will ye love simplicity? the + scorners delight in their scorning, and _fools_ hate + knowledge?" + +[Illustration: THE STARS OF ORION.] + +What constellation was known to the ancient Hebrews as "the fool"? The +Seventy who rendered the Old Testament into Greek confess themselves at +fault. Once, in Amos, both _K[=i]mah_ and _K[)e]s[=i]l_ are left +untranslated. Instead of "Him that maketh the seven stars and Orion," we +have the paraphrase, "That maketh and transformeth all things." Once, in +Job, it is rendered "Hesperus," the evening star; and in the other two +instances it is given as "Orion." The tradition of the real meaning of +the word as an astronomical term had been lost, or at least much +confused before the Septuagint Version was undertaken. The Jews had +not, so far as there is any present evidence, learned the term in +Babylon, for the word has not yet been found as a star-name on any +cuneiform inscription. It was well known before the Exile, for Amos and +Isaiah both use it, and the fact that the author of Job also uses it, +indicates that he did not gain his knowledge of the constellation during +the Babylonian captivity. + +The majority of translators and commentators have, however, agreed in +believing that the brightest and most splendid constellation in the sky +is intended--the one which we know as Orion. This constellation is one +of the very few in which the natural grouping of the stars seems to +suggest the figure that has been connected with it. Four bright stars, +in a great trapezium, are taken to mark the two shoulders and the two +legs of a gigantic warrior; a row of three bright stars, midway between +the four first named, suggest his gemmed belt; another row of stars +straight down from the centre star of the belt, presents his sword; a +compact cluster of three stars marks his head. A gigantic warrior, armed +for the battle, seems thus to be outlined in the heavens. As Longfellow +describes him-- + + "Begirt with many a blazing star, + Stood the great giant, Algebar, + Orion, hunter of the beast! + His sword hung gleaming by his side, + And, on his arm, the lion's hide + Scattered across the midnight air + The golden radiance of its hair." + +In accord with the form naturally suggested by the grouping of the +stars, the Syrians have called the constellation _Gabb[=a]r[=a]_; and +the Arabs, _Al Jabb[=a]r_; and the Jews, _Gibb[=o]r_. The brightest star +of the constellation, the one in the left knee, now generally known as +_Rigel_, is still occasionally called _Algebar_, a corruption of _Al +Jabb[=a]r_, though one of the fainter stars near it now bears that name. +The meaning in each case is "the giant," "the mighty one," "the great +warrior," and no doubt from the first formation of the constellations, +this, the most brilliant of all, was understood to set forth a warrior +armed for the battle. There were _gibb[=o]rim_ before the Flood; we are +told that after "the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and +they bare children to them, the same became mighty men (_gibb[=o]rim_) +which were of old, men of renown." + +But according to Jewish tradition, this constellation was appropriated +to himself by a particular mighty man. We are told in Gen. x. that-- + + "Cush begat Nimrod: he began to be a mighty one (_gibb[=o]r_) + in the earth." + +and it is alleged that he, or his courtiers, in order to flatter him, +gave his name to this constellation, just as thousands of years later +the University of Leipzic proposed to call the belt stars of Orion, +_Stellae Napoleonis_, "the Constellation of Napoleon."[234:1] + +There was at one time surprise felt, that, deeply as the name of Nimrod +had impressed itself upon Eastern tradition, his name, as such, was +"nowhere found in the extensive literature which has come down to us" +from Babylon. It is now considered that the word, Nimrod, is simply a +Hebrew variant of Merodach, "the well-known head of the Babylonian +pantheon." He was probably "the first king of Babylonia or the first +really great ruler of the country." It is significant, as Mr. T. G. +Pinches points out, in his _Old Testament in the Light of the Records +from Assyria and Babylonia_, that just as in Genesis it is stated that +"the beginning of his (Nimrod's) kingdom was Babel, and Erech, and +Accad, and Calneh," so Merodach is stated, in the cuneiform records, to +have built Babel and Erech and Niffer, which last is probably Calneh. +The Hebrew scribes would seem to have altered the name of Merodach in +two particulars: they dropped the last syllable, thus suggesting that +the name was derived from _Marad_, "the rebellious one"; and they +prefixed the syllable "Ni," just as "Nisroch" was written for "Assur." +"From a linguistic point of view, therefore, the identification of +Nimrod as a changed form of Merodach is fully justified." + +[Illustration: ORION AND THE NEIGHBOURING CONSTELLATIONS.] + +The attitude of Orion in the sky is a striking one. The warrior is +represented as holding a club in the right hand, and a skin or shield in +the left. His left foot is raised high as if he were climbing a steep +ascent, he seems to be endeavouring to force his way up into the zodiac, +and--as Longfellow expresses it--to be beating the forehead of the +Bull. His right leg is not shown below the knee, for immediately +beneath him is the little constellation of the Hare, by the early Arabs +sometimes called, _Al Kursiyy al Jabb[=a]r_, "the Chair of the Giant," +from its position. Behind Orion are the two Dogs, each constellation +distinguished by a very brilliant star; the Greater Dog, by _Sirius_, +the brightest star in the heavens; the Lesser Dog, by _Procyon_, i.e. +the "Dog's Forerunner." Not far above Orion, on the shoulder of the +Bull, is the little cluster of the Pleiades. + +There are--as we have seen--only three passages where _K[=i]mah_, +literally "the cluster" or "company,"--the group we know as the +Pleiades,--is mentioned in Scripture; and in each case it is associated +with _K[)e]s[=i]l_, "the fool,"--Orion. Several Greek poets give us the +same association, likening the stars to "rock-pigeons, flying from the +Hunter Orion." And Hesiod in his _Works and Days_ writes-- + + "Do not to plough forget, + When the Seven Virgins, and Orion, set: + Thus an advantage always shall appear, + In ev'ry labour of the various year. + If o'er your mind prevails the love of gain, + And tempts you to the dangers of the main, + Yet in her harbour safe the vessel keep, + When strong Orion chases to the deep + The Virgin stars." + +There is a suggestion of intense irony in this position of Orion amongst +the other constellations. He is trampling on the Hare--most timid of +creatures; he is climbing up into the zodiac to chase the little company +of the Pleiades--be they seven doves or seven maidens--and he is +thwarted even in this unheroic attempt by the determined attitude of the +guardian Bull. + +A similar irony is seen in the Hebrew name for the constellation. The +"mighty Hunter," the great hero whom the Babylonians had deified and +made their supreme god, the Hebrews regarded as the "fool," the "impious +rebel." Since Orion is Nimrod, that is Merodach, there is small wonder +that _K[)e]s[=i]l_ was not recognized as his name in Babylonia.[238:1] + +The attitude of Orion--attempting to force his way upward into the +zodiac--and the identification of Merodach with him, gives emphasis to +Isaiah's reproach, many centuries later, against the king of Babylon, +the successor of Merodach-- + + "Thou hast said in thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, I + will exalt my throne above the stars of God: I will sit also + upon the mount of the congregation, in the sides of the north: + I will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will be like + the Most High." + +In the sight of the Hebrew prophets and poets, Merodach, in taking to +himself this group of stars, published his shame and folly. He had +ascended into heaven, but his glittering belt was only his fetter; he +was bound and gibbeted in the sky like a captive, a rebel, and who could +loose his bands? + +In the thirteenth chapter of Isaiah we have the plural of +_k[)e]s[=i]l_--_k[)e]s[=i]lim_. It is usually understood that we have +here Orion, as the most splendid constellation in the sky, put for the +constellations in general. But if we remember that _k[)e]s[=i]l_ stands +for "Nimrod" or "Merodach," the first proud tyrant mentioned by name in +Scripture, the particular significance of the allusion becomes evident-- + + "Behold, the day of the Lord cometh, cruel both with wrath and + fierce anger, to lay the land desolate: and he shall destroy + the sinners thereof out of it. For the stars of heavens and + the constellations"--(that is the _k[)e]s[=i]lim_, the Nimrods + or Merodachs of the sky)--"thereof shall not give their light: + the sun shall be darkened in his going forth, and the moon + shall not cause her light to shine. And I will punish the + world for their evil, and the wicked for their iniquity; and I + will cause the arrogancy of the proud to cease, and will lay + low the haughtiness of the terrible." + +The strictly astronomical relations of Orion and the Pleiades seem to be +hinted at in Amos and in Job-- + + "Seek Him that maketh the seven stars and Orion, and turneth + the shadow of death into the morning, and maketh the day dark + with night." + +In this passage the parallelism seems to be between the seven stars, the +Pleiades, with sunrise, and Orion with sunset. Now at the time and place +when the constellations were mapped out, the Pleiades were the immediate +heralds of sunrise, shortly after the spring equinox, at the season +which would correspond to the early part of April in our present +calendar. The rising of Orion at sunset--his acronical rising--was early +in December, about the time when the coldest season of the year begins. +The astronomical meaning of the "bands of Orion" would therefore be the +rigour in which the earth is held during the cold of winter. + +It is possible that the two great stars which follow Orion, _Sirius_ and +_Procyon_, known to the ancients generally and to us to-day as "the +Dogs," were by the Babylonians known as "the Bow-star" and "the +Lance-star"; the weapons, that is to say, of Orion or Merodach. Jensen +identifies Sirius with the Bow-star, but considers that the Lance-star +was Antares; Hommel, however, identifies the Lance-star with Procyon. In +the fifth tablet of the Babylonian Creation epic as translated by Dr. L. +W. King, there is an interesting account of the placing of the Bow-star +in the heavens. After Merodach had killed Tiamat-- + + 75. "The gods (his fathers) beheld the net which he had made, + 76. They beheld the bow and how (its work) was accomplished. + 77. They praised the work which he had done [ . . . ] + 78. Then Anu raised [the . . .] in the assembly of the gods. + 79. He kissed the bow, (saying), 'It is [ . . . ]'! + 80. And thus he named the names of the bow, (saying), + 81. '_Long-wood_ shall be one name, and the second name [shall + be . . . ], + 82. And its third name shall be the _Bow-star_, in heaven [shall + it . . . ]!' + 83. Then he fixed a station for it." + +Dr. Cheyne even considers that he has found a reference to these two +stars in Job xxxviii. 36-- + + "Who hath put wisdom in the inward parts (Lance-star), + Or who hath given understanding to the heart (Bow-star)." + +But this interpretation does not appear to have been generally accepted. +The same high authority suggests that the astronomical allusions in Amos +may have been inserted by a post-exilic editor, thus accounting for the +occurrence of the same astronomical terms as are found in Job, which he +assigns to the exilic or post-exilic period. This seems a dangerous +expedient, as it might with equal reason be used in many other +directions. Further, it entirely fails to explain the real difficulty +that _k[=i]mah_ and _k[)e]s[=i]l_ have not been found as Babylonian +constellation names, and that their astronomical signification had been +lost by the time that the "Seventy" undertook their labours. + +Quite apart from the fact that the Babylonians could not give the name +of "Fool" to the representation in the sky of their supreme deity, the +Hebrews and the Babylonians regarded the constellation in different +ways. Several Assyriologists consider that the constellations, _Orion_ +and _Cetus_, represent the struggle between Merodach and Tiamat, and +this conjecture is probably correct, so far as Babylonian ideas of the +constellations are concerned, for Tiamat is expressly identified on a +Babylonian tablet with a constellation near the ecliptic.[241:1] But +this means that the myth originated in the star figures, and was the +Babylonian interpretation of them. In this case, Cetus--that is +Tiamat--must have been considered as a goddess, and as directly and +immediately the ancestress of all the gods. Orion--Merodach--must have +been likewise a god, the great-great-grandson of Tiamat, whom he +destroys. + +The Hebrew conception was altogether different. Neither Merodach, nor +Tiamat, nor the constellations of Orion and Cetus, nor the actual stars +of which they are composed, are anything but creatures. Jehovah has made +Orion, as well as the "Seven Stars," as "His hand hath formed the +crooked serpent." By the mouth of Isaiah He says, "I form the light, and +create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the Lord, do all these +things." The Babylonian view was of two divinities pitted against each +other, and the evil divinity was the original and the originator of the +good. In the Hebrew view, even the powers of evil are created things; +they are not self-existent. + +And the Hebrews took a different view from the Babylonians of the story +told by these constellations. The Hebrews always coupled Orion with the +Pleiades; the Babylonians coupled Orion with Cetus--that is, Merodach +with Tiamat. + +The view that has come down to us through the Greeks agrees much better +with the association of the constellations as held amongst the Hebrews, +rather than amongst the Babylonians. The Hunter Orion, according to the +Greeks, chased the Pleiades--the little company of Seven Virgins, or +Seven Doves--and he was confronted by the Bull. In their view, too, the +Sea-monster was not warring against Orion, but against the chained +woman, Andromeda. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[234:1] But the fact that Napoleon's name was thus coupled with this +constellation does not warrant us in asserting that Napoleon had no +historical existence, and that his long contest with the great sea-power +(England), with its capital on the river Thames (? _tehom_), was only a +stellar myth, arising from the nearness of Orion to the Sea-monster in +the sky--a variant, in fact, of the great Babylonian myth of Marduk and +Tiamat, the dragon of the deep. + +It seems necessary to make this remark, since the process of +astrologizing history, whether derived from the Bible or from secular +writers, has been carried very far. Thus Dr. H. Winckler writes down the +account of the first three Persian kings, given us by Herodotus, as +myths of Aries, Taurus, and Gemini; David and Goliath, too, are but +Marduk and Tiamat, or Orion and Cetus, but David has become the Giant, +and Goliath the Dragon, for "Goliath" is claimed as a word-play on the +Babylonian _galittu_, "ocean." Examining an Arabic globe of date 1279 +A.D.--that is to say some 4,000 years after the constellations were +devised,--Dr. Winckler found that Orion was represented as left-handed. +He therefore used this left-handed Orion as the link of identification +between Ehud, the left-handed judge of Israel, and Tyr, the left-handed +Mars of the Scandinavian pantheon. Dr. Winckler seems to have been +unaware of the elementary fact that a celestial globe necessarily shows +its figures "inside out." We look up to the sky, to see the actual +constellations from within the sphere; we look down upon a celestial +globe from without, and hence see the designs upon it as in the +looking-glass. + +[238:1] Dr. Cheyne says, in a note on p. 52 of _Job and Solomon_, "Heb. +_K's[=i]l_, the name of the foolhardy giant who strove with Jehovah. The +Chaldeo-Assyrian astrology gave the name _Kisiluv_ to the ninth month, +connecting it with the zodiacal sign Sagittarius. But there are valid +reasons for attaching the Hebrew popular myth to Orion." So Col. Conder, +in p. 179 of _The Hittites and their Language_, translates the name of +the Assyrian ninth month, _Cisleu_, as "giant." Now Sagittarius is in +the heavens just opposite to Orion, so when in the ninth month the sun +was in conjunction with Sagittarius, Orion was in opposition. In +_Cisleu_, therefore, the giant, Orion, was riding the heavens all night, +occupying the chamber of the south at midnight, so that the ninth month +might well be called the month of the giant. + +[241:1] Dr. L. W. King, _Tablets of Creation_, appendix iii. p. 208. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +MAZZAROTH + + +We have no assistance from any cuneiform inscriptions as to the +astronomical significance of _`Ayish_, _K[=i]mah_, and _K[)e]s[=i]l_, +but the case is different when we come to _Mazzaroth_. In the fifth +tablet of the Babylonian Creation epic we read-- + + "1. He (Marduk) made the stations for the great gods; + 2. The stars, their images, as the stars of the zodiac, he fixed. + 3. He ordained the year, and into sections (_mizr[=a]ta_) he + divided it; + 4. For the twelve months he fixed three stars. + 5. After he had [. . .] the days of the year [. . .] images + 6. He founded the station of Nibir to determine their bounds; + 7. That none might err or go astray. + 8. He set the station of B[=e]l and Ea along with him." + +In the third line _mizr[=a]ta_, cognate with the Hebrew +_Mazz[=a]r[=o]th_, means the sections or divisions of the year, +corresponding to the signs of the zodiac mentioned in the second line. +There can therefore be little doubt that the translators who gave us our +English versions are practically correct in the rendering of Job +xxxviii. 32 which they give in the margin, "Canst thou bring forth +Mazzaroth (or the twelve signs) in his season?" + +The foregoing extract from the fifth tablet of Creation has no small +astronomical interest. Merodach is represented as setting in order the +heavenly bodies. First of all he allots their stations to the great +gods, dividing to them the constellations of the zodiac, and the months +of the year; so that the arrangement by which every month had its +tutelary deity or deities, is here said to be his work. Next, he divides +up the constellations of the zodiac; not merely arranging the actual +stars, but appropriating to each constellation its special design or +"image." Third, he divides up the year to correspond with the zodiac, +making twelve months with three "stars" or constellations to each. In +other words, he carries the division of the zodiac a step further, and +divides each sign into three equal parts, the "decans" of the +astrologers, each containing 10 deg. (_deka_) of the ecliptic. + +The statement made in line 4 refers to an important development of +astronomy. The _constellations_ of the zodiac, that is, the groups made +up of the actual stars, are very unequal in size and irregular in shape. +The numerous theories, ancient or modern, in which the constellations +are supposed to owe their origin to the distinctive weather of the +successive months, each constellation figure being a sort of hieroglyph +for its particular month, are therefore all manifestly erroneous, for +there never could have been any real fixed or steady correlation between +the constellations and the months. Similarly, the theories which claim +that the ancient names for the months were derived from the +constellations are equally untenable. Some writers have even held both +classes of theory, overlooking the fact that they mutually contradict +each other. + +But there came a time when the inconvenience of the unequal division of +the zodiac by the constellations was felt to be an evil, and it was +remedied by dividing the ecliptic into twelve equal parts, each part +being called after the constellation with which it corresponded most +nearly at the time such division was made. These equal divisions have +been called the _Signs_ of the zodiac. It must be clearly understood +that they have always and at all times been imaginary divisions of the +heavens, that they were never associated with real stars. They were +simply a picturesque mode of expressing celestial longitude; the +distance of a star from the place of the sun at the spring equinox, as +measured along the ecliptic,--the sun's apparent path during the year. + +The Signs once arranged, the next step was an easy one. Each sign was +equivalent to 30 degrees of longitude. A third of a sign, a "decan," was +10 degrees of longitude, corresponding to the "week" of ten days used in +Egypt and in Greece. + +This change from the constellations to the Signs cannot have taken place +very early. The place of the spring equinox travels backwards amongst +the stars at the rate of very little more than a degree in 72 years. +When the change was made the spring equinox was somewhere in the +constellation _Aries_, the Ram, and therefore Aries was then adopted as +the first Sign, and must always remain such, since the Signs move +amongst the stars with the equinox. + +[Illustration: POSITION OF SPRING EQUINOX, B.C. 2700.] + +We cannot fix when this change was made within a few years, but it +cannot have been _before_ the time when the sun at the spring equinox +was situated just below _Hamal_, the brightest star of the Ram. This was +about 700 B.C. The equal division of the zodiac must have taken place +not earlier than this, and with it, the Bull must have been deposed from +the position it had always held up to that time, of leader of the +zodiac. It is probable that some direct method of determining the +equinox itself was introduced much about the same time. This new system +involved nothing short of a revolution in astronomy, but the Babylonian +Creation story implies that this revolution had already taken place +when it was composed, and that the equal division of the zodiac was +already in force. It is possible that the sixth and seventh lines of the +poem indicate that the Babylonians had already noticed a peculiar fact, +viz. that just as the moon passes through all the signs in a month, +whilst the sun passes through only one sign in that time; so the sun +passes through all the signs in a year, whilst Jupiter passes through +but one sign. _Nibir_ was the special Babylonian name of the planet +Jupiter when on the meridian; and Merodach, as the deity of that planet, +is thus represented as pacing out the bounds of the zodiacal Signs by +his movement in the course of the year. The planet also marks out the +third part of a sign, _i. e._ ten degrees; for during one-third of each +year it appears to retrograde, moving from east to west amongst the +stars instead of from west to east. During this retrogression it covers +the breadth of one "decan" = ten degrees. + +[Illustration: POSITION OF SPRING EQUINOX, A.D. 1900.] + +The Babylonian Creation epic is therefore quite late, for it introduces +astronomical ideas not current earlier than 700 B.C. in Babylonia or +anywhere else. This new development of astronomy enables us also to +roughly date the origin of the different orders of systematic astrology. + +Astrology, like astronomy, has passed through successive stages. It +began at zero. An unexpected event in the heavens was accounted +portentous, because it was unexpected, and it was interpreted in a good +or bad sense according to the state of mind of the beholder. There can +have been at first no system, no order, no linking up of one specific +kind of prediction with one kind of astronomical event. It can have been +originally nothing but a crude jumble of omens, just on a level with the +superstitions of some of our peasantry as to seeing hares, or cats, or +magpies; and the earliest astrological tablets from Mesopotamia are +precisely of this character. + +But the official fortune-tellers at the courts of the kings of Nineveh +or Babylon must speedily have learned the necessity of arranging some +systems of prediction for their own protection--systems definite enough +to give the astrologer a groundwork for a prediction which he could +claim was dependent simply upon the heavenly bodies, and hence for which +the astrologer could not be held personally responsible, and at the same +time elastic enough to enable him to shape his prediction to fit in with +his patron's wishes. The astrology of to-day shows the same essential +features. + +This necessity explains the early Babylonian tablets with catalogues of +eclipses on all days of the month, and in all quarters of the sky. The +great majority of the eclipses could never happen, but they could be, +none-the-less, made use of by a court magician. If an eclipse of the sun +took place on the 29th day and in the south, he could always point out +how exceedingly unpleasant things might have been for the king and the +country if he, the magician, had not by his diligence, prevented its +happening, say, on the 20th, and in the north. A Zulu witch-doctor is +quite equal to analogous subterfuges to-day, and no doubt his Babylonian +congeners were not less ingenious 3,000 years ago. Such subterfuges were +not always successful when a Chaka or a Nebuchadnezzar had to be dealt +with, but with kings of a more ordinary type either in Zululand or +Mesopotamia they would answer well enough. + +Coming down to times when astronomy had so far advanced that a catalogue +of the stars had been drawn up, with their positions determined by +actual measurement, it became possible for astrologers to draw up +something like a definite system of prediction, based upon the +constellations or parts of a constellation that happened to be rising at +any given moment, and this was the system employed when Zeuchros of +Babylon wrote in the first century of our era. His system must have been +started later than 700 B.C., for in it Aries is considered as the leader +of the zodiac; the constellations are already disestablished in favour +of the Signs; and the Signs are each divided into three. A practical +drawback to this particular astrological system was that the aspect +presented by the heavens on one evening was precisely the same as that +presented on the next evening four minutes earlier. The field for +prediction therefore was very limited and repeated itself too much for +the purpose of fortune-tellers. + +The introduction of the planets into astrology gave a greater diversity +to the material used by the fortune-tellers. An early phase of planetary +astrology consisted in the allotment of a planet to each hour of the day +and also to each day of the week. It has been already shown in the +chapter on "Saturn and Astrology," that this system arose from the +Ptolemaic idea of the solar system grafted on the Egyptian division of +the day into twenty-four hours, and applied to the week of seven days. +It probably originated in Alexandria, and arose not earlier than the +third century before our era. Mathematical astrology--the complex system +now in vogue--involves a considerable knowledge of the apparent +movements of the planets and a development of mathematics such as did +not exist until the days of Hipparchus. It also employs the purely +imaginary signs of the zodiac, not the constellations; and reckons the +first point of Aries as at the spring equinox. So far as we can +ascertain, the spring equinox marked the first point of the +constellation Aries about B.C. 110. + +All these varied forms of astrology are therefore comparatively recent. +Before that it was of course reckoned ominous if an eclipse took place, +or a comet was seen, or a bright planet came near the moon, just as +spilling salt or crossing knives may be reckoned ominous to-day. The +omens had as little to do with observation, or with anything that could +be called scientific, in the one case as in the other. + +It is important to realize that astrology, as anything more than the +crude observance of omens, is younger than astronomy by at least 2,000 +years. + +_Mazz[=a]r[=o]th_ occurs only once in the Bible, viz. in Job xxxviii. +32, already so often quoted, but a similar word _Mazz[=a]l[=o]th_ occurs +in 2 Kings xxiii. 5, where it is said that Josiah put down the +idolatrous priests, "them also that burned incense unto Baal, to the +sun, and to the moon, and to the planets (_Mazz[=a]l[=o]th_), and to all +the host of heaven." The context itself, as well as the parallel passage +in Deuteronomy--"When thou seest the sun, and the moon, and the stars, +even all the host of heaven, shouldst be driven to worship them,"--shows +clearly that celestial luminaries of some kind are intended, probably +certain groups of stars, distinguished from the general "host of +heaven." + +Comparing Job ix. 9, with Job xxxviii. 31, 32, we find _`Ash_, or +_`Ayish_, _K[=i]mah_ and _K[)e]sil_ common to the two passages; if we +take _`Ash_ and _`Ayish_ as identical, this leaves the "chambers of the +south" as the equivalent of _Mazzaroth_. The same expression occurs in +the singular in Job xxxvii. 9--"Out of the south (_marg._ chamber) +cometh the whirlwind." There need be but little question as to the +significance of these various passages. The correspondence of the word +_Mazz[=a]r[=o]th_ with the Babylonian _mizr[=a]t[=a]_, the "divisions" +of the year, answering to the twelve signs of the zodiac, points in +exactly the same direction as the correspondence in idea which is +evident between the "chambers of the south" and the Arabic _Al +man[=a]zil_, "the mansions" or "resting-places" of the moon in the lunar +zodiac. + +Mazzaroth are therefore the "divisions" of the zodiac, the "chambers" +through which the sun successively passes in the course of the year, his +"resting-place" for a month. They are "the chambers of the south," since +that is their distinctive position. In Palestine, the sun, even at +rising or setting at midsummer, passes but little to the north of east +or west. Roughly speaking, the "south" is the sun's quarter, and +therefore it is necessarily the quarter of the constellation in which +the sun is placed. + +It has been made an objection to this identification that the Israelites +are said to have worshipped _Mazz[=a]l[=o]th_, and we have no direct +evidence that the signs or constellations of the zodiac were worshipped +as such. But this is to make a distinction that is hardly warranted. The +Creation tablets, as we have seen, distinctly record the allocation of +the great gods to the various signs, Merodach himself being one of the +three deities associated with the month Adar, just as in Egypt a god +presided over each one of the thirty-six decades of the year. + +Again, it is probable that the "golden calf," worshipped by the +Israelites in the wilderness, and, after the disruption, at Bethel and +at Dan, was none other than an attempt to worship Jehovah under the +symbol of Taurus, the leader of the zodiac and cognizance of the tribe +of Joseph; regarded as a type of Him Who had been the Leader of the +people out of Egypt, and the Giver of the blessings associated with the +return of the sun to Taurus, the revival of nature in spring-time. It +was intended as a worship of Jehovah; it was in reality dire rebellion +against Him, and a beginning of the worship of "_Mazz[=a]l[=o]th_ and +the heavenly host;" an idolatry that was bound to bring other idolatries +in its train. + +A three-fold symbol found continually on Babylonian monuments, "the +triad of stars," undoubtedly at one time set forth Sin, the moon-god, +Samas, the sun-god, and I[vs]tar, in this connection possibly the planet +Venus. It has therefore been suggested by Prof. Schiaparelli that +_Mazz[=a]l[=o]th_ is the planet Venus; and, since the word is plural in +form, Venus in her double capacity;--sometimes an evening, sometimes a +morning star. The sun and the moon and _Mazz[=a]l[=o]th_ would then set +forth the three brightest luminaries, whilst the general congress of +stars would be represented by the "host of heaven." But though Venus is +sometimes the brightest of the planets, she is essentially of the same +order as Jupiter or Mars, and is not of the same order as the sun and +moon, with whom, on this supposition, she is singled out to be ranked. +Moreover, if I[vs]tar or Ashtoreth were intended in this passage, it +does not appear why she should not be expressly named as such; +especially as Baal, so often coupled with her, is named. The "triad of +stars," too, had originally quite a different meaning, as will be seen +later. + +Moreover, the parallelism between Job ix. and Job xxxviii. is destroyed +by this rendering, since the planet Venus could not be described as "the +chambers of the south." These are therefore referred by Professor +Schiaparelli to the glorious mass of stars in the far south, shining in +the constellations that set forth the Deluge story,--the Ship, and the +Centaur, much the most brilliant region of the whole sky. + +Another interpretation of _Mazzaroth_ is given by Dr. Cheyne, on grounds +that refute Professor Schiaparelli's suggestion, but it is itself open +to objection from an astronomical point of view. He writes-- + + "_Mazzaroth_ is probably not to be identified with _Mazzaloth_ + (2 Kings xxiii. 5) in spite of the authority of the Sept. and + the Targum. . . . _Mazzaroth_ = Ass. _Mazarati_; _Mazzaloth_ + (i.e. the zodiacal signs) seems to be the plural of + _Mazz[=a]la_ = Ass. _Manzaltu_, station."[254:1] + +Dr. Cheyne therefore renders the passage thus-- + + "Dost thou bring forth the moon's watches at their season, + And the Bear and her offspring--dost thou guide them? + Knowest thou the laws of heaven? + Dost thou determine its influence upon the earth?" + +_Mazzaloth_ are therefore "the zodiacal signs," but _Mazzaroth_ "the +watches or stations of the moon, which marked the progress of the +month;"[254:2] or, in other words, the lunar zodiac. + +But the lunar and the solar zodiac are only different ways of dividing +the same belt of stars. Consequently when, as in the passage before us, +reference is made to the actual belt of stars as a whole, there is no +difference between the two. So that we are obliged, as before, to +consider _Mazzaroth_ and _Mazzaloth_ as identical, and both as setting +forth the stars of the zodiac. + +So far as the two zodiacs differ, it is the solar and not the lunar +zodiac that is intended. This is evident when we consider the different +natures of the apparent motions of the sun and the moon. The sun passes +through a twelfth part of the zodiac each month, and month by month the +successive constellations of the zodiac are brought out, each in its own +season; each having a period during which it rises at sunset, is visible +the whole night, and sets at sunrise. The solar _Mazzaroth_ are +therefore emphatically brought out, each "in its season." Not so the +lunar _Mazzaroth_. + +The expression, "the watches or stations of the moon which marked the +progress of the month," is unsuitable when astronomically considered. +"Watches" refer strictly to divisions of the day and night; the +"stations" of the moon refer to the twenty-seven or twenty-eight +divisions of the lunar zodiac; the "progress of the month" refers to the +complete sequence of the lunar phases. These are three entirely +different matters, and Dr. Cheyne has confused them. The progress of the +moon through its complete series of stations is accomplished in a +siderial month--that is, twenty-seven days eight hours, but from the +nature of the case it cannot be said that these "stations" are brought +out each in his season, in that time, as a month makes but a small +change in the aspect of the sky. The moon passes through the complete +succession of its phases in the course of a synodical month, which is in +the mean twenty-nine days, thirteen hours--that is to say from new to +new, or full to full--but no particular star, or constellation, or +"station" has any fixed relation to any one given phase of the moon. In +the course of some four or five years the moon will have been both new +and full in every one of the "lunar stations." + + "Knowest thou the ordinances of heaven? + Canst thou set the dominion thereof in the earth?" + +He, who has lived out under the stars, in contact with the actual +workings of nature, knows what it is to watch "Mazzaroth" brought "out +in his season;" the silent return to the skies of the constellations, +month by month, simultaneous with the changes on the face of the earth. +Overhead, the glorious procession, so regular and unfaltering, of the +silent, unapproachable stars: below, in unfailing answer, the succession +of spring and summer, autumn and winter, seedtime and harvest, cold and +heat, rain and drought. If there be but eyes to see, this majestic +Order, so smooth in working, so magnificent in scale, will impress the +most stolid as the immediate acting of God; and the beholder will feel +at the same a reverent awe, and an uplifting of the spirit as he sees +the action of "the ordinances of heaven," and the evidence of "the +dominion thereof in the earth." + +Dr. Cheyne, however, only sees in these beautiful and appropriate lines +the influence upon the sacred writer of "the physical theology of +Babylonia";[256:1] in other words, its idolatrous astrology, "the +influence of the sky upon the earth." + +But what would Job understand by the question, "Canst thou bring forth +Mazz[=a]r[=o]th in his season?" Just this: "Canst thou so move the +great celestial sphere that the varied constellations of the zodiac +shall come into view, each in their turn, and with them the earth pass +through its proper successive seasons?" The question therefore embraced +and was an extension of the two that preceded it. "Canst thou bind the +sweet influences of the Pleiades? Canst thou prevent the revival of all +the forces of nature in the springtime?" and "Canst thou loose the bands +of Orion; canst thou free the ground from the numbing frosts of winter?" + +The question to us would not greatly differ in its meaning, except that +we should better understand the mechanism underlying the phenomena. The +question would mean, "Canst thou move this vast globe of the earth, +weighing six thousand million times a million million tons, continually +in its orbit, more than 580 millions of miles in circuit, with a speed +of nearly nineteen miles in every second of time, thus bringing into +view different constellations at different times of the year, and +presenting the various zones of the earth in different aspects to the +sun's light and heat?" To us, as to Job, the question would come as: + + "Knowest thou the ordinances of heaven? + Canst thou set the dominion thereof in the earth?" + +It is going beyond astronomy, yet it may be permitted to an astronomer, +to refer for comparison to a parallel thought, not couched in the form +of a question, but in the form of a prayer: + + "Thy will be done, + As in heaven, so in earth." + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[254:1] Rev. T. K. Cheyne, M.A., _Job and Solomon_, p. 290. + +[254:2] _Ibid._, p. 52. + +[256:1] Rev. T. K. Cheyne, M.A., _Job and Solomon_, p. 52. + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +ARCTURUS + + +In two passages of the Book of Job a word, _`Ash_ or _`Ayish_, is used, +by context evidently one of the constellations of the sky, but the +identification of which is doubtful. In our Authorized Version the first +passage is rendered thus:-- + + (God) "Which maketh Arcturus (_`Ash_), Orion, and Pleiades, + and the chambers of the south"; + +and the second:-- + + "Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, + Or loose the bands of Orion? + Canst thou bring forth Mazzaroth in his season? + Or canst thou guide Arcturus (_`Ayish_) with his sons? + Knowest thou the ordinances of heaven? + Canst thou set the dominion thereof in the earth?" + +The words (or word, for possibly _`Ayish_ is no more than a variant of +_`Ash_) here translated "Arcturus" were rendered by the "Seventy" as +"Arktouros" in the first passage; as "Hesperos" in the second passage; +and their rendering was followed by the Vulgate. The rendering Hesper or +Vesper is absurd, as "the sons" of Hesper has no meaning. "Arktouros" +is not improbably a misrendering of "Arktos," "the north," which would +give a free but not a literal translation of the meaning of the passage. +In another passage from Job (xxxvii. 9) where the south wind is +contrasted with the cold from another quarter of the sky, the +"Seventy"--again followed by the Vulgate--rendered it as "cold from +Arcturus." Now cold came to the Jews, as it does to us, from the north, +and the star which we know as Arcturus could not be described as +typifying that direction either now or when the Septuagint or Vulgate +versions were made. The Peschitta, the Syriac version of the Bible, made +about the second century after Christ, gives as the Syriac equivalent +for `Ash, or `Ayish, the word _`iy[=u]th[=a]_, but it also renders +_K[)e]s[=i]l_ by the same word in Amos v. 8, so that the translators +were evidently quite at sea as to the identity of these constellations. +We are also in doubt as to what star or constellation the Syrians meant +by _`Iy[=u]th[=a]_, and apparently they were in some doubt themselves, +for in the Talmud we are told that there was a disputation, held in the +presence of the great teacher Rabbi Jehuda, about 150 years after +Christ, whether _`Iy[=u]th[=a]_ was situated in the head of the Bull, or +in the tail of the Ram. Oriental scholars now assign it either to +Aldebaran in the head of the Bull, the "sons" being in this case the +other members of the Hyades group of which Aldebaran is the brightest +star; or else identifying it with the Arabic _el-`aiy[=u]q_, the name of +the star which the Greeks call _Aix_, and we call Capella, the "sons" on +this inference being the three small stars near, called by the Greeks +and by ourselves the "Kids." The word _`Ash_ is used several times in +Scripture, but without any astronomical signification, and is there +rendered "moth," as in Isaiah, where it says-- + + "Lo, they all shall wax old as a garment; the moth (_`Ash_) + shall eat them up." + +This literal significance of the word does not help, as we know of no +constellation figured as a "moth" or bearing any resemblance to one. + +But the word _`ash_, or _`ayish_ does not differ importantly from the +word _na`sh_, in Hebrew "assembly," in Arabic "bier," which has been the +word used by the Arabs from remote antiquity to denote the four bright +stars in the hind-quarters of the Great Bear; those which form the body +of the Plough. Moreover, the three stars which form the "tail" of the +Great Bear, or the "handle" of the Plough have been called by the Arabs +_ben[=a]t na`sh_, "the daughters of na`sh." The Bear is the great +northern constellation, which swings constantly round the pole, always +visible throughout the changing seasons of the year. There should be no +hesitation then in accepting the opinion of the Rabbi, Aben Ezra, who +saw in _`Ash_, or _`Ayish_ the quadrilateral of the great Bear, whose +four points are marked by the bright stars, Alpha, Beta, Gamma and +Delta, and in the "sons" of _`Ayish_, the three stars, Epsilon, Zeta, +and Eta. Our Revised Version therefore renders the word as "Bear." + +In both passages of Job, then, we get the four quarters of the sky +marked out as being under the dominion of the Lord. In the ninth chapter +they are given in the order-- + + The Bear, which is in the North; + + Orion, in its acronical rising, with the sun setting in the + West; + + The Pleiades, in their heliacal rising, with the sun rising in + the East; + + And the Chambers of the South. + +In the later passage they are given with fuller illustration, and in the +order-- + + The Pleiades, whose "sweet influences" are given by their + heliacal rising in spring time, with the sun rising in the + East; + + Orion, whose "bands" are those of winter, heralded by his + acronical rising with the sun setting in the West; + + Mazzaroth, the constellations of the zodiac corresponding to + the Chambers of the South, which the sun occupies each in its + "season." + + The Bear with its "sons," who, always visible, are unceasingly + guided round the pole in the North. + +The parallelism in the two passages in Job gives us the right to argue +that _`Ash_ and _`Ayish_ refer to the same constellation, and are +variants of the same name; possibly their vocalization was the same, and +they are but two divergent ways of writing the word. We must therefore +reject Prof. Schiaparelli's suggestion made on the authority of the +Peschitta version of the Scriptures and of Rabbi Jehuda, who lived in +the second century A.D., that _`Ash_ is _`Iy[=u]th[=a]_ which is +Aldebaran, but that _`Ayish_ and his "sons" may be Capella and her +"Kids." + +Equally we must reject Prof. Stern's argument that _K[=i]mah_ is Sirius, +_K[)e]s[=i]l_ is Orion, _Mazz[=a]r[=o]th_ is the Hyades and _`Ayish_ is +the Pleiades. He bases his argument on the order in which these names +are given in the second passage of Job, and on the contention of +Otfried Mueller that there are only four out of the remarkable groups of +stars placed in the middle and southern regions of the sky which have +given rise to important legends in the primitive mythology of the +Greeks. These groups follow one after the other in a belt in the sky in +the order just given, and their risings and settings were important +factors in the old Greek meteorological and agricultural calendars. +Prof. Stern assumes that _k[)e]s[=i]l_ means Orion, and from this +identification deduces the others, neglecting all etymological or +traditional evidences to the contrary. He takes no notice of the +employment of the same names in passages of Scripture other than that in +the thirty-eighth chapter of Job. Here he would interpret the "chain," +or "sweet influences" of _K[=i]mah_ = "Sirius the dog," by assuming that +the Jews considered that the dog was mad, and hence was kept chained up. +More important still, he fails to recognize that the Jews had a +continental climate in a different latitude from the insular climate of +Greece, and that both their agricultural and their weather conditions +were different, and would be associated with different astronomical +indications. + +In the 9th verse of the 37th chapter of Job we get an antithesis which +has already been referred to-- + + "Out of the south cometh the whirlwind: and cold out of the + north." + +The Hebrew word here translated "north" is _mezar[=i]m_, a plural word +which is taken literally to mean "the scatterings." For its +interpretation Prof. Schiaparelli makes a very plausible suggestion. He +says, "We may first observe that the five Hebrew letters with which this +name was written in the original unpointed text could equally well be +read, with a somewhat different pointing, as _mizrim_, or also as +_mizrayim_, of which the one is the plural, the other the dual, of +_mizreh_. Now _mizreh_ means a winnowing-fan, the instrument with which +grain is scattered in the air to sift it; and it has its root, like +_mezarim_, in the word _zarah_, . . . which, besides the sense +_dispersit_, bears also the sense _expandit_, _ventilavit_."[263:1] + +[Illustration: STARS OF THE PLOUGH, AS THE WINNOWING FAN.] + +If Prof. Schiaparelli is correct in his supposition, then the word +translated "north" in our versions is literally the "two winnowing +fans," names which from the form suggested by the stars we may suppose +that the Jews gave to the two Bears in the sky, just as the Chinese +called them the "Ladles," and the Americans call them the "Big Dipper" +and the "Little Dipper." The sense is still that of the north, but we +may recognize in the word employed another Jewish name of the +constellation, alternative with _`Ash_ or _`Ayish_, or perhaps used in +order to include in the region the Lesser as well as the Greater Bear. +We should not be surprised at finding an alternative name for this great +northern constellation, for we ourselves call it by several different +appellations, using them indiscriminately, perhaps even in the course of +a single paragraph. + +What to Job did the question mean which the Lord addressed to him: +"Canst thou guide the Bear and his sons?" To Job it meant, "Canst thou +guide this great constellation of stars in the north, in their unceasing +round, as a charioteer guides his horses in a wide circle, each keeping +to his proper ring, none entangling himself with another, nor falling +out of his place?" + +What would the same question mean to us, if addressed to us to-day? In +the first place we might put it shortly as "Canst thou turn the earth on +its axis regularly and continuously, so as to produce this motion of the +stars round the pole, and to make day and night?" But modern astronomy +can ask the question in a deeper and a wider sense. + +It was an ancient idea that the stars were fixed in a crystal sphere, +and that they could not alter their relative positions; and indeed until +the last century or two, instruments were not delicate enough to measure +the small relative shift that stars make. It is within the last seventy +years that we have been able to measure the "annual parallax" of certain +stars,--that is, the difference in the position of a star when viewed by +the earth from the opposite ends of a diameter of the earth's orbit +round the sun. Besides their yearly shift due to "annual parallax," most +stars have a "proper" or "peculiar motion" of their own, which is in +most cases a very small amount indeed, but can be determined more easily +than "annual parallax" because its effect accumulates year after year. +If, therefore, we are able to observe a star over a period of fifty, or +a hundred or more years, it may seem to have moved quite an appreciable +amount when examined by the powerful and delicate instruments that we +have now at our disposal. Observations of the exact positions of stars +have been made ever since the founding of Greenwich Observatory, so that +now we have catalogues giving the "proper motions" of several hundreds +of stars. When these are examined it is seen that some groups of stars +move in fellowship together through space, having the same direction, +and moving at the same rate, and of these companies the most striking +are the stars of the Plough, that is _`Ayish_ and his sons. Not all the +stars move together; out of the seven, the first and the last have a +different direction, but the other five show a striking similarity in +their paths. And not only are their directions of movement, and the +amounts of it, the same for the five stars, but spectroscopic +observations of their motion in the line of sight show that they are all +approaching us with a speed of about eighteen miles a second, that is to +say with much the same speed as the earth moves in her orbit round the +sun. Another indication of their "family likeness" is that all their +spectra are similar. A German astronomer, Dr. Hoeffler, has found for +this system a distance from us so great that it would take light 192 +years to travel from them to us. Yet so vast is this company of five +stars that it would take light seventy years, travelling at the rate of +186,000 miles in every second of time to go from the leading star, +_Merak_--Beta of the Bear--to _Mizar_--Zeta of the Bear--the final +brilliant of the five. So bright and great are these suns that they +shine to us as gems of the second magnitude, and yet if our sun were +placed amongst them at their distance from us he would be invisible to +the keenest sight. + +Dr. Hoeffler's estimate may be an exaggerated one, but it still remains +true that whilst the cluster of the Pleiades forms a great and wonderful +family group, it is dwarfed into insignificance by the vast distances +between these five stars of the Great Bear. Yet these also form one +family, though they are united by no nebulous bands, and are at +distances so great from each other that the bonds of gravitation must +cease to show their influence; yet all are alike, all are marshalled +together in their march under some mysterious law. We cannot answer the +question, "By what means are _`Ayish_ and his sons guided?" much more +are we speechless when we are asked, "Canst thou guide them?" + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[263:1] _Astronomy in the Old Testament_, p. 69. + + +[Illustration: "BLOW UP THE TRUMPET IN THE NEW MOON."] + + + + +BOOK III + +TIMES AND SEASONS + + + + +CHAPTER I + +THE DAY AND ITS DIVISIONS + + +There is a difference of opinion at the present day amongst astronomers +as to the time in which the planet Venus rotates upon her axis. This +difference arises through the difficulty of perceiving or identifying +any markings on her brilliantly lighted surface. She is probably +continually cloud-covered, and the movements of the very faint shadings +that are sometimes seen upon her have been differently interpreted. The +older observers concurred in giving her a rotation period of 23{h} +21{m}, which is not very different from that of the earth. Many +astronomers, amongst them Schiaparelli, assign a rotation period of 225 +days, that is to say the same period as that in which she goes round the +sun in her orbit. The axis on which she rotates is almost certainly at +right angles to the plane in which she moves round the sun, and she has +no moon. + +We do not know if the planet is inhabited by intelligent beings, but +assuming the existence of such, it will be instructive to inquire as to +the conditions under which they must live if this view be correct, and +the rotation period of Venus, and her revolution period be the same. + +Venus would then always turn the same face to the sun, just as our moon +always turns the same face to us and so never appears to turn round. +Venus would therefore have no "days," for on her one hemisphere there +would be eternal light, and on the other eternal darkness. Since she has +no moon, she has no "month." Since she moves round the sun in a circle, +and the axis through her north and south poles lies at right angles to +her ecliptic, she has no "seasons," she can have no "year." On her +daylight side, the sun remains fixed in one spot in the sky, so long as +the observer does not leave his locality; it hangs overhead, or near +some horizon, north, south, east, or west, continually. There are no +"hours," therefore no divisions of time, it might be almost said no +"time" itself. There are no points of the compass even, no north, south, +east or west, no directions except towards the place where the sun is +overhead or away from it. There could be no history in the sense we know +it, for there would be no natural means of dating. "Time" must there be +artificial, uncertain and arbitrary. + +On the night side of Venus, if her men can see the stars at all for +cloud, they would perceive the slow procession of stars coming out, for +Venus turns continually to the heavens--though not to the sun. +_Mazzaroth_ would still be brought out in his season, but there would be +no answering change on Venus. Her men might still know the ordinances of +heaven, but they could not know the dominion thereof set upon their +earth. + +This imaginary picture of the state of our sister planet may illustrate +the fourteenth verse of the first chapter of Genesis:-- + + "And God said, Let there be lights in the firmament of the + heaven to divide the day from the night; and let them be for + signs, and for seasons, and for days, and years." + +The making of the calendar is in all nations an astronomical problem: it +is the movements of the various heavenly bodies that give to us our most +natural divisions of time. We are told in Deuteronomy:-- + + "The sun, and the moon, and the stars, even all the host of + heaven, . . . the Lord thy God hath divided unto all nations + under the whole heaven." + +This is the legitimate use of the heavenly bodies, just as the worship +of them is their abuse, for the division of time--in other words, the +formation of a calendar--is a necessity. But as there are many heavenly +bodies and several natural divisions of time, the calendars in use by +different peoples differ considerably. One division, however, is common +to all calendars--the day. + +The "day" is the first and shortest natural division of time. At present +we recognize three kinds of "days"--_the sidereal day_, which is the +interval of time between successive passages of a fixed star over a +given meridian; _the apparent solar day_, which is the interval between +two passages of the sun's centre over a given meridian, or the interval +between two successive noons on a sundial; and _the mean solar day_, +which is the interval between the successive passages of a fictitious +sun moving uniformly eastward in the celestial equator, and completing +its annual course in exactly the same time as that in which the actual +sun makes the circuit of the ecliptic. The mean solar days are all +exactly the same length; they are equal to the length of the average +apparent solar day; and they are each four minutes longer than a +sidereal day. We divide our days into 24 hours; each hour into 60 +minutes; each minute into 60 seconds. This subdivision of the day +requires some mechanical means of continually registering time, and for +this purpose we use clocks and watches. + +The sidereal day and the mean solar day necessitate some means of +registering time, such as clocks; therefore the original day in use must +have been the apparent solar day. It must then have been reckoned either +from sunset to sunset, or from sunrise to sunrise. Later it might have +been possible to reckon it from noon to noon, when some method of fixing +the moment of noon had been invented; some method, that is to say, of +fixing the true north and south, and of noting that the sun was due +south, or the shadow due north. Our own reckoning from midnight to +midnight is a late method. Midnight is not marked by the peculiar +position of any visible heavenly body; it has, in general, to be +registered by some mechanical time-measurer. + +In the Old Testament Scriptures the ecclesiastical reckoning was always +from one setting of the sun to the next. In the first chapter of Genesis +the expressions for the days run, "The evening and the morning," as if +the evening took precedence of the morning. When the Passover was +instituted as a memorial feast, the command ran-- + + "In the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month at + even, ye shall eat unleavened bread, until the one and + twentieth day of the month at even. Seven days shall there be + no leaven." + +And again, for the sabbath of rest in the seventh month-- + + "In the ninth day of the month at even, from even unto even, + shall ye celebrate your sabbath." + +The ecclesiastical "day" of the Jews, therefore, began in the evening, +with sunset. It does not by any means follow that their civil day began +at this time. It would be more natural for such business contracts as +the hiring of servants or labourers to date from morning to morning +rather than from evening to evening. Naturally any allusion in the +Scriptures to the civil calendar as apart from the ecclesiastical would +be indirect, but that common custom was not entirely in agreement with +the ecclesiastical formula we may perhaps gather from the fact that in +the Old Testament there are twenty-six cases in which the phrases "day +and night," "day or night" are employed, and only three where "night" +comes before "day." We have a similar divergence of usage in the case of +our civil and astronomical days; the first beginning at midnight, and +the second at the following noon, since the daylight is the time for +work in ordinary business life, but the night for the astronomers. The +Babylonians, at least at a late date in their history, had also a +twofold way of determining when the day began. Epping and Strassmaier +have translated and elucidated a series of Babylonian lunar calendars of +dates between the first and second centuries before our era. In one +column of these was given the interval of time which elapsed between the +true new moon and the first visible crescent. + + "Curious to relate, at first all Father Epping's calculations + to establish this result were out by a mean interval of six + hours. The solution was found in the fact that the Babylonian + astronomers were not content with such a variable instant of + time as sunset for their calculations, as indeed they ought + not to have been, but used as the origin of the astronomical + day at Babylon the midnight which followed the setting of the + sun, marking the beginning of the civil day." + +It may be mentioned that the days as reckoned from sunset to sunset, +sunrise to sunrise, and noon to noon, would give intervals of slightly +different lengths. This would, however, be imperceptible so long as +their lengths were not measured by some accurate mechanical +time-measurer such as a clepsydra, sandglass, pendulum, or spring clock. + +The first obvious and natural division of the whole day-interval is into +the light part and the dark part. As we have seen in Genesis, the +evening and the morning are the day. Since Palestine is a sub-tropical +country, these would never differ very greatly in length, even at +midsummer or midwinter. + +The next subdivision, of the light part of the day, is into morning, +noon and evening. As David says in the fifty-fifth Psalm-- + + "Evening, and morning, and at noon, will I pray." + +None of these three subdivisions were marked out definitely in their +beginning or their ending, but each contained a definite epoch. Morning +contained the moment at which the sun rose; noon the moment at which he +was at his greatest height, and was at the same time due south; evening +contained the moment at which the sun set. + +In the early Scriptures of the Old Testament, the further divisions of +the morning and the evening are still natural ones. + +For the progress of the morning we have, first, the twilight, as in +Job-- + + "Let the stars of the twilight thereof be dark; + Let it look for light but have none; + Neither let it see the eyelids of the morning." + +Then, daybreak, as in the Song of Solomon-- + + "Until the day break (literally, breathe) and the shadows flee + away," + +where the reference is to the cool breezes of twilight. So too in +Genesis, in Joshua, in the Judges and in Samuel, we find references to +the "break of day" (literally, the rising of the morning, or when it +became light to them) and "the dawning of the day" or "about the spring +of the day." + +The progress of the morning is marked by the increasing heat; thus as +"the sun waxed hot," the manna melted; whilst Saul promised to let the +men of Jabesh-Gilead have help "by that time the sun be hot," or, as we +should put it, about the middle of the morning. + +Noon is often mentioned. Ish-bosheth was murdered as he "lay on a bed at +noon," and Jezebel's prophets "called on the name of Baal from morning +even unto noon." + +We find the "afternoon" (lit. "till the day declined") mentioned in the +nineteenth chapter of the Judges, and in the same chapter this period is +further described in "The day draweth toward evening (lit. is weak)," +and "The day groweth to an end" (lit. "It is the pitching time of the +day," that is to say, the time for pitching tents, in preparation for +the nightly halt). + +As there was no dividing line between the morning and noontide, neither +was there any between the afternoon and evening. The shadows of the +night were spoken of as chased away by the cool breezes of the morning, +so the lengthening shadows cast by the declining sun marked the progress +of the evening. Job speaks of the servant who "earnestly desireth the +shadow;" that is to say, the intimation, from the length of his own +shadow, that his day's work was done; and Jeremiah says, "The shadows of +the evening are stretched out." Then came sundown, and the remaining +part of the evening is described in Proverbs: "In the twilight, in the +evening, in the black and dark night." + +In a country like Palestine, near the tropics, with the days not +differing extravagantly in length from one part of the year to another, +and the sun generally bright and shining, and throwing intense shadows, +it was easy, even for the uneducated, to learn to tell the time of day +from the length of the shadow. Here, in our northern latitude, the +problem is a more complex one, yet we learn from the _Canterbury Tales_, +that Englishmen in the time of the Plantagenets could read the position +of the sun with quite sufficient accuracy for ordinary purposes. Thus +the host of the Tabard inn, though not a learned man-- + + "Saw wel, that the brighte sonne + The ark of his artificial day had ronne + The fourthe part, and half an houre and more; + And though he was not depe experte in lore, + He wiste it was the eighte and twenty day + Of April, that is messager to May; + And saw wel that the shadow of every tree + Was as in lengthe of the same quantitee + That was the body erect, that caused it; + And therfore by the shadow he toke his wit, + That Phebus, which that shone so clere and bright, + Degrees was five and fourty clombe on hight; + And for that day, as in that latitude, + It was ten of the clok, he gan conclude."[277:1] + +In the latter part of the day there is an expression used several times +in Exodus, Leviticus, and Numbers "between the two evenings" which has +given rise to much controversy. The lamb of the Passover was killed in +this period; so also was the lamb of the first year offered daily at the +evening sacrifice; and day by day Aaron was then commanded to light the +seven lamps and burn incense. It is also mentioned once, in no +connection with the evening sacrifice, when the Lord sent quails to the +children of Israel saying, "At even (between the two evenings) ye shall +eat flesh." In Deuteronomy, where a command is again given concerning +the Passover, it is explained that it is "at even, at the going down of +the sun." The Samaritans, the Karaite Jews, and Aben Ezra held "the two +evenings" to be the interval between the sun's setting and the entrance +of total darkness; _i. e._ between about six o'clock and seven or +half-past seven. A graphic description of the commencement of the +sabbath is given in Disraeli's novel of _Alroy_, and may serve to +illustrate this, the original, idea of "between the two evenings." + + "The dead were plundered, and thrown into the river, the + encampment of the Hebrews completed. Alroy, with his principal + officers, visited the wounded, and praised the valiant. The + bustle which always succeeds a victory was increased in the + present instance by the anxiety of the army to observe with + grateful strictness the impending sabbath. + + "When the sun set the sabbath was to commence. The undulating + horizon rendered it difficult to ascertain the precise moment + of his fall. The crimson orb sunk below the purple mountains, + the sky was flushed with a rich and rosy glow. Then might be + perceived the zealots, proud in their Talmudical lore, holding + the skein of white silk in their hands, and announcing the + approach of the sabbath by their observation of its shifting + tints. While the skein was yet golden, the forge of the + armourers still sounded, the fire of the cook still blazed, + still the cavalry led their steeds to the river, and still the + busy footmen braced up their tents, and hammered at their + palisades. The skein of silk became rosy, the armourer worked + with renewed energy, the cook puffed with increased zeal, the + horsemen scampered from the river, the footmen cast an + anxious glance at the fading light. + + "The skein of silk became blue; a dim, dull, sepulchral, + leaden tinge fell over its purity. The hum of gnats arose, the + bat flew in circling whirls over the tents, horns sounded from + all quarters, the sun had set, the sabbath had commenced. The + forge was mute, the fire extinguished, the prance of horses + and the bustle of men in a moment ceased. A deep, a sudden, an + all-pervading stillness dropped over that mighty host. It was + night; the sacred lamps of the sabbath sparkled in every tent + of the camp, which vied in silence and in brilliancy with the + mute and glowing heavens." + +In later times, on account of ritualistic necessities, a different +interpretation was held. So Josephus says: "So these high-priests, upon +the coming of their feast which is called the Passover, . . . slay their +sacrifices, from the ninth hour till the eleventh."[279:1] And the +Talmud made the first evening to begin with the visible decline of the +sun and the second with sunset, or "the two evenings" to last from three +till about six. Schiaparelli gives the first evening from sunset until +the time that the newly visible lunar crescent could be seen in the +twilight sky, or about half an hour after sunset, and the second evening +from that until darkness set in, basing his argument on the directions +to Aaron to light the lamps "between the two evenings," since, he +argues, these would not be made to burn in the daylight. Probably in the +days of Moses and Aaron the period could not be defined as accurately as +this would imply, as the opportunity of seeing the new moon could only +come once a month, and we have no evidence of any mechanical +time-measurer being then in use with them. + +For shorter spaces of time we have the word "moment" or "instant" many +times mentioned. The words may mean, the opening or winking of the eye, +"the twinkling of an eye," spoken of by St. Paul, in his Epistle to the +Corinthians, and do not describe any actual duration of time, or +division of the day. + +The only time-measurer mentioned in the Bible is the dial of Ahaz, which +will form the subject of a later chapter. It need only be noted here +that, as it depended upon the fall of the shadow, it was of use only +whilst the sun was shining; not during cloudy weather, or at night. + +As the day had three main divisions, so had also the night. There were +three "watches," each, like the watches on ship-board, about four hours +in length. So in the Psalms, "the watches" are twice put as an +equivalent for the night. + +The ancient Hebrews would have no difficulty in roughly dividing the +night into three equal parts, whenever the stars could be seen. Whether +they watched "Arcturus and his sons,"--the circumpolar constellations +moving round like a vast dial in the north--or the bringing forth of +Mazzaroth, the zodiacal constellations, in the south, they would soon +learn to interpret the signs of night with sufficient accuracy for their +purpose. + +The first watch of night is mentioned in the book of Lamentations. + + "Arise, cry out in the night: in the beginning of the watches + pour out thine heart like water before the face of the Lord." + +It was "in the beginning of the middle watch; and they had but newly +set the watch," that Gideon and his gallant three hundred made their +onslaught on the host of the Midianites. + +It was in the third, the morning watch, that "the Lord looked unto the +host of the Egyptians through the pillar of fire and of the cloud, and +troubled the host of the Egyptians" as they pursued Israel into the +midst of the Red Sea. In this watch also, Saul surprised the Ammonites +as they besieged Jabesh-Gilead, and scattered them, "so that two of them +were not left together." + +In the New Testament, the Roman method of dividing the night is adopted; +viz. into four watches. When the disciples were crossing the Sea of +Galilee in their little boat, and they had toiled all night in rowing +because the wind was contrary, it was in "the fourth watch of the night" +that Jesus came unto them. + +There is no mention of any mechanical time-measurer in the Old +Testament, and in only one book is there mention in the English version +of the word "hour." Five times it is mentioned in the Book of Daniel as +the rendering of the Chaldean word _sha`ah_, which literally means "the +instant of time." + +No mention either is made of the differing lengths of the days or nights +throughout the year--at midsummer the day is 14-1/4 hours long, and the +night 9-3/4. Job speaks, however, of causing "the day-spring to know its +place," which may well refer to the varying places along the eastern +horizon at which the sun rose during the course of the year. Thus in +mid-winter the sun rose 28 deg. south of the east point, or half a point +south of E.S.E. Similarly in midsummer it rose 28 deg. north of east, or +half a point north of E.N.E.[282:1] + +The Babylonians divided the whole day interval into twelve _kasbu_, or +"double hours." Those again were divided into sixty parts, each equal to +two of our minutes; this being about the time that is required for the +disc of the sun to rise or set wholly. The Babylonian _kasbu_ was not +only a division of time, but a division of space, signifying the space +that might be marched in a _kasbu_ of time. Similarly we find, in the +Old Testament, the expression "a day's journey," or "three days' +journey," to express distance, and in the New Testament we find the same +idea applied to a shorter distance in the "sabbath-day's journey," which +was about two miles. But the Jews in New Testament times adopted, not +the Babylonian day of twelve hours, but the Egyptian of twenty-four. So +we find, in the parable of the Labourers in the Vineyard, mention made +of hiring early in the morning, and at the third, sixth, ninth, and +eleventh hours; and since those hired latest worked for but one hour, it +is evident that there were twelve hours in the daylight. Our Lord +alludes to this expressly in the Gospel according to St. John, where he +says-- + + "Are there not twelve hours in the day? If any man walk in the + day, he stumbleth not, because he seeth the light of this + world. But if a man walk in the night, he stumbleth, because + there is no light in him." + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[277:1] _The Man of Lawe's Prologue_, lines 4421-4434. + +[279:1] Josephus, _Wars_, VI. ix. 3. + +[282:1] See the diagram on p. 363. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +THE SABBATH AND THE WEEK + + +The present chapter has little, if anything, to do with astronomy, for +the week, as such, is not an astronomical period. But the sabbath and +the week of seven days are so intimately connected with the laws and +customs of Israel that it is impossible to leave them out of +consideration in dealing with the "times and seasons" referred to in the +Bible. + +The day, the month and the year are each defined by some specific +revolution of one of the great cosmical bodies; there is in each case a +return of the earth, or of the earth and moon together, to the same +position, relative to the sun, as that held at the beginning of the +period. + +The week stands in a different category. It is not defined by any +astronomical revolution; it is defined by the return of the sabbath, the +consecrated day. + +A need for the division of time into short periods, less than a month, +has been generally felt amongst civilized men. Business of state, +commercial arrangements, social intercourse, are all more easily carried +out, when some such period is universally recognized. And so, what we +may loosely term a "week," has been employed in many ancient nations. +The Aztecs, using a short month of 20 days, divided it into four +quarters of 5 days each. The Egyptians, using a conventional month of 30 +days, divided it into 3 decades; and decades were also used by the +Athenians, whose months were alternately of 29 and of 30 days. + +Hesiod tells us that the days regarded as sacred in his day were the +fourth, fourteenth and twenty-fourth of each month. + + "The fourth and twenty-fourth, no grief should prey + Within thy breast, for holy either day. + + * * * * * + + Pierce on the fourth thy cask; the fourteenth prize + As holy; and, when morning paints the skies, + The twenty-fourth is best." + +The Babylonians divided the month somewhat differently; the seventh, +fourteenth, nineteenth, twenty-first and twenty-eighth days being +regarded as "sabbaths."[284:1] + +The sabbath enjoined upon the Hebrews was every seventh day. The week as +defined by it was a "free" week; it was tied neither to month nor year, +but ran its course uninterruptedly, quite irrespective of the longer +divisions of time. It was, therefore, a different conception from that +underlying the usages of the Greeks or Babylonians, and, it may be +added, a more reasonable and practical one. + +Four origins have been assigned for the week. There are those who +assert that it is simply the closest possible approximation to the +quarter-month; the mean month being 29-1/2 days in length, a +quarter-month would be 7-3/8 days, and since fractions of a day cannot +be recognized in any practical division of time for general use, the +week of seven days forms the nearest approach to the quarter-month that +could be adopted. This is undeniably true, but it is far more likely +that such an origin would give rise to the Babylonian system than to the +Jewish one, for the Babylonian system corrected the inequality of +quarter-month and week every month, and so kept the two in harmony; +whilst the Hebrew disregarded the month altogether in the succession of +his weeks. + +Next, it is asserted that the Hebrew sabbath was derived from the +Babylonian, and that "it is scarcely possible for us to doubt that we +owe the blessings decreed in the sabbath or Sunday day of rest in the +last resort to that ancient and civilized race on the Euphrates and +Tigris."[285:1] + +There are two points to be considered here. Did the Babylonians observe +their "sabbaths" as days of rest; and, were they or the Hebrews the more +likely to hand on their observances to another nation? + +We can answer both these questions. As to the first, a large number of +Babylonian documents on tablets, preserved in the British Museum, have +been published by Father Strassmaier, and discussed by Prof. +Schiaparelli. In all there were 2,764 dated documents available for +examination, nearly all of them commercial and civil deeds, and +covering practically the whole period from the accession of +Nebuchadnezzar to the twenty-third year of Darius Hystaspes. This number +would give an average of 94 deeds for each day of the month; the number +actually found for the four "sabbaths," _i. e._ for the 7th, 14th, 21st +and 28th days, were 100, 98, 121 and 91 respectively. The Babylonians +evidently did not keep these days as days of rest, or of abstinence from +business, as the Jews keep their sabbath, or Christian countries their +Sunday. They cannot even have regarded it as an unlucky day, since we +find the average of contracts is rather higher for a "sabbath" than for +a common day. + +The case is a little different with the 19th day of the month. This, as +the 49th day from the beginning of the previous month, was a sabbath of +sabbaths, at the end of a "week of weeks." In this case only 89 +contracts are found, which is slightly below the average, though twelve +common days show a lower record still. But in most cases the date is +written, not as 19, but as 20-1; as if there were a superstition about +the number 19. On the other hand, this method of indicating the number +may be nothing more than a mode of writing; just as in our Roman +numerals, XIX., one less than XX., is written for 19. + +The Babylonians, therefore, did not observe these days as days of rest, +though they seem to have marked them in the ritual of temple and court. +Nor did they make every seventh or every fifth a rest-day, for Prof. +Schiaparelli has specially examined these documents to see if they gave +any evidence of abstention from business either on one day in seven or +on one day in five, and in both cases with a purely negative result. + +When we inquire which nation has been successful in impressing their +particular form of sabbath on the nations around the case is clear. We +have no evidence of the Babylonians securing the adoption of their +sabbatic arrangements by the Persians, Greeks and Parthians who +successively overcame them. It was entirely different with the Jews. The +Jewish kingdom before the Captivity was a very small one compared with +its enemies on either side--Assyria, Babylon and Egypt; it was but a +shadow even of its former self after the Return. And imperial Rome was a +mightier power than Assyria or Babylon at their greatest. If ever one +state was secure from influence by another on the score of its greater +magnitude and power, Rome was safe from any Jewish impress. Yet it is +perfectly well known that the impression made upon the Romans by the +Jews in this very matter of sabbath-keeping was widespread and deep. +Jewish influence was felt and acknowledged almost from the time that +Syria, of which Judaea was but a petty division, became a Roman province, +and a generation had not passed away before we find Horace making +jocular allusion to the spread of the recognition of the Jewish sabbath. +In his ninth satire he describes himself as being buttonholed by a bore, +and, seeing a friend pass by, as begging the latter to pretend business +with him and so relieve him of his trouble. His friend mischievously +excuses himself from talking about business:-- + + "To-day's the thirtieth sabbath. Can you mean + Thus to insult the circumcised Jews?" + +Persius, in his fifth satire, speaks of those who-- + + "Move their lips with silence, and with fear + The sabbath of the circumcised revere." + +Juvenal, in his fourteenth satire, describes how many Romans reverence +the sabbath; and their sons, bettering the example, turn Jews +themselves:-- + + "Others there are, whose sire the sabbath heeds, + And so they worship naught but clouds and sky. + They deem swine's flesh, from which their father kept, + No different from a man's. And soon indeed + Are circumcised; affecting to despise + The laws of Rome, they study, keep and fear + The Jewish law, whate'er in mystic book + Moses has handed down,--to show the way + To none but he who the same rites observes, + And those athirst to lead unto the spring + Only if circumcised. Whereof the cause + Was he, their sire, to whom each seventh day + Was one of sloth, whereon he took in hand + No part in life." + +Ovid, Tibullus, and others also speak of the Jewish sabbath, not merely +as universally known, but as largely observed amongst the Romans, so +that it obtained almost a public recognition, whilst the success of +Judaism in making proselytes, until Christianity came into rivalry with +it, is known to every one. + +As to the general influence of Judaism in securing the recognition of +the week with its seventh day of rest, the testimony of Josephus is +emphatic. + + "The multitude of mankind itself have had a great inclination + of a long time to follow our religious observances; for there + is not any city of the Grecians, nor any of the barbarians, + nor any nation whatsoever, whither our custom of resting on + the seventh day hath not come, and by which our fasts and + lighting up lamps, and many of our prohibitions as to our + food, are not observed; they also endeavour to imitate our + mutual concord with one another, and the charitable + distribution of our goods, and our diligence in our trades, + and our fortitude in undergoing the distresses we are in, on + account of our laws; and, what is here matter of the greatest + admiration, our law hath no bait of pleasure to allure men to + it, but it prevails by its own force; and as God Himself + pervades all the world, so hath our law passed through all the + world also."[289:1] + +Philo, the Jew, bears equally distinct testimony to the fact that +wheresoever the Jews were carried in their dispersion, their laws and +religious customs, especially their observance of every seventh day, +attracted attention, and even secured a certain amount of acceptance. +The Jews, therefore, even when, as a nation, they were ruined and +crushed, proved themselves possessed of such vital force, of such +tenacity, as to impress their conquerors with interest in, and respect +for, their sabbatic customs. Of their tenacity and force in general, of +their power to influence the nations amongst whom they have been +scattered, the history of the last two thousand five hundred years is +eloquent. It is not reasonable, nor scientific, to suppose that this +nation, steel since it returned from its captivity in Babylon, was wax +before. + +But the third suggestion as to the origin of the week of seven +days,--that it was derived from the influence of the planets,--makes the +matter clearer still. This suggestion has already been noticed in the +chapter on "Saturn and Astrology." It is sufficient to say here that it +presupposes a state of astronomical advancement not attained until long +after the sabbath was fully known. The Babylonians did observe the seven +planets, but there is no trace of their connection with the Babylonian +week. But when the Greek astronomers had worked out that system of the +planetary motions which we call after Ptolemy, and the planets had been +fitted by the Alexandrian observers to the days of the Jewish week and +the hours of the Egyptian day, then the Babylonian astrologers also +adopted the mongrel combination. Thus indirectly Babylon received the +free week from the Jews, and did not give it. + + "The oldest use of the free and uniform week is found among + the Jews, who had only a most imperfect knowledge of the + planets. The identity of the number of the days in the week + with that of the planets is purely accidental, and it is not + permissible to assert that the former number is derived from + the latter."[290:1] + + "Carried by the Jews into their dispersion, adopted by the + Chaldaean astrologers for use in their divinations, received by + Christianity and Islam, this cycle" (the free week of seven + days), "so convenient and so useful for chronology, has now + been adopted throughout the world. Its use can be traced back + for about 3,000 years, and there is every reason to believe + that it will last through the centuries to come, resisting the + madness of useless novelty and the assaults of present and + future iconoclasts."[290:2] + +The fourth account of the origin of the week is that given us in the +Bible itself. + + "In six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all + that in them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore the + Lord blessed the sabbath day, and hallowed it." + +The institution of the sabbath day is the crown of the work of creation, +the key to its purpose. Other times and seasons are marked out by the +revolutions and conjunctions of the heavenly bodies. This day is set +apart directly by God Himself; it is His express handiwork,--"the day +which the Lord hath made." + +The great truth taught in the first chapter of Genesis is that God is +the One Reality. All that we can see above or around was made by Him. He +alone is God. + +And His creative work has a definite goal to which its several details +all lead up--the creation of man, made in the image of God. + +As such, man has a higher calling than that of the beasts that perish. +The chief object of their lives is to secure their food; their +aspirations extend no further. But he is different; he has higher wants, +nobler aspirations. How can they be met? + +The earth was created to form an abode suitable for man; the varied +forms of organic life were brought into existence to prepare the way for +and minister to him. For what was man himself made, and made in the +image of God, but that he might know God and have communion with Him? +To this the sabbath day gave the call, and for this it offered the +opportunity. + + "For what are men better than sheep or goats, + That nourish a blind life within the brain, + If, knowing God, they lift not hands of prayer?" + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[284:1] This is learnt from a single tablet of a Babylonian Calendar +(preserved in the British Museum), which unfortunately contains one +month only. + +[285:1] _Babel and Bible_, Dr. Fried. Delitzsch, Johns' Translation, pp. +40, 41. + +[289:1] _Flavius Josephus against Apion_, book ii. 40. + +[290:1] Schiaparelli, _Astronomy in the Old Testament_, p. 135. + +[290:2] _Ibid._, p. 133. + + + + +CHAPTER III + +THE MONTH + + +The shortest natural division of time is the day. Next in length comes +the month. + +As was pointed out in the chapter on the Moon, the Hebrews used two +expressions for month--_Chodesh_, from a root meaning "to be new"; and +_Yerach_, from the root meaning "to be pale." + +_Chodesh_ is the word most commonly employed, and this, in itself, is +sufficient to show that the Hebrew calendar month was a lunar one. But +there are, besides, too many references to the actual new moons for +there to be any doubt on the question. + +Every seventh day was commanded to be held as a sabbath of rest, and on +it were sacrificed four lambs, instead of the two offered up, the one at +the morning and the other at the evening sacrifice of the six working +days. But the new moons are also mentioned as holy days, and are coupled +with the sabbaths. The husband of the Shunamite asked her why she wished +to go to Elisha, as "it is neither new moon, nor sabbath." Isaiah, +speaking in the name of the Lord, says-- + + "The new moons and sabbaths, the calling of assemblies, I + cannot away with; . . . your new moons and your appointed + feasts My soul hateth"; and again, "From one new moon to + another, and from one sabbath to another, shall all flesh come + to worship." + +Amos speaks of degenerate Israel, that they say-- + + "When will the new moon be gone, that we may sell corn? and + the sabbath, that we may set forth wheat?" + +As late as Apostolic times, St. Paul refers to the feasts of the new +moons, saying, "Let no man therefore judge you . . . in respect . . . of +the new moon." + +The ordinances respecting the observance of the new moons--the +"beginnings of months"--were explicit. Trumpets were blown over the +burnt offerings and over the sacrifices of the peace offerings, and the +nature of these offerings is given in detail in the twenty-eighth +chapter of the Book of Numbers. The ordinances were reiterated and +emphasized in the days of David, Solomon, Hezekiah, Ezekiel, Ezra and +Nehemiah. Amongst the Jews of the present day the trumpets are not blown +at new moons; extra prayers are read, but the burnt and peace offerings +are of necessity omitted. + +Beside the "new moons" and the sabbaths, the ancient Hebrews had three +great festivals, all defined as to the time of their celebration by the +natural months. + +The first was the Feast of the Passover, which lasted a week, and began +with the killing of a lamb "between the two evenings"; on the 14th day +of the month Abib, the first month of the year--that is to say, on the +evening that the first moon of the year became full. This feast +corresponded to our Easter. The second was that of Pentecost, and was +bound to the Feast of the Passover by being appointed to occur seven +weeks after the consecration of the harvest season by the offering of +the sheaf on the second day of the Passover. We still celebrate the +Feast of Pentecost, or Whitsunday, keeping it in remembrance of the +birthday of the Christian Church. This feast lasted but a single day, +and did not occur at either the new or the full of the moon, but nearly +at first quarter. + +The third festival was threefold in its character. It began with special +sacrifices besides those usually offered at the new moon:-- + + "In the seventh month, on the first day of the month, ye shall + have an holy convocation; ye shall do no servile work: it is a + day of blowing of trumpets unto you." + +This then was especially dependent on the new moon, being on the first +day of the month. + +On the 10th day of the month was the Day of Atonement, when the people +should afflict their souls. On the 15th day of the month began the Feast +of Tabernacles, which commenced on the night that the moon was full, and +lasted for a week. + +We have no special religious seasons in the Christian Church to +correspond with these. + +We thus see that with the Hebrews all the days of the new moons, and two +days of full moon (in the first and in the seventh months), were days +for which special ordinances were imposed. And there is no doubt that +the beginnings of the new months were obtained by direct observation of +the moon, when weather or other conditions permitted, not by any rule of +thumb computation. The new moon observed was, necessarily, not the new +moon as understood in the technical language of astronomy; _i. e._ the +moment when the moon is in "conjunction" with the sun, having its dark +side wholly turned towards the earth, and being in consequence +completely invisible. "The new moon" as mentioned in the Scriptures, and +as we ordinarily use the term, is not this conjunction, but the first +visible crescent of the moon when it has drawn away from the sun +sufficiently to be seen after sunset for a short time, in the twilight, +before it sets; for the moon when very slender cannot be seen in +daylight. It may, therefore, be first seen any time between about 18 +hours and 40 hours after its conjunction with the sun; in other words, +it may be first seen on one of two evenings. But for the ecclesiastical +rites it was necessary that there should be an authoritative declaration +as to the time of the commencement of the month, and, moreover, the +great feasts were fixed for certain days in the month, and so were +dependent on its beginning. + +During the period of the Jewish restoration, up to the destruction of +Jerusalem by Titus, the Sanhedrim used to sit in the "Hall of Polished +Stones" to receive the testimony of credible witnesses that they had +seen the new moon. If the new moon had appeared at the commencement of +the 30th day--corresponding to our evening of the 29th--the Sanhedrim +declared the previous month "imperfect," or consisting only of 29 days. +If credible witnesses had not appeared to testify to the appearance of +the new moon on the evening of the 29th, the next evening, _i. e._ that +of the 30th--according to our mode of reckoning--was taken as the +commencement of the new month, and the previous month was then declared +to be "full," or of 30 days. + +Early in the Christian era, it was enacted that no testimony should be +received from unknown persons, because, says the Talmud, the Baithusites +wished to impose on the Mishnic Rabbis, and hired two men to do so for +four hundred pieces of silver. + +It is clear, therefore, that about the time of the Christian era the +beginnings of the months were determined astronomically from the actual +observation of the new moons, and we may safely conclude that it was the +same also from the earliest times. It was the actual new moon, not any +theoretical or fictitious new moon, that regulated the great festivals, +and, as we have seen, there was often some considerable uncertainty +possible in the fixing of the dates. The witnesses might give +conflicting testimony, and the authoritative date might be proved to be +in fault. We have an instance of such conflicting authority in the +different dating, on one occasion, of the Day of Atonement by the Rabbi +Yehoshua, and Rabbon Gamaliel, the president of the Sanhedrim, grandson +of the Gamaliel at whose feet Paul sat. + +According to a statement in the Mishna, dating from the second century +of our era, the appearance of the new moon at Jerusalem was signalled to +Babylonia during the century preceding the destruction of the Holy City +by Titus, and perhaps from earlier times. The dispersion of the Jews +had therefore presented them with an additional difficulty in fixing the +beginning of their months. The problem is much more intricate to-day, +seeing that the Jews are dispersed over the whole world, and the new +moon, first visible on one evening at Jerusalem, might be seen the +evening before, according to the reckoning of places west of Jerusalem, +or might be invisible until the following evening, according to the +reckoning of places east of it. We have the same problem to solve in +finding the date of Easter Sunday. The Prayer Book rule for finding it +runs thus:-- + + "Easter day is always the first Sunday after the full moon + which happens upon, or next after, the 21st day of March; and + if the full moon happens on a Sunday, Easter day is the Sunday + after." + +But the "moon" we choose for the ecclesiastical calendar is an imaginary +body, which is so controlled by specially constructed tables as to be +"full" on a day not differing by more than two or three days at most +from the date on which the actual moon is full. This may seem, at first +sight, a very clumsy arrangement, but it has the advantage of defining +the date of Easter precisely, without introducing any question as to the +special meridian where the moon might be supposed to be observed. Thus, +in 1905, the moon was full at 4{h} 56{m} Greenwich mean time on the +morning of March 21. But Easter Day was not fixed for March 26, the next +Sunday following that full moon, but a month later, for April 23. For +the calendar moon, the imaginary moon, was full on March 20; and it may +be added that the actual moon, though full on March 21 for European +time, was full on March 20 for American time. There would have been an +ambiguity, therefore, if the actual moon had been taken, according to +the country in which it was observed, an ambiguity which is got rid of +by adopting a technical or imaginary moon. + +The names given to the different months in Scripture have an interest of +their own. For the most part the months are simply numbered; the month +of the Passover is the first month, and the others follow, as the +second, third, fourth, etc., throughout the year; examples of each +occurring right up to the twelfth month. There is no mention of a +thirteenth month. + +But occasionally we find names as well as numbers given to the months. +The first of these is Abib, meaning the month of "green ears." This was +the first month, the month of the Passover, and it received its name no +doubt from the first green ears of barley offered before the Lord during +the feast that followed the Passover. + +The second month was called Zif, "splendour"; apparently referring to +the splendour of the flowers in full spring time. It is mentioned +together with two other names, Ethanim, the seventh month, and Bul, the +eighth month, in the account of the building and dedication of Solomon's +Temple. The last two are certainly Phoenician names, having been found +on Phoenician inscriptions; the first is possibly Phoenician also. Their +occurrence in this special connection was no doubt a result of the very +large part taken in the building of the Temple and the construction of +its furniture by the workmen of Hiram, king of Tyre. The Phoenician +names of the months would naturally appear in the contracts and accounts +for the work, side by side with the Hebrew equivalents; just as an +English contractor to-day, in negotiating for a piece of work to be +carried out in Russia, would probably take care to use the dating both +of the Russian old style calendar, and of the English new style. The +word used for month in these cases is generally, not _chodesh_, the +month as beginning with the new moon, but _yerach_, as if the chronicler +did not wish them to be understood as having been determined by Jewish +authorities or methods. In one case, however, _chodesh_ is used in +connection with the month Zif. + +The other instances of names for the months are Nisan, Sivan, Elul, +Chisleu, Tebeth, Sebat, and Adar, derived from month names in use in +Babylonia, and employed only in the books of Esther, Ezra, Nehemiah, and +Zechariah, all avowedly post-exilic writers. The month word used in +connection with them is _chodesh_--since the Babylonian months were also +lunar--except in the single case where Ezra used a month name, terming +it _yerach_. The other post-exilic writers or editors of the books of +Holy Scripture would seem to have been at some pains to omit all +Babylonian month names. These Babylonian month names continue to be used +in the Jewish calendar of to-day. + +In four places in Scripture mention is made of a month of days, the word +for month being in two cases _chodesh_, and in two, _yerach_. Jacob, +when he came to Padan-aram, abode with Laban for "the space of a +month," before his crafty uncle broached the subject of his wages. This +may either merely mean full thirty days, or the term _chodesh_ may +possibly have a special appropriateness, as Laban may have dated Jacob's +service so as to commence from the second new moon after his arrival. +Again, when the people lusted for flesh in the wilderness, saying, "Who +shall give us flesh to eat?" the Lord promised to send them flesh-- + + "And ye shall eat. Ye shall not eat one day, nor two days, nor + five days, neither ten days, nor twenty days, but even a whole + month. . . . And there went forth a wind from the Lord, and + brought quails from the sea." + + "He rained flesh also upon them as dust, + And feathered fowls like as the sand of the sea." + +The "whole month" in this case was evidently a full period of thirty +days, irrespective of the particular phase of the moon when it began and +ended. + +Amongst the Babylonians the sign for the word month was xxx, expressing +the usual number of days that it contained, and without doubt amongst +the Hebrews that was the number of days originally assigned to the +month, except when the interval between two actually observed new moons +was found to be twenty-nine. In later times it was learned that the +length for the lunation lay between twenty-nine and thirty days, and +that these lengths for the month must be alternate as a general rule. +But in early times, if a long spell of bad weather prevented direct +observation of the new moon, we cannot suppose that anything less than +thirty days would be assigned to each month. + +Such a long spell of bad observing weather did certainly occur on one +occasion in the very early days of astronomy, and we accordingly find +that such was the number of days allotted to several consecutive months, +though the historian was evidently in the habit of observing the new +moon, for _chodesh_ is the word used to express these months of thirty +days. + +We are told that-- + + "In the six hundreth year of Noah's life, in the second month, + the seventeenth day of the month, the same day were all the + fountains of the great deep broken up, and the windows of + heaven were opened." + +And later that-- + + "After the end of the hundred and fifty days the waters were + abated. And the ark rested in the seventh month, on the + seventeenth day of the month, upon the mountains of Ararat." + +The five months during which the waters prevailed upon the earth were, +therefore, reckoned as of thirty days each. If all the new moons, or +even that of the seventh month, had been actually observed, this event +would have been ascribed to the nineteenth day of the month, since 150 +days is five months and two days; but in the absence of such +observations a sort of "dead reckoning" was applied, which would of +course be corrected directly the return of clear weather gave an +opportunity for observing the new moon once again. + +A similar practice was followed at a much later date in Babylon, where +astronomy is supposed to have been highly developed from remote +antiquity. Thus an inscription recently published by Dr. L. W. King +records that-- + + "On the 26th day of the month Sivan, in the seventh year, the + day was turned into night, and fire in the midst of heaven." + +This has been identified by Mr. P. H. Cowell, F.R.S., Chief Assistant at +the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, as the eclipse of the sun that was +total at Babylon on July 31, B.C. 1063. The Babylonians, when bad +weather obliged them to resort to dead reckoning, were, therefore, still +reckoning the month as precisely thirty days so late as the times of +Samuel and Saul, and in this particular instance were two, if not three, +days out in their count. Had the new moon of Sivan been observed, or +correctly calculated, the eclipse must have been reckoned as falling on +the 28th or 29th day of the month. + +The Athenians in the days of Solon, five hundred years later than this, +adopted months alternately twenty-nine and thirty days in length, which +gives a result very nearly correct. + +The Jews after the Dispersion adopted the system of thus alternating the +lengths of their months, and with some slight modifications it holds +good to the present day. As will be shown in the following chapter, the +ordinary years are of twelve months, but seven years in every nineteen +are "embolismic," having an extra month. The names employed are those +learned during the Babylonian captivity, and the year begins with the +month Tishri, corresponding to September-October of our calendar. The +lengths of most of the months are fixed as given in the following +table, but any adjustment necessary can be effected either by adding one +day to Heshvan, which has usually twenty-nine days, or taking away one +day from Kislev, which has usually thirty-- + + ORDINARY YEAR EMBOLISMIC YEAR + DAYS DAYS + Tishri 30 30 + Heshvan 29 + 29 + + Kislev 30 - 30 - + Tebeth 29 29 + Shebat 30 30 + Adar 29 30 + Ve-adar ... 29 + Nisan 30 30 + Yiar 29 29 + Sivan 30 30 + Tamuz 29 29 + Ab 30 30 + Elul 29 29 + +The Jewish month, therefore, continues to be essentially a true lunar +one, though the exact definition of each month is, to some extent, +conventional, and the words of the Son of Sirach still apply to the +Hebrew calendar-- + + "The moon also is in all things for her season, + For a declaration of times, and a sign of the world. + From the moon is the sign of the feast day; + A light that waneth when she is come to the full." + +For so God-- + + "Appointed the moon for seasons." + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +THE YEAR + + +The third great natural division of time is the year, and, like the day +and the month, it is defined by the relative apparent movements of the +heavenly bodies. + +As the Rabbi Aben Ezra pointed out, _shanah_, the ordinary Hebrew word +used for year, expresses the idea of _annus_ or _annulus_, a closed +ring, and therefore implies that the year is a complete solar one. A +year, that is purely lunar, consists of twelve lunations, amounting to +354 days. Such is the year that the Mohammedans use; and since it falls +short of a solar year of 365 days by 10 or 11 days, its beginning moves +backwards rather rapidly through the seasons. + +The Jews used actual lunations for their months, but their year was one +depending on the position of the sun, and their calendar was therefore a +luni-solar one. But lunations cannot be made to fit in exactly into a +solar year--12 lunations are some 11 days short of one year; 37 +lunations are 2 or 3 days too long for three years--but an approximation +can be made by giving an extra month to every third year; or more nearly +still by taking 7 years in every 19 as years of 13 months each. This +thirteenth month is called an intercalary month, and in the present +Jewish calendar it is the month Adar which is reduplicated under the +name of Ve-Adar. But, though from the necessity of the case, this +intercalation, from time to time, of a thirteenth month must have been +made regularly from the first institution of the feast of unleavened +bread, we find no allusion, direct or indirect, in the Hebrew Scriptures +to any such custom. + +Amongst the Babylonians a year and a month were termed "full" when they +contained 13 months and 30 days respectively, and "normal" or +"incomplete" when they contained but 12 months or 29 days. The +succession of full and normal years recurred in the same order, at +intervals of nineteen years. For 19 years contain 6939 days 14-1/2 +hours; and 235 months, 6939 days 16-1/2 hours; the two therefore +differing only by about a couple of hours. The discovery of this cycle +is attributed to Meton, about 433 B.C., and it is therefore known as the +Metonic cycle. It supplies the "Golden Numbers" of the introduction to +the Book of Common Prayer. + +There are two kinds of solar years, with which we may have to do in a +luni-solar calendar--the tropical or equinoctial year, and the sidereal +year. The tropical year is the interval from one season till the return +of that season again--spring to spring, summer to summer, autumn to +autumn, or winter to winter. It is defined as the time included between +two successive passages of the sun through the vernal equinox, hence it +is also called the equinoctial year. Its length is found to be 365 days, +5 hours, 49 minutes, and some ancient astronomers derived its length as +closely as 365 days, 6 hours, by observing the dates when the sun set at +exactly the opposite part of the horizon to that where it rose. + +The sidereal year is the time occupied by the sun in apparently +completing the circuit of the heavens from a given star to the same star +again. The length of the sidereal year is 365 days, 6 hours, 9 minutes. +In some cases the ancients took the sidereal year from the "heliacal" +risings or settings of stars, that is from the interval between the time +when a bright star was first seen in the morning just before the sun +rose, until it was first so seen again; or last seen just after the sun +set in the evening, until it was last so seen again. + +But to connect the spring new moon with the day when the sun has +returned to the equinox is a more difficult and complicated matter. The +early Hebrews would seem to have solved the problem practically, by +simply watching the progress of the growing grain. If at one new moon in +spring time it appeared clear that some of the barley would be ready in +a fortnight for the offering of the green ears at the feast of +unleavened bread, then that was taken as beginning the new year. If it +appeared doubtful if it would be ready, or certain that it would not be, +then the next new moon was waited for. This method was sufficient in +primitive times, and so long as the nation of Israel remained in its own +land. In the long run, it gave an accurate value for the mean tropical +year, and avoided all the astronomical difficulties of the question. It +shows the early Hebrews as practical men, for the solution adopted was +easy, simple and efficient. This practical method of determining the +beginning of the year amongst the early Hebrews, does not appear to have +been the one in use amongst the Babylonians either early or late in +their history. The early Babylonians used a sidereal year, as will be +shown shortly. The later Babylonians used a tropical year dependent on +the actual observation of the spring equinox. + +To those who have no clocks, no telescopes, no sundials, no instruments +of any kind, there are two natural epochs at which the day might begin; +at sunrise, the beginning of daylight; and at sunset, the beginning of +darkness. Similarly, to all nations which use the tropical year, whether +their calendar is dependent on the sun alone, or on both sun and moon, +there are two natural epochs at which the year may begin; at the spring +equinox, the beginning of the bright half of the year, when the sun is +high in the heavens, and all nature is reviving under its heat and +light; and at the autumn equinox, the beginning of the dark half of the +year, when the sun is low in the heavens, and all nature seems dying. As +a nation becomes more highly equipped, both in the means of observing, +and in knowledge, it may not retain either of these epochs as the actual +beginning of its year, but the determination of the year still rests +directly or indirectly upon the observation of the equinoxes. + +At the exodus from Egypt, in the month Abib, the children of Israel were +commanded in these words-- + + "This month shall be unto you the beginning of months: it + shall be the first month of the year to you." + +This command may have abolished and reversed the previously existing +calendar, or it may have related solely to the ecclesiastical calendar, +and the civil calendar may have been still retained with a different +epoch of commencement. + +An inquiry into the question as to whether there is evidence in +Scripture of the use of a double calendar, shows that in every case that +the Passover is mentioned it is as being kept in the first month, except +when Hezekiah availed himself of the regulation which permitted its +being kept in the second month. Since the Passover was a spring feast, +this links the beginning of the year to the spring time. Similarly the +feast of Tabernacles, which is an autumn festival, is always mentioned +as being held in the seventh month. + +These feasts would naturally be referred to the ecclesiastical calendar. +But the slight evidences given in the civil history point the same way. +Thus some men joined David at Ziklag during the time of his persecution +by Saul, "in the first month." This was spring time, for it is added +that Jordan had overflowed all its banks. Similarly, the ninth month +fell in the winter: for it was as he "sat in the winter-house in the +ninth month, and there was a fire on the hearth burning before him" that +king Jehoiakim took the prophecy of Jeremiah and "cut it with the +penknife, and cast it into the fire that was on the hearth." The same +ninth month is also mentioned in the Book of Ezra as a winter month, a +time of great rain. + +The same result is given by the instances in which a Babylonian month +name is interpreted by its corresponding Jewish month number. In each +case the Jewish year is reckoned as beginning with Nisan, the month of +the spring equinox. + +In one case, however, two Babylonian month names do present a +difficulty. + +In the Book of Nehemiah, in the first chapter, the writer says-- + + "It came to pass in the month Chisleu, in the twentieth year, + as I was in Shushan the palace, that Hanani, one of my + brethren, came"-- + +and told him concerning the sad state of Jerusalem. In consequence of +this he subsequently approached the king on the subject "in the month +Nisan, in the twentieth year of Artaxerxes the king." + +If the twentieth year of king Artaxerxes began in the spring, Nisan, +which is a spring month, could not follow Chisleu, which is a month of +late autumn. But Artaxerxes may have dated his accession, and therefore +his regnal years, from some month between Nisan and Chisleu; or the +civil year may have been reckoned at the court of Shushan as beginning +with Tishri. It may be noted that Nehemiah does not define either of +these months in terms of the Jewish. Elsewhere, when referring to the +Jewish Feast of Tabernacles, he attributes it to the seventh month, in +accord with its place in the Mosaic calendar. An alteration of the +beginning of the year from the spring to the autumn was brought about +amongst the Jews at a later date, and was systematized in the Religious +Calendar by the Rabbis of about the fourth century A.D. Tishri begins +the Jewish year at the present day; the first day of Tishri being taken +as the anniversary of the creation of the world. + +The Mishna, "The Law of the Lip," was first committed to writing in 191 +A.D., and the compilation of the Babylonian Talmud, based on the Mishna, +was completed about 500 A.D. In its commentary on the first chapter of +Genesis, there is an allusion to the year as beginning in spring, for it +says that-- + + "A king crowned on the twenty-ninth of Adar is considered as + having completed the first year of his reign on the first of + Nisan" (_i. e._ the next day). "Hence follows (observes some + one) that the first of Nisan is the new year's day of kings, + and that if one had reigned only one day in a year, it is + considered as a whole year."[311:1] + +It is not indicated whether this rule held good for the kings of Persia, +as well as for those of Israel. If so, and this tradition be correct, +then we cannot explain Nehemiah's reckoning by supposing that he was +counting from the month of the accession of Artaxerxes, and must assume +that a civil or court year beginning with Tishri, _i. e._ in the autumn, +was the one in question. + +A further, but, as it would seem, quite an imaginary difficulty, has +been raised because the feast of ingathering, or Tabernacles, though +held in the seventh month, is twice spoken of as being "in the end of +the year," or, as it is rendered in the margin in one case, "in the +revolution of the year." This latter expression occurs again in 2 Chron. +xxiv. 23, when it is said that, "at the end of the year, the host of +Syria came up"; but in this case it probably means early spring, for it +is only of late centuries that war has been waged in the winter months. +Down to the Middle Ages, the armies always went into winter quarters, +and in the spring the kings led them out again to battle. One Hebrew +expression used in Scripture means the return of the year, as applied to +the close of one and the opening of another year. This is the expression +employed in the Second Book of Samuel, and of the First Book of +Chronicles, where it is said "after the year was expired, at the time +when kings go forth to battle," implying that in the time of David the +year began in the spring. The same expression, no doubt in reference to +the same time of the year, is also used in connection with the warlike +expeditions of Benhadad, king of Syria, and of Nebuchadnezzar, king of +Babylon. + +It is admitted that the Feast of Tabernacles was held in the autumn, and +in the seventh month. The difficulty lies in the question of how it +could be said to be "in the end of the year," "at the year's end," +although it is clear from the cases just cited that these and similar +expressions are merely of a general character, as we ourselves might +say, "when the year came round," and do not indicate any rigid +connection with a specific date of the calendar. + +We ourselves use several years and calendars, without any confusion. The +civil year begins, at midnight, on January 1; the financial year on +April 1; the ecclesiastical year with Advent, about December 1; the +scholastic year about the middle of September, and so on. As the word +"year" expresses with ourselves many different usages, there is no +reason to attribute to the Jews the extreme pedantry of invariably using +nothing but precise definitions drawn from their ecclesiastical +calendar. + +The services of the Tabernacle and the Temple were--with the exception +of the slaying of the Paschal lambs--all comprised within the hours of +daylight; there was no offering before the morning sacrifice, none after +the evening sacrifice. So, too, the Mosaic law directed all the great +feasts to be held in the summer half of the year, the light half; none +in the winter. The Paschal full moon was just after the spring equinox; +the harvest moon of the Feast of Tabernacles as near as possible to the +autumn equinox. Until the introduction, after the Captivity, of the +Feast of Purim in the twelfth month, the month Adar, the ecclesiastical +year might be said to end with those seven days of joyous "camping-out" +in the booths built of the green boughs; just as all the great days of +the Christian year lie between Advent and the octave of Pentecost, +whilst the "Sundays after Trinity" stretch their length through six +whole months. There is, therefore, no contradiction between the command +in Exod. xii., to make Abib, the month of the Passover, the first month, +and the references elsewhere in Exodus to the Feast of Ingathering as +being in "the end of the year." It was at the end of the agricultural +year; it was also at the end of the period of feasts. So, if a workman +is engaged for a day's work, he comes in the morning, and goes home in +the evening, and expects to be paid as he leaves; no one would ask him +to complete the twenty-four hours before payment and dismissal. It is +the end of his day; though, like the men in the parable of the Labourers +in the Vineyard, he has only worked twelve hours out of the twenty-four. +In the same way the Feast of Tabernacles, though in the seventh month, +was in "the end of the year," both from the point of view of the farmer +and of the ordinances of the sacred festivals. + +The method employed in very early times in Assyria and Babylonia for +determining the first month of the year was a simple and effective one, +the principle of which may be explained thus: If we watch for the +appearance of the new moon in spring time, and, as we see it setting in +the west, notice some bright star near it, then 12 months later we +should see the two together again; but with this difference, that the +moon and star would be seen together, not on the first, but on the +second evening of the month. For since 12 lunar months fall short of a +solar year by 11 days, the moon on the first evening would be about 11 +degrees short of her former position. But as she moves about 13 degrees +in 24 hours, the next evening she would practically be back in her old +place. In the second year, therefore, moon and star would set together +on the second evening of the first month; and in like manner they would +set together on the third evening in the third year; and, roughly +speaking, on the fourth evening of the fourth year. But this last +conjunction would mean that they would also set together on the first +evening of the next month, which would thus be indicated as the true +first month of the year. Thus when moon and star set together on the +third evening of a month, thirteen months later they would set together +on the first evening of a month. Thus the setting together of moon and +star would not only mark which was to be first month of the year, but if +they set together on the first evening it would show that the year then +beginning was to be an ordinary one of 12 months; if on the third +evening, that the year ought to be a full one of 13 months. + +This was precisely the method followed by the Akkadians some 4000 years +ago. For Prof. Sayce and Mr. Bosanquet translate an old tablet in +Akkadian as follows:-- + + "When on the first day of the month _Nisan_ the star of stars + (or _Dilgan_) and the moon are parallel, that year is normal. + When on the third day of the month _Nisan_ the star of stars + and the moon are parallel, that year is full."[315:1] + +The "star of stars" of this inscription is no doubt the bright star +Capella, and the year thus determined by the setting together of the +moon and Capella would begin on the average with the spring equinox +about 2000 B.C. + +When Capella thus marked the first month of the year, the "twin stars," +Castor and Pollux, marked the second month of the year in just the same +way. A reminiscence of this circumstance is found in the signs for the +first two months; that for the first month being a crescent moon "lying +on its back;" that for the second month a pair of stars. + +The significance of the crescent being shown as lying on its back is +seen at once when it is remembered that the new moon is differently +inclined to the horizon according to the time of the year when it is +seen. It is most nearly upright at the time of the autumn equinox; it is +most nearly horizontal, "lying on its back," at the spring equinox. It +is clear from this symbol, therefore, that the Babylonians began their +year in the spring. + +[Illustration: POSITION OF THE NEW MOON AT THE EQUINOXES.] + +This method, by which the new moon was used as a kind of pointer for +determining the return of the sun to the neighbourhood of a particular +star at the end of a solar year, is quite unlike anything that +commentators on the astronomical methods of the ancients have supposed +them to have used. But we know from the ancient inscription already +quoted that it was actually used; it was eminently simple; it was bound +to have suggested itself wherever a luni-solar year, starting from the +observed new moon, was used. Further, it required no instruments or +star-maps; it did not even require a knowledge of the constellations; +only of one or two conspicuous stars. Though rough, it was perfectly +efficient, and would give the mean length of the year with all the +accuracy that was then required. + +[Illustration: BOUNDARY-STONE IN THE LOUVRE; APPROXIMATE DATE, B.C. +1200. + +(From a photograph by Messrs. W. A. Mansell.)] + +But it had one drawback, which the ancients could not have been expected +to foresee. The effect of "precession," alluded to in the chapter on +"The Origin of the Constellations," p. 158, would be to throw the +beginning of the year, as thus determined, gradually later and later in +the seasons,--roughly speaking, by a day in every seventy years,--and +the time came, no doubt, when it was noticed that the terrestrial +seasons no longer bore their traditional relation to the year. This +probably happened at some time in the seventh or eighth centuries before +our era, and was connected with the astronomical revolution that has +been alluded to before; when the ecliptic was divided into twelve equal +divisions, not associated with the actual stars, the Signs were +substituted for the Constellations of the Zodiac, and the Ram was taken +as the leader instead of the Bull. The equinox was then determined by +direct measurement of the length of the day and night; for a tablet of +about this period records-- + + "On the sixth day of the month Nisan the day and night were + equal. The day was six double-hours (_kasbu_), and the night + was six double-hours." + +So long as Capella was used as the indicator star, so long the year must +have begun with the sun in Taurus, the Bull; but when the re-adjustment +was made, and the solar tropical year connected with the equinox was +substituted for the sidereal year connected with the return of the sun +to a particular star, it would be seen that the association of the +beginning of the year with the sun's presence in any given constellation +could no longer be kept up. The necessity for an artificial division of +the zodiac would be felt, and that artificial division clearly was not +made until the sun at the spring equinox was unmistakably in Aries, the +Ram; or about 700 B.C. + +The eclipse of 1063 B.C. incidentally proves that the old method of +fixing Nisan by the conjunction of the moon and Capella was then still +in use; for the eclipse took place on July 31, which is called in the +record "the 26th of Sivan." Sivan being the third month, its 26th day +could not have fallen so late, if the year had begun with the equinox; +but it would have so fallen if the Capella method were still in vogue. + +There is a set of symbols repeated over and over again on Babylonian +monuments, and always given a position of eminence;--it is the so-called +"Triad of Stars," a crescent lying on its back and two stars near it. +They are seen very distinctly at the top of the photograph of the +boundary-stone from the Louvre, given on p. 318, and also immediately +above the head of the Sun-god in the photograph of the tablet from +Sippar, on p. 322. Their significance is now clear. Four thousand years +before the Christian era, the two Twin stars, Castor and Pollux, served +as indicators of the first new moon of the year, just as Capella did two +thousand years later. The "triad of stars," then, is simply a picture of +what men saw, year after year, in the sunset sky at the beginning of the +first month, six thousand years ago. It is the earliest record of an +astronomical observation that has come down to us. + +[Illustration: WORSHIP OF THE SUN-GOD AT SIPPARA.] + +How simple and easy the observation was, and how distinctly the year was +marked off by it! The month was marked off by the first sight of the new +thin crescent in the evening sky. The day was marked off by the return +of darkness, the evening hour in which, month by month, the new moon was +first observed; so that "the evening and the morning were the first +day." The year was marked off by the new moon being seen in the evening +with a bright pair of stars, the stars we still know as the "Twins;" and +the length of the year was shown by the evening of the month, when moon +and stars came together. If on the first evening, it was a year of +twelve months; if on the third, one of thirteen. There was a time when +these three observations constituted the whole of primitive astronomy. + +In later days the original meaning of the "Triad of Stars" would seem to +have been forgotten, and they were taken as representing Sin, Samas, and +Istar;--the Moon, the Sun and the planet Venus. Yet now and again a hint +of the part they once played in determining the length of the year is +preserved. Thus, on the tablet now in the British Museum, and shown on +p. 322, sculptured with a scene representing the worship of the Sun-god +in the temple of Sippar, these three symbols are shown with the +explanatory inscription:-- + + "The Moon-god, the Sun-god, and Istar, dwellers in the abyss, + Announce to the years what they are to expect;" + +possibly an astrological formula, but it may well mean--"announce +whether the years should expect twelve or thirteen months." + +As already pointed out, this method had one drawback; it gave a sidereal +year, not a tropical year, and this inconvenience must have been +discovered, and Capella substituted for the Twin stars, long before the +giving of the Law to Israel. The method employed by the priests of +watching the progress of the ripening of the barley overcame this +difficulty, and gave a year to Israel which, on the average, was a +correct tropical one. + +There is a detail in the history of the flood in Gen. vii. and viii. +which has been taken by some as meant to indicate the length of the +tropical year. + + "In the six hundredth year of Noah's life, in the second + month, the seventeenth day of the month, the same day were all + the fountains of the great deep broken up, and the windows of + heaven were opened." + + "And it came to pass in the six hundredth and first year, . . . + in the second month, on the seven and twentieth day of the + month, was the earth dried." + +The interval from the commencement of the deluge to its close was +therefore twelve lunar months and ten days; _i. e._ 364 or 365 days. +The beginning of the rain would, no doubt, be sharply marked; the end of +the drying would be gradual, and hence the selection of a day exactly +(so far as we can tell) a full tropical year from the beginning of the +flood would seem to be intentional. A complete year had been consumed by +the judgment. + +No such total interruption of the kindly succession of the seasons shall +ever occur again:-- + + "While the earth remaineth, seed-time and harvest, and cold + and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not + cease." + +The rain is no longer for judgment, but for blessing:-- + + "Thou visitest the earth, and waterest it, + Thou greatly enrichest it; + The river of God is full of water: + Thou providest them corn, when Thou hast so prepared the earth. + Thou waterest her furrows abundantly; + Thou settlest the ridges thereof: + Thou makest it soft with showers; + Thou blessest the springing thereof. + Thou crownest the year with Thy goodness." + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[311:1] P. I. Hershon, _Genesis with a Talmudical Commentary_, p. 30. + +[315:1] _Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society_, vol. xxxix. +p. 455. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +THE SABBATIC YEAR AND THE JUBILEE + + +The principle of the week with its sabbath of rest was carried partially +into the month, and completely into the year. The seventh month of the +year was marked out pre-eminently by the threefold character of its +services, though every seventh month was not distinguished. But the +weekly sabbath was expressed not only in days but in years, and was one +both of rest and of release. + +The sabbath of years was first enjoined from Mount Sinai, in the third +month after the departure from Egypt, certainly within a day or so, if +not on the actual day, of the second great feast of the year, variously +known to the Hebrews as the Feast of Firstfruits, or the Feast of Weeks, +and to us as Pentecost, that is Whitsuntide. It is most shortly given in +Exod. xxi. 2, and xxiii. 10, 11:-- + + "If thou buy an Hebrew servant, six years he shall serve: and + in the seventh he shall go out free for nothing." + + "Six years thou shalt sow thy land, and shalt gather in the + fruits thereof: but the seventh year thou shalt let it rest + and lie still; that the poor of thy people may eat: and what + they leave the beasts of the field shall eat. In like manner + thou shalt deal with thy vineyard, and with thy oliveyard." + +These laws are given at greater length and with fuller explanation in +the twenty-fifth chapter of the Book of Leviticus. In addition there is +given a promise of blessing for the fulfilment of the laws, and, in the +twenty-sixth chapter, a sign to follow on their breach. + + "If ye shall say, What shall we eat the seventh year? behold, + we shall not sow, nor gather in our increase: then I will + command My blessing upon you in the sixth year, and it shall + bring forth fruit for three years. And ye shall sow the eighth + year, and eat yet of old fruit until the ninth year: until her + fruits come in ye shall eat of the old store." + + "Ye shall keep My sabbaths . . . and if ye walk contrary unto + Me . . . I will scatter you among the heathen, and will draw + out a sword after you: and your land shall be desolate, and + your cities waste. Then shall the land enjoy her sabbaths, as + long as it lieth desolate, and ye be in your enemies' land; + even then shall the land rest, and enjoy her sabbaths. As long + as it lieth desolate it shall rest; because it did not rest in + your sabbaths, when ye dwelt upon it." + +In the fifteenth chapter of the Book of Deuteronomy this sabbatic year +is called a year of release. The specific injunctions here relate to +loans made to a Hebrew and to a foreigner, and to the taking of a Hebrew +into bondage. The laws as to loans had direct reference to the sabbath +of the land, for since only Hebrews might possess the Holy Land, +interest on a debt might not be exacted from a Hebrew in the sabbatic +year, as the land did not then yield him wherewith he might pay. But +loans to foreigners would be necessarily for commercial, not +agricultural, purposes, and since commerce was not interdicted in the +sabbatic year, interest on loans to foreigners might be exacted. +Warning was given that the loans to a poor Hebrew should not be withheld +because the sabbatic year was close at hand. The rules with respect to +the Hebrew sold for debt into bondage are the same as those given in the +Book of the Exodus. + +In Deuteronomy it was also enjoined that-- + + "at the end of every seven years, in the solemnity of the year + of release, in the Feast of Tabernacles" (that is, in the + feast of the seventh month), "when all Israel is come to + appear before the Lord thy God in the place which He shall + choose, thou shalt read this law before all Israel in their + hearing." + +We find no more mention of the sabbatic year until the reign of +Zedekiah, the last king of Judah. He had made a covenant with all the +people which were at Jerusalem, to proclaim liberty unto them, that +every Hebrew bondservant should go free, but the princes and all the +people caused their Hebrew bondservants to return and be in subjection +to them. Then Jeremiah the prophet was sent to remind them of the +covenant made with their fathers when they were brought out from the +land of Egypt, from the house of bondmen; and in the Second Book of +Chronicles it is said that the sign of the breaking of this covenant, +already quoted from the Book of Leviticus, was being accomplished. The +Captivity was-- + + "to fulfil the word of the Lord by the mouth of Jeremiah, + until the land had enjoyed her sabbaths: for as long as she + lay desolate she kept sabbath, to fulfil three-score and ten + years." + +After the exile, we find one reference to the sabbatic year in the +covenant sealed by the princes, Levites, and priests and people, in the +Book of Nehemiah:-- + + "That we would leave the seventh year, and the exaction of + every debt." + +Just as the Feast of Weeks was bound to the Feast of the Passover by +numbering seven sabbaths from the day of the wave-offering--"even unto +the morrow after the seventh sabbath shall ye number fifty days:"--so +the year of Jubilee was bound to the sabbatic year:-- + + "Thou shalt number seven sabbaths of years unto thee, seven + times seven years; and the space of the seven sabbaths of + years shall be unto thee forty and nine years. Then shalt thou + cause the trumpet of the Jubile to sound on the tenth day of + the seventh month, in the day of atonement shall ye make the + trumpet sound throughout all your land. And ye shall hallow + the fiftieth year, and proclaim liberty throughout all the + land unto all the inhabitants thereof: it shall be a Jubile + unto you; and ye shall return every man unto his possession, + and ye shall return every man unto his family." + +In this year of Jubilee all land, and village houses, and the houses of +the Levites were to revert to their original owners. These, in other +words, could be leased only, and not bought outright, the price of the +lease depending upon the number of years until the next Jubilee. A +foreigner might not buy a Hebrew outright as a bondslave; he could but +contract with him as a servant hired for a term; this contract might be +abolished by the payment of a sum dependent on the number of years until +the next year of Jubilee, and in any case the Hebrew servant and his +family must go out free at the year of Jubilee. In the last chapter of +the Book of Numbers we get a reference again to the year of Jubilee, and +indirect allusions to it are made by Isaiah, in "the acceptable year of +the Lord" when liberty should be proclaimed, and in "the year of the +redeemed." In his prophecy of the restoration of Israel, Ezekiel +definitely refers to "the year of liberty," when the inheritance that +has been granted to a servant shall return again to the prince. + +The interpretation of the sabbatic year and the year of Jubilee has +greatly exercised commentators. At what season did the sabbatic year +begin? was it coterminous with the ecclesiastical year; or did it differ +from it by six months? Was the year of Jubilee held once in every +forty-nine years or once in every fifty? did it begin at the same season +as the sabbatic year? did it interrupt the reckoning of the sabbatic +year, so that a new cycle commenced immediately after the year of +Jubilee; or was the sabbatic year every seventh, irrespective of the +year of Jubilee? did the year of Jubilee always follow immediately on a +sabbatic year, or did this only happen occasionally? + +The problem will be much simpler if it is borne in mind that the Law, as +originally proclaimed, was eminently practical and for practical men. +The period of pedantry, of hair-splitting, of slavery to mere +technicalities, came very late in Jewish history. + +It is clear from what has been already said in the chapter on the year, +that the only calendar year in the Old Testament was the sacred one, +beginning with the month Abib or Nisan, in the spring. At the same time +the Jews, like ourselves, would occasionally refer vaguely to the +beginning, or the end, or the course of the year, without meaning to set +up any hard and fast connection with the authorized calendar. + +Now it is perfectly clear that the sabbatic year cannot have begun with +the first day of the month Abib, because the first fruits were offered +on the fifteenth of that month. That being so, the ploughing and the +sowing must have taken place very considerably earlier. It is not +possible to suppose that the Hebrew farmer would plough and sow his land +in the last months of the previous year, knowing that he could not reap +during the sabbatic year. + +Similarly, it seems hardly likely that it was considered as beginning +with the first of Tishri, inasmuch as the harvest festival, the Feast of +the Ingathering, or Tabernacles, took place in the middle of that month. +The plain and practical explanation is that, after the Feast of +Tabernacles of the sixth year, the farmer would not again plough, sow, +or reap his land until after the Feast of Tabernacles in the sabbatic +year. The sabbatic year, in other words, was a simple agricultural year, +and it did not correspond exactly with the ecclesiastical or with any +calendar year. + +For practical purposes the sabbatic year therefore ended with the close +of the Feast of Tabernacles, when the Law was read before the whole +people according to the command of Moses; and it practically began a +year earlier. + +The year of Jubilee appears in the directions of Lev. xxv. to have been +most distinctly linked to the sabbatic year. + + "The space of the seven sabbaths of years shall be unto thee + forty and nine years, . . . and ye shall hallow the fiftieth + year, and proclaim liberty throughout all the land unto all + the inhabitants thereof: it shall be a Jubile unto you." + +It would seem, therefore, that just as the week of days ran on +continuously, uninterrupted by any feasts or fasts, so the week of years +ran on continuously. And as the Feast of Pentecost was the 49th day from +the offering of the first-fruits on the morrow of the Passover, so the +Jubilee was the 49th year from the "morrow" of a sabbatic year; it +followed immediately after a sabbatic year. The Jubilee was thus the +49th year from the previous Jubilee; it was the 50th from the particular +sabbatic year from which the original reckoning was made. + +Actually the year of Jubilee began before the sabbatic year was +completed, because the trumpet of the Jubilee was to be blown upon the +Day of Atonement, the 10th day of the seventh month--that is to say, +whilst the sabbatic year was yet in progress. Indeed, literally +speaking, this trumpet, "loud of sound," blown on the 10th day of the +seventh month, _was_ the Jubilee, that is to say, the sound of +rejoicing, the joyful sound. A difficulty comes in here. The Israelites +were commanded-- + + "Ye shall not sow, neither reap that which groweth of itself + in it, nor gather the grapes in it of thy vine undressed. For + it is the Jubile; it shall be holy unto you: ye shall eat the + increase thereof out of the field." + +This would appear to mean that the Jubilee extended over a whole year +following a sabbatic year, so that the land lay fallow for two +consecutive years. But this seems negatived by two considerations. It is +expressly laid down in the same chapter (Lev. xxv. 22) that the +Israelites were to sow in the eighth year--that is to say, in the year +after a sabbatic year, and the year of Jubilee would be always a year of +this character. Further, if the next sabbatic year was the seventh after +the one preceding the Jubilee, then the land would be tilled for only +five consecutive years, not for six, though this is expressly commanded +in Lev. xxv. 3. If, on the contrary, it was tilled for six years, then +the run of the sabbatic years would be interrupted. + +The explanation of this difficulty may possibly be found in the fact +that that which distinguished the year of Jubilee was something which +did not run through the whole circuit of the seasons. The land in that +year was to return to its original owners. The freehold of the land was +never sold; the land was inalienable, and in the year of Jubilee it +reverted. "In the year of this Jubile ye shall return every man unto his +possession." + +It is quite clear that it could not have been left to the caprice of the +owners of property as to when this transfer took place, or as to when +such Hebrews as had fallen through poverty into slavery should be +liberated. If the time were made optional, grasping men would put it off +till the end of the year, and sooner or later that would be the general +rule. There can be no doubt that the blowing of the trumpet on the 10th +day of the seventh month was the proclamation of liberty throughout all +the land and to all the inhabitants thereof; and that the transfer of +the land must have taken place at the same time. The slave would return +to the possession of his ancestors in time to keep, as a freeman, the +Feast of Tabernacles on his own land. The four days between the great +day of Atonement and the Feast of Tabernacles were sufficient for this +change to be carried out. + +The term "Year of Jubilee" is therefore not to be taken as signifying +that the events of the Jubilee were spread over twelve months, but +simply, that it was the year in which the restoration of the Jubilee was +accomplished. We speak of the king's "coronation year," though his +coronation took place on but a single day, and the meaning that we +should attach to the phrase would depend upon the particular sense in +which we were using the word "year." Whilst, therefore, the Jubilee +itself was strictly defined by the blowing of trumpets on the 10th day +of the seventh month, it would be perfectly correct to give the title, +"year of Jubilee," to any year, no matter in what season it commenced, +that contained the day of that proclamation of liberty. It is also +correct to say that it was the fiftieth year because it was placed at +the very end of the forty-ninth year. + +The difficulty still remains as to the meaning of the prohibition to sow +or reap in the year of Jubilee. The command certainly reads as if the +land was to lie fallow for two consecutive years; but it would seem an +impracticable arrangement that the poor man returning to his inheritance +should be forbidden to plough or sow until more than a twelvemonth had +elapsed, and hence that he should be forbidden to reap until nearly two +full years had run their course. It also, as already stated, seems +directly contrary to the command to sow in the eighth year, which would +also be the fiftieth. It may therefore be meant simply to emphasize the +prohibition to sow and reap in the sabbatic year immediately preceding +the Jubilee. The temptation would be great to a grasping man to get the +most he could out of the land before parting with it for ever. + +In spite of the strong array of commentators who claim that the Jubilees +were to be held every fifty years as we moderns should compute it, there +can be no doubt but that they followed each other at the same interval +as every seventh sabbatic year; in other words, that they were held +every 49 years. This is confirmed by an astronomical consideration. +Forty-nine years make a convenient luni-solar cycle, reconciling the +lunar month and the tropical solar year. Though not so good as the +Metonic cycle of 19 years, it is quite a practical one, as the following +table will show:-- + + 3 years = 1095.73 days : 37 months = 1092.63 days + 8 " = 2921.94 " : 99 " = 2923.53 " + 11 " = 4017.66 " : 136 " = 4016.16 " + 19 " = 6939.60 " : 235 " = 6939.69 " + 49 " = 17896.87 " : 606 " = 17895.54 " + 60 " = 21914.53 " : 742 " = 21911.70 " + +The cycle of 49 years would therefore be amply good enough to guide the +priestly authorities in drawing up their calendar in cases where there +was some ambiguity due to the interruption of observations of the moon, +and this was all that could be needed so long as the nation of Israel +remained in its own land. + +The cycle of 8 years is added above, since it has been stated that the +Jews of Alexandria adopted this at one time from the Greeks. This was +not so good as the cycle of 11 years would have been, and not to be +compared with the combination of the two cycles in that of 19 years +ascribed to Meton. The latter cycle was adopted by the Babylonian Jews, +and forms the basis of the Jewish calendar in use to-day. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +THE CYCLES OF DANIEL + + +The cycle of 49 years, marked out by the return of the Jubilee, was a +useful and practical one. It supplied, in fact, all that the Hebrews, in +that age, required for the purposes of their calendar. The Babylonian +basic number, 60, would have given--as will be seen from the table in +the last chapter--a distinctly less accurate correspondence between the +month and the tropical year. + +There is another way of looking at the regulations for the Jubilee, +which brings out a further significant relation. On the 10th day of the +first month of any year, the lamb was selected for the Passover. On the +10th day of the seventh month of any year was the great Day of +Atonement. From the 10th day of the first month of the first year after +a Jubilee to the next blowing of the Jubilee trumpet on the great Day of +Atonement, was 600 months, that is 50 complete lunar years. And the same +interval necessarily held good between the Passover of that first year +and the Feast of Tabernacles of the forty-ninth year. The Passover +recalled the deliverance of Israel from the bondage of Egypt; and in +like manner, the release to be given to the Hebrew slave at the year of +Jubilee was expressly connected with the memory of that national +deliverance. + + "For they are My servants, which I brought forth out of the + land of Egypt: they shall not be sold as bondmen." + +The day of Jubilee fell in the middle of the ecclesiastical year. From +the close of the year of Jubilee--that is to say, of the ecclesiastical +year in which the freeing, both of the bondmen and of the land, took +place--to the next day of Jubilee was 48-1/2 solar years, or--as seen +above--600 lunations, or 50 lunar years, so that there can be no doubt +that the period was expressly designed to exhibit this cycle, a cycle +which shows incidentally a very correct knowledge of the true lengths of +the lunation and solar year. + +This cycle was possessed by no other nation of antiquity; therefore the +Hebrews borrowed it from none; and since they did not borrow the cycle, +neither could they have borrowed the ritual with which that cycle was +interwoven. + +That the Hebrews possessed this knowledge throws some light upon an +incident in the early life of the prophet Daniel. + + "In the third year of the reign of Jehoiakim king of Judah + came Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon unto Jerusalem, and + besieged it. . . . And the king spake unto Ashpenaz the master + of his eunuchs, that he should bring certain of the children + of Israel, and of the king's seed, and of the princes; + children in whom was no blemish, but well favoured, and + skilful in all wisdom, and cunning in knowledge, and + understanding science, and such as had ability in them to + stand in the king's palace, and whom they might teach the + learning and the tongue of the Chaldeans. . . . Now among + these were of the children of Judah, Daniel, Hananiah, + Mishael, and Azariah: unto whom the prince of the eunuchs gave + names: for he gave unto Daniel the name of Belteshazzar; and + to Hananiah, of Shadrach; and to Mishael, of Meshach; and to + Azariah, of Abed-nego. . . . As for these four children, God + gave them knowledge and skill in all learning and wisdom; and + Daniel had understanding in all visions and dreams. Now at the + end of the days that the king had said he should bring them + in, then the prince of the eunuchs brought them in before + Nebuchadnezzar. And the king communed with them; and among + them all was found none like Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and + Azariah: therefore stood they before the king. And in all + matters of wisdom and understanding, that the king inquired of + them, he found them ten times better than all the magicians + and astrologers that were in all his realm." + +The Hebrew children that king Nebuchadnezzar desired to be brought were +to be already possessed of knowledge; they were to be further instructed +in the learning and tongue of the Chaldeans. But when the four Hebrew +children were brought before the king, and he communed with them, he +found them wiser than his own wise men. + +No account is given of the questions asked by the king, or of the +answers made by the four young Hebrews; so it is merely a conjecture +that possibly some question bearing on the calendar may have come up. +But if it did, then certainly the information within the grasp of the +Hebrews could not have failed to impress the king. + +We know how highly the Greeks esteemed the discovery by Meton, in the +86th Olympiad, of that relation between the movements of the sun and +moon, which gives the cycle of nineteen years, and similar knowledge +would certainly have given king Nebuchadnezzar a high opinion of the +young captives. + +But there is evidence, from certain numbers in the book which bears his +name, that Daniel was acquainted with luni-solar cycles which quite +transcended that of the Jubilees in preciseness, and indicate a +knowledge such as was certainly not to be found in any other ancient +nation. The numbers themselves are used in a prophetic context, so that +the meaning of the whole is veiled, but astronomical knowledge +underlying the use of these numbers is unmistakably there. + +One of these numbers is found in the eighth chapter. + + "How long shall be the vision concerning the daily sacrifice, + and the transgression of desolation, to give both the + sanctuary and the host to be trodden under foot? And he said + unto me, Unto two thousand and three hundred days; then shall + the sanctuary be cleansed." + +The twelfth chapter gives the other number, but in a more veiled form:-- + + "And I heard the man clothed in linen, which was upon the + waters of the river, when he held up his right hand and his + left hand unto heaven, and sware by Him that liveth for ever + that it shall be for a time, times, and an half; and when he + shall have accomplished to scatter the power of the holy + people, all these things shall be finished." + +The numerical significance of the "time, times and an half," or, as it +is expressed in the seventh chapter of Daniel, "until a time, and times, +and the dividing of time," is plainly shown by the corresponding +expressions in the Apocalypse, where "a time and times and half a time" +would appear to be given elsewhere both as "forty and two months" and +"a thousand, two hundred and three-score days." Forty-two conventional +months--that is of 30 days each--make up 1260 days, whilst 3-1/2 +conventional years of 360 days--that is twelve months of 30 days +each--make up the same period. The word "times" is expressly used as +equivalent to years in the eleventh chapter of Daniel, where it is said +that the king of the north "shall come on at the end of the times, even +of years, with a great army and with much substance." Then, again in the +vision which Nebuchadnezzar had previous to his madness, he heard the +watcher and the holy one cry concerning him:-- + + "Let his heart be changed from man's, and let a beast's heart + be given unto him; and let seven times pass over him." + +It has been generally understood that the "seven times" in this latter +case meant "seven years." The "time, times and an half" are obviously +meant as the half of "seven times." + +The two numbers, 2,300 and 1,260, whatever be their significance in +their particular context in these prophecies, have an unmistakable +astronomical bearing, as the following table will show:-- + + 2,300 solar years = 840,057 days, 1 hour. + 28,447 lunar months = 840,056 " 16 hours. + difference = 9 " + 1,260 solar years = 460,205 " 4 " + 15,584 lunar months = 460,204 " 17 " + difference = " 11 " + +If the one number 1,260 stood alone, the fact that it was so close a +lunar cycle might easily be ascribed to a mere coincidence. Seven is a +sacred number, and the days in the year may be conventionally +represented as 360. Half the product of the two might, perhaps, seem to +be a natural number to adopt for symbolic purposes. But the number 2,300 +stands in quite a different category. It is not suggested by any +combination of sacred numbers, and is not veiled under any mystic +expression; the number is given as it stands--2,300. But 2,300 solar +years is an exact number, not only of lunations, but also of +"anomalistic" months. The "anomalistic month" is the time occupied by +the moon in travelling from its perigee, that is its point of nearest +approach to the earth, round to its perigee again. For the moon's orbit +round the earth is not circular, but decidedly elliptical; the moon +being 31,000 miles nearer to us at perigee than it is at apogee, its +point of greatest distance. But it moves more rapidly when near perigee +than when near apogee, so that its motion differs considerably from +perfect uniformity. + +But the period in which the moon travels from her perigee round to +perigee again is 27 days, 13 hours, 18 minutes, 37 seconds, and there +are in 2,300 solar years almost exactly 30,487 such periods or +anomalistic months, which amount to 840,057 days, 2 hours. + +If we take the mean of these three periods, that is to say 840,057 days, +as being the cycle, it brings into harmony the day, the anomalistic +month, the ordinary month, and the solar year. It is from this point of +view the most perfect cycle known. + +Dr. H. Grattan Guinness[343:1] has shown what a beautifully simple and +accurate calendar could have been constructed on the basis of this +period of 2,300 years; thus:-- + + 2,300 solar years contain 28,447 synodic months, of which 847 + are intercalary, or epact months. 2,300 years are 840,057 + days: + + Days. + 27,600 {13,800 non-intercalary mths. of 29 d. each = 400,200 + {13,800 " " " " 30 " = 414,000 + 847 {423 intercalary months of 30 days each = 12,690 + {424 " " " 31 " " = 13,144 + 23 days additional for the 23 centuries = 23 + ------- + 840,057 + +The Jewish calendar on this system would have consisted of ordinary +months, alternately 29 and 30 days in length. The intercalary months +would have contained alternately 30 or 31 days, and once in every +century one of the ordinary months would have had an additional day. Or, +what would come to very much the same thing, this extra day might have +been added at every alternate Jubilee. + +By combining these two numbers of Daniel some cycles of extreme +astronomical interest have been derived by De Cheseaux, a Swiss +astronomer of the eighteenth century, and by Dr. H. Grattan Guinness, +and Dr. W. Bell Dawson in our own times. Thus, the difference between +2,300 and 1,260 is 1,040, and 1,040 years give an extremely exact +correspondence between the solar year and the month, whilst the mean of +the two numbers gives us 1,780, and 1,780 lunar years is 1,727 solar +years with extreme precision. But since these are not given directly in +the Book of Daniel, and are only inferential from his numbers, there +seems no need to comment upon them here. + +It is fair, however, to conclude that Daniel was aware of the Metonic +cycle. The 2300-year cycle gives evidence of a more accurate knowledge +of the respective lengths of month and year than is involved in the +cycle of 19 years. And the latter is a cycle which a Jew would be +naturally led to detect, as the number of intercalary months contained +in it is seven, the Hebrew sacred number. + +The Book of Daniel, therefore, itself proves to us that king +Nebuchadnezzar was perfectly justified in the high estimate which he +formed of the attainments of the four Hebrew children. Certainly one of +them, Daniel, was a better instructed mathematician and astronomer than +any Chaldean who had ever been brought into his presence. + +We have the right to make this assertion, for now we have an immense +number of Babylonian records at our command; and can form a fairly +accurate estimate as to the state there of astronomical and mathematical +science at different epochs. A kind of "quasi-patriotism" has induced +some Assyriologists to confuse in their accounts of Babylonian +attainments the work of times close to the Christian era with that of +many centuries, if not of several millenniums earlier; and the times of +Sargon of Agade, whose reputed date is 3800 B.C., have seemed to be +credited with the astronomical work done in Babylon in the first and +second centuries before our era. This is much as if we should credit +our predecessors who lived in this island at the time of Abraham with +the scientific attainments of the present day. + +The earlier astronomical achievements at Babylon were not, in any real +sense, astronomical at all. They were simply the compilation of lists of +crude astrological omens, of the most foolish and unreasoning kind. Late +in Babylonian history there were observations of a high scientific +order; real observations of the positions of moon and planets, made with +great system and regularity. But these were made after Greek astronomy +had attained a high level, and Babylon had come under Greek rule. + +Whether this development of genuine astronomical observation was of +native origin, or was derived from their Greek masters, is not clear. If +it was native, then certainly the Babylonians were not able to use and +interpret the observations which they made nearly so well as were Greek +astronomers, such as Eudoxus, Thales, Pythagoras, Hipparchus and many +others. + +But it must not be supposed that, though their astronomical achievements +have been grossly, even ludicrously, exaggerated by some popular +writers, the Babylonians contributed nothing of value to the progress of +the science. We may infer from such a tablet as that already quoted on +page 320, when the equinox was observed on the 6th day of Nisan, since +there were 6 _kasbu_ of day and 6 _kasbu_ of night, that some mechanical +time-measurer was in use. Indeed, the record on one tablet has been +interpreted as noting that the astronomer's clock or clepsydra had +stopped. If this be so, then we owe to Babylon the invention of clocks +of some description, and from an astronomical point of view, this is of +the greatest importance. + +Tradition also points to the Chaldeans as the discoverers of the +_Saros_, the cycle of 18 years, 10 or 11 days, after which eclipses of +the sun or moon recur. The fact that very careful watch was kept every +month at the times of the new and of the full moon, at many different +stations, to note whether an eclipse would take place, would naturally +bring about the discovery of the period, sooner or later. + +The achievements of a nation will be in accordance with its temperament +and opportunities, and it is evident from the records which they have +left us that the Babylonians, though very superstitious, were a +methodical, practical, prosaic people, and a people of that order, if +they are numerous, and under strong rule, will go far and do much. The +discovery of the _Saros_ was such as was within their power, and was +certainly no small achievement. But it is to the Greeks, not to the +Babylonians, that we trace the beginnings of mathematics and planetary +theory. + +We look in vain amongst such Babylonian poetry as we possess for the +traces of a Homer, a Pindar, a Sophocles, or even of a poet fit to enter +into competition with those of the second rank in the literature of +Greece; while it must remain one of the literary mysteries of our time +that any one should deem the poetry of the books of Isaiah and Job +dependent on Babylonian inspiration. + +There were two great hindrances under which the Babylonian man of +science laboured: he was an idolater, and he was an astrologer. It is +not possible for us in our freedom to fully realize how oppressive was +the slavery of mind, as well as spirit, which was consequent upon this +twofold superstition. The Greek was freer, insomuch that he did not +worship the planets, and did not become a planetary astrologer until +after he had learnt that superstition from Chaldea; in learning it he +put an end to his scientific progress. + +But the Hebrew, if he was faithful to the Law that had been given to +him, was free in mind as well as in spirit. He could fearlessly inquire +into any and all the objects of nature, for these were but things--the +work of God's Hands, whereas he, made in the image of God, having the +right of intercourse with God, was the superior, the ruler of everything +he could see. + +His religious attitude therefore gave him a great superiority for +scientific advancement. Yet there was one phase of that attitude which, +whilst it preserved him from erroneous conceptions, tended to check that +spirit of curiosity which has led to so much of the scientific progress +of modern times. "What?" "How?" and "Why?" are the three questions which +man is always asking of nature, and to the Hebrew the answer to the +second and third was obvious:--It is the power of God: It is the will of +God. He did not need to invent for himself the crass absurdities of the +cosmogonies of the heathen; but neither was he induced to go behind the +appearances of things; the sufficient cause and explanation of all was +God. + +But of the appearances he was very observant, as I trust has become +clear in the course of this imperfect review of the traces of one +particular science as noticed in Holy Scripture. + +If he was faithful to the Law which had been given him, the Hebrew was +free in character as well as in mind. His spirit was not that of a +bondman, and Nebuchadnezzar certainly never met anything more noble, +anything more free, than the spirit of the men who answered him in the +very view of the burning fiery furnace:-- + + "O Nebuchadnezzar, we are not careful to answer thee in this + matter. If it be so, our God whom we serve is able to deliver + us from the burning fiery furnace, and He will deliver us out + of thine hand, O king. BUT IF NOT, be it known unto thee, O + king, that we will not serve thy gods, nor worship the golden + image which thou hast set up." + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[343:1] _Creation centred in Christ_, p. 344. + + +[Illustration: "SUN, STAND THOU STILL UPON GIBEON, AND THOU MOON IN THE +VALLEY OF AJALON."] + + + + +BOOK IV + +THREE ASTRONOMICAL MARVELS + + + + +CHAPTER I + +JOSHUA'S "LONG DAY"[351:1] + + +1.--METHOD OF STUDYING THE RECORD + +There are three incidents recorded in Holy Scripture which may fairly, +if with no great exactness, be termed astronomical miracles;--the "long +day" on the occasion of Joshua's victory at Beth-horon; the turning back +of the shadow on the dial of Ahaz, as a sign of king Hezekiah's recovery +from sickness; and the star which guided the wise men from the east to +the birthplace of the Holy Child at Bethlehem. + +As astronomy has some bearing on each of these three remarkable events, +it will be of some interest to examine each of them from the point of +view of our present astronomical knowledge. It does not follow that this +will throw any new light upon the narratives, for we must always bear in +mind that the Scriptures were not intended to teach us the physical +sciences; consequently we may find that the very details have been +omitted which an astronomer, if he were writing an account of an +astronomical observation, would be careful to preserve. And we must +further remember that we have not the slightest reason to suppose that +the sacred historians received any supernatural instruction in +scientific matters. Their knowledge of astronomy therefore was that +which they had themselves acquired from education and research, and +nothing more. In other words, the astronomy of the narrative must be +read strictly in the terms of the scientific advancement of the writers. + +But there is another thing that has also to be remembered. The narrative +which we have before us, being the only one that we have, must be +accepted exactly as it stands. That is the foundation of our inquiry; we +have no right to first cut it about at our will, to omit this, to alter +that, to find traces of two, three, or more original documents, and so +to split up the narrative as it stands into a number of imperfect +fragments, which by their very imperfection may seem to be more or less +in conflict. + +The scientific attitude with regard to the record of an observation +cannot be too clearly defined. If that record be the only one, then we +may accept it, we may reject it, we may be obliged to say, "We do not +understand it," or "It is imperfect, and we can make no use of it," but +we must not alter it. A moment's reflection will show that a man who +would permit himself to tamper with the sole evidence upon which he +purports to work, no matter how profoundly convinced he may be that his +proposed corrections are sound, is one who does not understand the +spirit of science, and is not going the way to arrive at scientific +truth. + +There is no need then to inquire as to whether the tenth chapter of the +Book of Joshua comes from two or more sources; we take the narrative as +it stands. And it is one which has, for the astronomer, an interest +quite irrespective of any interpretation which he may place upon the +account of the miracle which forms its central incident. For Joshua's +exclamation:-- + + "Sun, stand thou still upon Gibeon; + And thou, Moon, in the valley of Ajalon," + +implies that, at the moment of his speaking, the two heavenly bodies +appeared to him to be, the one upon or over Gibeon, the other over the +valley of Ajalon. We have therefore, in effect, a definite astronomical +observation; interesting in itself, as being one of the oldest that has +been preserved to us; doubly interesting in the conclusions that we are +able to deduce from it. + +The idea which has been most generally formed of the meaning of Joshua's +command, is, that he saw Gibeon in the distance on the horizon in one +direction with the sun low down in the sky immediately above it, and the +valley of Ajalon in the distance, on the horizon in another direction, +with the moon low down in the sky above it. + +It would be quite natural to associate the sun and moon with distant +objects if they were only some five or six degrees high; it would be +rather straining the point to do so if they were more than ten degrees +high; and if they were fifteen or more degrees high, it would be quite +impossible. + +They could not be both in the same quarter of the sky; both rising or +both setting. For this would mean that the moon was not only very near +the sun in the sky, but was very near to conjunction--in other words, to +new moon. She could, therefore, have only shown a slender thread of +light, and it is perfectly certain that Joshua, facing the sun in such a +country as southern Palestine could not possibly have perceived the thin +pale arch of light, which would have been all that the moon could then +have presented to him. Therefore the one must have been rising and the +other setting, and Joshua must have been standing between Gibeon and the +valley of Ajalon, so that the two places were nearly in opposite +directions from him. The moon must have been in the west and the sun in +the east, for the valley of Ajalon is west of Gibeon. That is to say, it +cannot have been more than an hour after sunrise, and it cannot have +been more than an hour before moonset. Adopting therefore the usual +explanation of Joshua's words, we see at once that the common idea of +the reason for Joshua's command to the sun, namely, that the day was +nearly over, and that he desired the daylight to be prolonged, is quite +mistaken. If the sun was low down in the sky, he would have had +practically the whole of the day still before him. + + +2.--BEFORE THE BATTLE + +Before attempting to examine further into the nature of the miracle, it +will be well to summarize once again the familiar history of the early +days of the Hebrew invasion of Canaan. We are told that the passage of +the Jordan took place on the tenth day of the first month; and that the +Feast of the Passover was held on the fourteenth day of that month. +These are the only two positive dates given us. The week of the Pascal +celebrations would have occupied the time until the moon's last quarter. +Then preparations were made for the siege of Jericho, and another week +passed in the daily processions round the city before the moment came +for its destruction, which must have been very nearly at the beginning +of the second month of the year. Jericho having been destroyed, Joshua +next ordered a reconnaissance of Ai, a small fortified town, some twenty +miles distant, and some 3400 feet above the Israelite camp at Gilgal, +and commanding the upper end of the valley of Achor, the chief ravine +leading up from the valley of the Jordan. The reconnaissance was +followed by an attack on the town, which resulted in defeat. From the +dejection into which this reverse had thrown him Joshua was roused by +the information that the command to devote the spoil of Jericho to utter +destruction had been disobeyed. A searching investigation was held; it +was found that Achan, one of the Israelite soldiers, had seized for +himself a royal robe and an ingot of gold; he was tried, condemned and +executed, and the army of Israel was absolved from his guilt. A second +attack was made upon Ai; the town was taken; and the road was made +clear for Israel to march into the heart of the country, in order to +hold the great religious ceremony of the reading of the law upon the +mountains of Ebal and Gerizim, which had been commanded them long +before. No note is given of the date when this ceremony took place, but +bearing in mind that the second month of the year must have begun at the +time of the first reconnaissance of Ai, and that the original giving of +the Law upon Mount Sinai had taken place upon the third day of the third +month, it seems most likely that that anniversary would be chosen for a +solemnity which was intended to recall the original promulgation in the +most effective manner. If this were so, it would account for the +circumstance, which would otherwise have seemed so strange, that Joshua +should have attacked two cities only, Jericho and Ai, and then for a +time have held his hand. It was the necessity of keeping the great +national anniversary on the proper day which compelled him to desist +from his military operations after Ai was taken. + +We are not told how long the religious celebrations at Shechem lasted, +but in any case the Israelites can hardly have been back in their camp +at Gilgal before the third moon of the year was at the full. But after +their return, events must have succeeded each other with great rapidity. +The Amorites must have regarded the pilgrimage of Israel to Shechem as +an unhoped-for respite, and they took advantage of it to organize a +great confederacy. Whilst this confederacy was being formed, the rulers +of a small state of "Hivites"--by which we must understand a community +differing either in race or habits from the generality of their Amorite +neighbours--had been much exercised by the course of events. They had +indeed reason to be. Ai, the last conquest of Israel, was less than four +miles, as the crow flies, from Bireh, which is usually identified with +Beeroth, one of the four cities of the Hivite State; and the Beerothites +had, without doubt, watched the cloud of smoke go up from the burning +town when it was sacked; and the mound which now covered what had been +so recently their neighbour city, was visible almost from their gates. +That was an object-lesson which required no enforcement. The Hivites, +sure that otherwise their turn would come next, resolved to make peace +with Israel before they were attacked. + +[Illustration: MAP OF SOUTHERN PALESTINE. + +Amorite Cities, _thus_: HEBRON. Hivite Cities: _BEEROTH_. + +Places taken by the Israelites: _Jericho_. + +Conjectural line of march of Joshua: ...................] + +To do this they had to deceive the Israelites into believing that they +were inhabitants of some land far from Canaan, and this they must do, +not only before Joshua actually attacked them, but before he sent out +another scouting party. For Beeroth would inevitably have been the very +first town which it would have approached, and once Joshua's spies had +surveyed it, all chance of the Hivites successfully imposing upon him +would have vanished. + +But they were exposed to another danger, if possible more urgent still. +The headquarters of the newly formed Amorite league was at Jerusalem, on +the same plateau as Gibeon, the Hivite capital, and distant from it less +than six miles. A single spy, a single traitor, during the anxious time +that their defection was being planned, and Adoni-zedec, the king of +Jerusalem, would have heard of it in less than a couple of hours; and +the Gibeonites would have been overwhelmed before Joshua had any inkling +that they were anxious to treat with him. Whoever was dilatory, whoever +was slow, the Gibeonites dared not be. It can, therefore, have been, at +most, only a matter of hours after Joshua's return to Gilgal, before +their wily embassy set forth. + +But their defection had an instant result. Adoni-zedec recognized in a +moment the urgency of the situation. With Joshua in possession of Gibeon +and its dependencies, the Israelites would be firmly established on the +plateau at his very gates, and the states of southern Palestine would be +cut off from their brethren in the north. + +Adoni-zedec lost no time; he sought and obtained the aid of four +neighbouring kings and marched upon Gibeon. The Gibeonites sent at once +the most urgent message to acquaint Joshua with their danger, and Joshua +as promptly replied. He made a forced march with picked troops all that +night up from Gilgal, and next day he was at their gates. + +Counterblow had followed blow, swift as the clash of rapiers in a duel +of fencers. All three of the parties concerned--Hivite, Amorite and +Israelite--had moved with the utmost rapidity. And no wonder; the stake +for which they were playing was very existence, and the forfeit, which +would be exacted on failure, was extinction. + + +3.--DAY, HOUR, AND PLACE OF THE MIRACLE + +The foregoing considerations enable us somewhat to narrow down the time +of the year at which Joshua's miracle can have taken place, and from an +astronomical point of view this is very important. The Israelites had +entered the land of Canaan on the 10th day of the first month, that is +to say, very shortly after the spring equinox--March 21 of our present +calendar. Seven weeks after that equinox--May 11--the sun attains a +declination of 18 deg. north. From this time its declination increases day +by day until the summer solstice, when, in Joshua's time, it was nearly +24 deg. north. After that it slowly diminishes, and on August 4 it is 18 deg. +again. For twelve weeks, therefore--very nearly a quarter of the entire +year--the sun's northern declination is never less than 18 deg.. The date of +the battle must have fallen somewhere within this period. It cannot have +fallen earlier; the events recorded could not possibly have all been +included in the seven weeks following the equinox. Nor, in view of the +promptitude with which all the contending parties acted, and were bound +to act, can we postpone the battle to a later date than the end of this +midsummer period. + +We thus know, roughly speaking, what was the declination of the +sun--that is to say, its distance from the equator of the heavens--at +the time of the battle; it was not less than 18 deg. north of the equator, +it could not have been more than 24 deg.. + +But, if we adopt the idea most generally formed of the meaning of +Joshua's command, namely, that he saw the sun low down over Gibeon in +one direction, and the moon low down over the valley of Ajalon in +another, we can judge of the apparent bearing of those two heavenly +bodies from an examination of the map. And since, if we may judge from +the map of the Palestine Exploration Fund, the valley of Ajalon lies +about 17 deg. north of west from Gibeon, and runs nearly in that direction +from it, the moon must, to Joshua, have seemed about 17 deg. north of west, +and the sun 17 deg. south of east. + +But for any date within the three summer months, the sun in the +latitude of Gibeon, when it bears 17 deg. south of east, must be at least +56 deg. high. At this height it would seem overhead, and would not give the +slightest idea of association with any distant terrestrial object. Not +until some weeks after the autumnal equinox could the sun be seen low +down on the horizon in the direction 17 deg. south of east, and at the same +time the moon be as much as 17 deg. north of the west point. And, as this +would mean that the different combatants had remained so close to each +other, some four or five months without moving, it is clearly +inadmissible. We are forced therefore to the unexpected conclusion that +_it is practically impossible that Joshua could have been in any place +from whence he could have seen, at one and the name moment; the sun low +down in the sky over Gibeon, and the moon over the valley of Ajalon_. + +Is the narrative in error, then? Or have we been reading into it our own +erroneous impression? Is there any other sense in which a man would +naturally speak of a celestial body as being "over" some locality on the +earth, except when both were together on his horizon? + +Most certainly. There is another position which the sun can hold in +which it may naturally be said to be "over," or "upon" a given place; +far more naturally and accurately than when it chances to lie in the +same direction as some object on the horizon. We have no experience of +that position in these northern latitudes, and hence perhaps our +commentators have, as a rule, not taken it into account. But those who, +in tropical or sub-tropical countries, have been in the open at high +noon, when a man's foot can almost cover his shadow, will recognize how +definite, how significant such a position is. In southern Palestine, +during the three summer months, the sun is always so near the zenith at +noon that it could never occur to any one to speak of it as anything but +"overhead." + +And the prose narrative expressly tells us that this was the case. It is +intimated that when Joshua spoke it was noon, by the expression that the +sun "hasted not to go down about a whole day," implying that the change +in the rate in its apparent motion occurred only in the afternoon, and +that it had reached its culmination. Further, as not a few commentators +have pointed out, the expression,--"the sun stood still in the midst of +heaven,"--is literally "in the bisection of heaven"; a phrase applicable +indeed to any position on the meridian, but especially appropriate to +the meridian close to the zenith. + +This, then, is what Joshua meant by his command to the sun. Its glowing +orb blazed almost in the centre of the whole celestial vault--"in the +midst of heaven"--and poured down its vertical rays straight on his +head. It stood over him--it stood over the place where he was--Gibeon. + +We have, therefore, been able to find that the narrative gives us, by +implication, two very important particulars, the place where Joshua was, +and the time of the day. He was at Gibeon, and it was high noon. + +The expression, "Thou, Moon, in the valley of Ajalon," has now a very +definite signification. As we have already seen, the valley of Ajalon +bears 17 deg. north of west from Gibeon, according to the map of the +Palestine Exploration Fund, so that this is the azimuth which the moon +had at the given moment. In other words, it was almost exactly midway +between the two "points of the compass," W.b.N. and W.N.W. It was also +in its "last quarter" or nearly so; that is, it was half-full, and +waning. With the sun on the meridian it could not have been much more +than half-full, for in that case it would have already set; nor much +less than half-full, or it would have been too faint to be seen in full +daylight. It was therefore almost exactly half-full, and the day was +probably the 21st day of the month in the Jewish reckoning. + +[Illustration: BEARINGS OF THE RISING AND SETTING POINTS OF THE SUN FROM +GIBEON.] + +But the moon cannot be as far as 17 deg. north of west in latitude 31 deg. 51' +N. on the 21st day of the month earlier than the fourth month of the +Jewish year, or later than the eighth month. Now the 21st day of the +fourth month is about seven weeks after the 3rd day of the third month; +the 21st day of the fifth month is eleven weeks. Remembering how close +Gilgal, Gibeon and Jerusalem were to each other, and how important was +the need for promptitude to Israelite and Amorite alike, it can scarcely +be disputed that eleven weeks is an inadmissible length of time to +interpose between the reading of the Law and the battle; and that seven +weeks is the utmost that can be allowed. + +The battle took place, then, on or about the 21st day of the fourth +month. But it could only have done so if that particular year began +late. If the year had begun earlier than April 1st of our present +calendar, the moon could not have been so far north on the day named. +For the Jewish calendar is a natural one and regulated both by the sun +and the moon. It begins with the new moon, and it also begins as nearly +as possible with the spring equinox. But as twelve natural months fall +short of a solar year by eleven days, a thirteenth month has to be +intercalated from time to time; in every nineteen years, seven are years +having an extra month. Now the 21st day of the fourth month must have +fallen on or about July 22 according to our present reckoning, in order +that the moon might have sufficient northing, and that involves a year +beginning after April 1; so that the year of the battle of Beth-horon +must have been an ordinary year, one of twelve months, but must have +followed a year of thirteen months. + +Summarizing all the conclusions at which we have now arrived, Joshua's +observation was made at Gibeon itself, almost precisely at the moment of +noon, on or about the 21st day of the fourth month, which day fell late +in July according to our present reckoning; probably on or about the +22nd. The sun's declination must have been about 20 deg. north; probably, if +anything, a little more. The sun rose therefore almost exactly at five +in the morning, and set almost exactly at seven in the evening, the day +being just fourteen hours long. The moon had not yet passed her third +quarter, but was very near it; that is to say, she was about half full. +Her declination did not differ greatly from 16 deg. north; she was probably +about 5 deg. above the horizon, and was due to set in about half an hour. +She had risen soon after eleven o'clock the previous evening, and had +lighted the Israelites during more than half of their night march up +from Gilgal. + + +4.--JOSHUA'S STRATEGY + +These conclusions, as to the place and time of day, entirely sweep away +the impression, so often formed, that Joshua's victory was practically +in the nature of a night surprise. Had it been so, and had the Amorites +been put to flight at daybreak, there would have seemed no conceivable +reason why, with fourteen hours of daylight before him, Joshua should +have been filled with anxiety for the day to have been prolonged. Nor is +it possible to conceive that he would still have been at Gibeon at noon, +seven hours after he had made his victorious attack upon his enemy. + +The fact is that, in all probability, Joshua had no wish to make a +night surprise. His attitude was like that of Nelson before the battle +of Trafalgar; he had not the slightest doubt but that he would gain the +victory, but he was most anxious that it should be a complete one. The +great difficulty in the campaign which lay before him was the number of +fortified places in the hands of the enemy, and the costliness, both in +time and lives, of all siege operations at that epoch. His enemies +having taken the field gave him the prospect of overcoming this +difficulty, if, now that they were in the open, he could succeed in +annihilating them there; to have simply scattered them would have +brought him but little advantage. That this was the point to which he +gave chief attention is apparent from one most significant circumstance +in the history; the Amorites fled by the road to Beth-horon. + +There have been several battles of Beth-horon since the days of Joshua, +and the defeated army has, on more than one occasion, fled by the route +now taken by the Amorites. Two of these are recorded by Josephus; the +one in which Judas Maccabaeus defeated and slew Nicanor, and the other +when Cestius Gallus retreated from Jerusalem. It is probable that +Beth-horon was also the scene of one, if not two, battles with the +Philistines, at the commencement of David's reign. In all these cases +the defeated foe fled by this road because it had been their line of +advance, and was their shortest way back to safety. + +But the conditions were entirely reversed in the case of Joshua's +battle. The Amorites fled _away from_ their cities. Jerusalem, the +capital of Adoni-zedec and the chief city of the confederation, lay in +precisely the opposite direction. The other cities of their league lay +beyond Jerusalem, further still to the south. + +A reference to the map shows that Gilgal, the headquarters of the army +of Israel, was on the plain of Jericho, close to the banks of the +Jordan, at the bottom of that extraordinary ravine through which the +river runs. Due west, at a distance of about sixteen or seventeen miles +as the crow flies, but three thousand four hundred feet above the level +of the Jordan, rises the Ridge of the Watershed, the backbone of the +structure of Palestine. On this ridge are the cities of Jerusalem and +Gibeon, and on it, leading down to the Maritime Plain, runs in a +north-westerly direction, the road through the two Beth-horons. + +The two Beth-horons are one and a half miles apart, with a descent of +700 feet from the Upper to the Lower. + +The flight of the Amorites towards Beth-horon proves, beyond a doubt, +that Joshua had possessed himself of the road from Gibeon to Jerusalem. +It is equally clear that this could not have been done by accident, but +that it must have been the deliberate purpose of his generalship. +Jerusalem was a city so strong that it was not until the reign of David +that the Israelites obtained possession of the whole of it, and to take +it was evidently a matter beyond Joshua's ability. But to have defeated +the Amorites at Gibeon, and to have left open to them the way to +Jerusalem--less than six miles distant--would have been a perfectly +futile proceeding. We may be sure, therefore, that from the moment when +he learned that Adoni-zedek was besieging Gibeon, Joshua's first aim was +to cut off the Amorite king from his capital. + +The fact that the Amorites fled, not towards their cities but away from +them, shows clearly that Joshua had specially manoeuvred so as to cut +them off from Jerusalem. How he did it, we are not told, and any +explanation offered must necessarily be merely of the nature of surmise. +Yet a considerable amount of probability may attach to it. The +geographical conditions are perfectly well known, and we can, to some +degree, infer the course which the battle must have taken from these, +just as we could infer the main lines of the strategy employed by the +Germans in their war with the French in 1870, simply by noting the +places where the successive battles occurred. The positions of the +battlefields of Mars-la-Tour, Gravelotte, and Sedan would show clearly +that the object of the Germans had been, first, to shut Bazaine up in +Metz, and then to hinder MacMahon from coming to his relief. So in the +present case, the fact that the Amorites fled by the way of the two +Beth-horons, shows, first, that Joshua had completely cut them off from +the road to Jerusalem, and next, that somehow or other when they took +flight they were a long way to the north of him. Had they not been so, +they could not have had any long start in their flight, and the +hailstorm which occasioned them such heavy loss would have injured the +Israelites almost as much. + +How can these two circumstances be accounted for? I think we can make a +very plausible guess at the details of Joshua's strategy from noting +what he is recorded to have done in the case of Ai. On that occasion, as +on this, he had felt his inability to deal with an enemy behind +fortifications. His tactics therefore had consisted in making a feigned +attack, followed by a feigned retreat, by which he drew his enemies +completely away from their base, which he then seized by means of a +detachment which he had previously placed in ambush near. Then, when the +men of Ai were hopelessly cut off from their city, he brought all his +forces together, surrounded his enemies in the open, and destroyed them. + +It was a far more difficult task which lay before him at Gibeon, but we +may suppose that he still acted on the same general principles. There +were two points on the ridge of the watershed which, for very different +reasons, it was important that he should seize. The one was Beeroth, one +of the cities of the Hivites, his allies, close to his latest victory of +Ai, and commanding the highest point on the ridge of the watershed. It +is distant from Jerusalem some ten miles--a day's journey. Tradition +therefore gives it as the place where the Virgin Mary and St. Joseph +turned back sorrowing, seeking Jesus. For "they, supposing Him to have +been in the company, went a day's journey," and Beeroth still forms the +first halting-place for pilgrims from the north on their return journey. + +Beeroth also was the city of the two sons of Rimmon who murdered +Ishbosheth, the son of Saul. When it is remembered how Saul had +attempted to extirpate the Gibeonites, and how bitter a blood feud the +latter entertained against his house in consequence, it becomes very +significant that the murderers of his son were men of this Gibeonite +town. + +Beeroth also commanded the exit from the principal ravine by which +Joshua could march upwards to the ridge--the valley of Achor. The +Israelites marching by this route would have the great advantage that +Beeroth, in the possession of their allies, the Gibeonites, would act as +a cover to them whilst in the ravines, and give them security whilst +taking up a position on the plateau. + +But Beeroth had one fatal disadvantage as a sole line of advance. From +Beeroth Joshua would come down to Gibeon from the north, and the +Amorites, if defeated, would have a line of retreat, clear and easy, to +Jerusalem. It was absolutely essential that somewhere or other he should +cut the Jerusalem road. + +This would be a matter of great difficulty and danger, as, if his +advance were detected whilst he was still in the ravines, he would have +been taken at almost hopeless disadvantage. The fearful losses which the +Israelites sustained in the intertribal war with Benjamin near this very +place, show what Joshua might reasonably have expected had he tried to +make his sole advance on the ridge near Jerusalem. + +Is it not probable that he would have endeavoured, under these +circumstances, to entice the Amorites as far away to the north as +possible before he ventured to bring his main force out on the ridge? If +so, we may imagine that he first sent a strong force by the valley of +Achor to Beeroth; that they were instructed there to take up a strong +position, and when firmly established, to challenge the Amorites to +attack them. Then, when the Israelite general in command at Beeroth +perceived that he had before him practically the whole Amorite +force--for it would seem clear that the five kings themselves, together +with the greater part of their army, were thus drawn away--he would +signal to Joshua that the time had come for his advance. Just as Joshua +himself had signalled with his spear at the taking of Ai, so the firing +of a beacon placed on the summit of the ridge would suffice for the +purpose. Joshua would then lead up the main body, seize the Jerusalem +road, and press on to Gibeon at the utmost speed. If this were so, the +small detachment of Amorites left to continue the blockade was speedily +crushed, but perhaps was aware of Joshua's approach soon enough to send +swift runners urging the five kings to return. The news would brook no +delay; the kings would turn south immediately; but for all their haste +they never reached Gibeon. They probably had but advanced as far as the +ridge leading to Beth-horon, when they perceived that not only had +Joshua relieved Gibeon and destroyed the force which they had left +before it, but that his line, stretched out far to the right and left, +already cut them off, not merely from the road to Jerusalem and Hebron, +but also from the valley of Ajalon, a shorter road to the Maritime Plain +than the one they actually took. East there was no escape; north was the +Israelite army from Beeroth; south and west was the army of Joshua. +Out-manoeuvred and out-generalled, they were in the most imminent danger +of being caught between the two Israelite armies, and of being ground, +like wheat, between the upper and nether millstones. They had no heart +for further fight; the promise made to Joshua,--"there shall not a man +of them stand before thee,"--was fulfilled; they broke and fled by the +one way open to them, the way of the two Beth-horons. + +Whilst this conjectural strategy attributes to Joshua a ready grasp of +the essential features of the military position and skill in dealing +with them, it certainly does not attribute to him any greater skill than +it is reasonable to suppose he possessed. The Hebrews have repeatedly +proved, not merely their valour in battle, but their mastery of the art +of war, and, as Marcel Dieulafoy has recently shown,[372:1] the earliest +general of whom we have record as introducing turning tactics in the +field, is David in the battle of the valley of Rephaim, recorded in 2 +Sam. v. 22-25 and 1 Chron. xiv. 13-17. + + "The several evolutions of a complicated and hazardous nature + which decided the fate of the battle would betoken, even at + the present day, when successfully conducted, a consummate + general, experienced lieutenants, troops well accustomed to + manoeuvres, mobile, and, above all, disciplined almost into + unconsciousness, so contrary is it to our instincts not + to meet peril face to face. . . . In point of fact, the + Israelites had just effected in the face of the Philistines a + turning and enveloping movement--that is to say, an operation + of war considered to be one of the boldest, most skilful, and + difficult attempted by forces similar in number to those of + the Hebrews, but, at the same time, very efficacious and + brilliant when successful. It was the favourite manoeuvre of + Frederick II, and the one on which his military reputation + rests." + +But though the Amorites had been discomfited by Joshua, they had not +been completely surrounded; one way of escape was left open. More than +this, it appears that they obtained a very ample start in the race along +the north-western road. We infer this from the incident of the +hailstorm which fell upon them whilst rushing down the precipitous road +between the Beth-horons; a storm so sudden and so violent that more of +the Amorites died by the hailstones than had fallen in the contest at +Gibeon. It does not appear that the Israelites suffered from the storm; +they must consequently have, at the time, been much in the rear of their +foes. Probably they were still "in the way that goeth up to Beth-horon"; +that is to say, in the ascent some two miles long from Gibeon till the +summit of the road is reached. There would be a special appropriateness +in this case in the phrasing of the record that "the Lord discomfited +the Amorites before Israel, and slew them with a great slaughter at +Gibeon, and _chased_ them along the way that goeth up to Beth-horon, and +smote them to Azekah and unto Makkedah." There was no slaughter on the +road between Gibeon and Beth-horon. It was a simple _chase_; a pursuit +with the enemy far in advance. + +The Israelites, general and soldiers alike, had done their best. The +forced march all night up the steep ravines, the plan of the battle, and +the way in which it had been carried out were alike admirable. Yet when +the Israelites had done their best, and the heat and their long +exertions had nearly overpowered them, Joshua was compelled to recognize +that he had been but partly successful. He had relieved Gibeon; the +Amorites were in headlong flight; he had cut them off from the direct +road to safety, but he had failed in one most important point. He had +not succeeded in surrounding them, and the greater portion of their +force was escaping. + + +5.--THE MIRACLE. + +It was at this moment, when his scouts announced to him the frustration +of his hopes, that Joshua in the anxiety lest the full fruits of his +victory should be denied him, and in the supremest faith that the Lord +God, in Whose hand are all the powers of the universe, was with him, +exclaimed: + + "Sun, stand thou still upon Gibeon, + And thou, Moon, in the valley of Ajalon!" + +So his exclamation stands in our Authorized Version, but, as the +marginal reading shows, the word translated "stand still" is more +literally "be silent." There can be no doubt that this expression, so +unusual in this connection, must have been employed with intention. What +was it that Joshua is likely to have had in his mind when he thus spoke? + +The common idea is that he simply wished for more time; for the day to +be prolonged. But as we have seen, it was midday when he spoke, and he +had full seven hours of daylight before him. There was a need which he +must have felt more pressing. His men had now been seventeen hours on +the march, for they had started at sunset--7 p.m.--on the previous +evening, and it was now noon, the noon of a sub-tropical midsummer. They +had marched at least twenty miles in the time, possibly considerably +more according to the route which they had followed, and the march had +been along the roughest of roads, and had included an ascent of 3400 +feet--about the height of the summit of Snowdon above the sea-level. +They must have been weary, and have felt sorely the heat of the sun, +now blazing right overhead. Surely it requires no words to labour this +point. Joshua's one pressing need at that moment was something to temper +the fierce oppression of the sun, and to refresh his men. This was what +he prayed for; this was what was granted him. For the moment the sun +seemed fighting on the side of his enemies, and he bade it "Be silent." +Instantly, in answer to his command, a mighty rush of dark storm-clouds +came sweeping up from the sea. + +Refreshed by the sudden coolness, the Israelites set out at once in the +pursuit of their enemies. It is probable that for the first six miles +they saw no trace of them, but when they reached Beth-horon the Upper, +and stood at the top of its steep descent, they saw the Amorites again. +As it had been with their fathers at the Red Sea, when the pillar of +cloud had been a defence to them but the means of discomfiture to the +Egyptians, so now the storm-clouds which had so revived them and +restored their their strength, had brought death and destruction to +their enemies. All down the rocky descent lay the wounded, the dying, +the dead. For "the Lord cast down great stones from heaven upon them, +unto Azekah, and they died: they were more which died with hailstones +than they whom the children of Israel slew with the sword." + + "The might of the Gentile, unsmote by the sword, + Had melted like snow in the glance of the Lord." + +Far below them the panic-stricken remnants of the Amorite host were +fleeing for safety to the cities of the Maritime Plain. The battle +proper was over; the one duty left to the army of Israel was to overtake +and destroy those remnants before they could gain shelter. + +But the narrative continues. "The sun stayed in the midst of heaven, and +hasted not to go down about a whole day." This statement evidently +implies much more than the mere darkening of the sun by storm-clouds. +For its interpretation we must return to the remaining incidents of the +day. + +These are soon told. Joshua pursued the Amorites to Makkedah, +twenty-seven miles from Gibeon by the route taken. There the five kings +had hidden themselves in a cave. A guard was placed to watch the cave; +the Israelites continued the pursuit for an undefined distance farther; +returned to Makkedah and took it by assault; brought the kings out of +their cave, and hanged them. + + "And it came to pass at the time of the going down of the sun, + that Joshua commanded, and they took them down off the trees, + and cast them into the cave wherein they had hidden + themselves, and laid great stones on the mouth of the cave, + unto this very day." + +All these events--the pursuit for twenty-seven miles and more, the +taking of Makkedah and the hanging of the kings--took place between noon +and the going down of the sun, an interval whose normal length, for that +latitude and at that time of the year, was about seven hours. + +This is an abnormal feat. It is true that a single trained pedestrian +might traverse the twenty-seven and odd miles, and still have time to +take part in an assault on a town and to watch an execution. But it is +an altogether different thing when we come to a large army. It is well +known that the speed with which a body of men can move diminishes with +the number. A company can march faster than a regiment; a regiment than +a brigade; a brigade than an army corps. But for a large force thirty +miles in the entire day is heavy work. "Thus Sir Archibald Hunter's +division, in its march through Bechuanaland to the relief of Mafeking, +starting at four in the morning, went on till seven or eight at night, +covering as many as thirty miles a day at times." Joshua's achievement +was a march fully as long as any of General Hunter's, but it was +accomplished in less than seven hours instead of from fifteen to +sixteen, and it followed straight on from a march seventeen hours in +length which had ended in a battle. In all, between one sunset and the +next he had marched between fifty and sixty miles besides fighting a +battle and taking a town. + +If we turn to the records of other battles fought in this neighbourhood, +we find that they agree as closely as we could expect, not with Joshua's +achievement, but with General Hunter's. In the case of the great victory +secured by Jonathan, the gallant son of Saul, the Israelites smote the +Philistines from Michmash to Ajalon;--not quite twenty miles. In the +defeat of Cestius Gallus, the Jews followed him from Beth-horon to +Antipatris, a little over twenty miles, the pursuit beginning at +daybreak, and being evidently continued nearly till sundown. The pursuit +of the Syrians under Nicanor by Judas Maccabaeus seems also to have +covered about the same distance, for Nicanor was killed at the first +onslaught and his troops took to flight. + +It is not at all unusual to read in comments on the Book of Joshua that +the "miracle" is simply the result of the dulness of the prose +chronicler in accepting as literal fact an expression that originated in +the poetic exuberance of an old bard. The latter, so it is urged, simply +meaning to add a figure of dignity and importance to his song +commemorating a great national victory, had written:-- + + "And the sun stood still, and the moon stayed, + Until the nation had avenged themselves of their enemies," + +but with no more expectation that the stay of the moon would be accepted +literally, than the singers, who welcomed David after the slaying of +Goliath, imagined that any one would seriously suppose that Saul had +actually with his own hand killed two thousand Philistines, and David +twenty thousand. But, say they, the later prose chronicler, quoting from +the ballad, and accepting a piece of poetic hyperbole as actual fact, +reproduced the statement in his own words, and added, "the sun stayed in +the midst of heaven, and hasted not to go down about a whole day." + +Not so. The poem and the prose chronicle make one coherent whole. +Working from the poem alone, treating the expressions in the first two +lines merely as astronomical indications of time and place, and without +the slightest reference to any miraculous interpretation, they lead to +the inevitable conclusion that the time was noonday. This result +certainly does not lie on the surface of the poem, and it was wholly +beyond the power of the prose chronicler to have computed it, yet it is +just in the supposed stupid gloss of the prose chronicler, and nowhere +else, that we find this fact definitely stated: whilst the "miracle" +recorded both by poem and prose narrative completely accords with the +extraordinary distance traversed between noon and sunset. + +Any man, however ignorant of science, if he be but careful and +conscientious, can truthfully record an observation without any +difficulty. But to successfully invent even the simplest astronomical +observation requires very full knowledge, and is difficult even then. +Every astronomer knows that there is hardly a single novelist, no matter +how learned or painstaking, who can at this present day introduce a +simple astronomical relation into his story, without falling into +egregious error. + +We are therefore quite sure that Joshua did use the words attributed to +him; that the "moon" and "the valley of Ajalon" were not merely inserted +in order to complete the parallelism by a bard putting a legend into +poetic form. Nor was the prose narrative the result of an editor +combining two or three narratives all written much after the date. The +original records must have been made at the time. + +All astronomers know well how absolutely essential it is to commit an +observation to writing on the spot. Illustrations of this necessity +could be made to any extent. One may suffice. In vol. ii. of the _Life +of Sir Richard Burton_, by his wife, p. 244, Lady Burton says:-- + + "On the 6th December, 1882 . . . we were walking on the Karso + (Opcona) alone; the sky was clear, and all of a sudden my + niece said to me, 'Oh, look up, there is a star walking into + the moon!' 'Glorious!' I answered. 'We are looking at the + Transit of Venus, which crowds of scientists have gone to the + end of the world to see.'" + +The Transit of Venus did take place on December 6, 1882; and though +Venus could have been seen without telescopic aid as a black spot on the +sun's disc, nothing can be more unlike Venus in transit than "a star +walking into the moon." The moon was not visible on that evening, and +Venus was only visible when on the sun's disc, and appeared then, not as +a star, but as a black dot. + +No doubt Lady Burton's niece did make the exclamation attributed to her, +but it must have been, not on December 6, 1882, but on some other +occasion. Lady Burton may indeed have told her niece that this was the +Transit of Venus, but that was simply because she did not know what a +transit was, nor that it occurred in the daytime, not at night. Lady +Burton's narrative was therefore not written at the time. So if the +facts of the tenth chapter of Joshua, as we have it, had not been +written at the time of the battle, some gross astronomical discordance +would inevitably have crept in. + +Let us suppose that the sun and moon did actually stand still in the sky +for so long a time that between noon and sunset was equal to the full +length of an ordinary day. What effect would have resulted that the +Israelites could have perceived? This, and this only, that they would +have marched twice as far between noon and sunset as they could have +done in any ordinary afternoon. And this as we have seen, is exactly +what they are recorded to have done. + +The only measure of time, available to the Israelites, independent of +the apparent motion of the sun, was the number of miles marched. Indeed, +with the Babylonians, the same word (_kasbu_) was used to indicate three +distinct, but related measures. It was a measure of time--the double +hour; of celestial arc--the twelfth part of a great circle, thirty +degrees, that is to say the space traversed by the sun in two hours; and +it was a measure of distance on the surface of the earth--six or seven +miles, or a two hours' march. + +If, for the sake of illustration, we may suppose that the sun were to +stand still for us, we should recognize it neither by sundial nor by +shadow, but we should see that whereas our clocks had indicated that the +sun had risen (we will say) at six in the morning, and had southed at +twelve of noon; it had not set until twelve of the night. The register +of work done, shown by all our clocks and watches, would be double for +the afternoon what it had been for the morning. And if all our clocks +and watches did thus register upon some occasion twice the interval +between noon and sunset that they had registered between sunrise and +noon, we should be justified in recording, as the writer of the book of +Joshua has recorded, "The sun stood still in the midst of heaven, and +hasted not to go down about a whole day." + +The real difficulty to the understanding of this narrative has lain in +the failure of commentators to put themselves back into the conditions +of the Israelites. The Israelites had no time-measurers, could have had +no time-measurers. A sundial, if any such were in existence, would only +indicate the position of the sun, and therefore could give no evidence +in the matter. Beside, a sundial is not a portable instrument, and +Joshua and his men had something more pressing to do than to loiter +round it. Clepsydrae or clocks are of later date, and no more than a +sundial are they portable. Many comments, one might almost say most +comments on the narrative, read as if the writers supposed that Joshua +and his men carried stop-watches, and that their chief interest in the +whole campaign was to see how fast the sun was moving. Since they had no +such methods of measuring time, since it is not possible to suppose that +over and above any material miracle that was wrought, the mental miracle +was added of acquainting the Israelites for this occasion only with the +Copernican system of astronomy, all that the words of the narrative can +possibly mean is, that-- + + "the sun stood still in the midst of heaven, and hasted not to + go down about a whole day," + +according to the only means which the Israelites had for testing the +matter. In short, it simply states in other words, what, it is clear +from other parts of the narrative, was actually the case, that the +length of the march made between noon and sunset was equal to an +ordinary march taking the whole of a day. + +If we suppose--as has been generally done, and as it is quite legitimate +to do, for all things are possible to God--that the miracle consisted in +the slackening of the rotation of the earth, what effect would have +been perceived by the Hebrews? This, and only this, that they would have +accomplished a full day's march in the course of the afternoon. And what +would have been the effects produced on all the neighbouring nations? +Simply that they had managed to do more work than usual in the course of +that afternoon, and that they felt more than usually tired and hungry in +the evening. + +But would it have helped the Israelites for the day to have been thus +actually lengthened? Scarcely so, unless they had been, at the same +time, endowed with supernatural, or at all events, with unusual +strength. The Israelites had already been 31 hours without sleep or +rest, they had made a remarkable march, their enemies had several miles +start of them; would not a longer day have simply given the latter a +better chance to make good their flight, unless the Israelites were +enabled to pursue them with unusual speed? And if the Israelites were so +enabled, then no further miracle is required; for them the sun would +have "hasted not to go down about a whole day." + +Leaving the question as to whether the sun appeared to stand still +through the temporary arrest of the earth's rotation, or through some +exaltation of the physical powers of the Israelites, it seems clear, +from the foregoing analysis of the narrative, that both the prose +account and the poem were written by eye-witnesses, who recorded what +they had themselves seen and heard whilst every detail was fresh in +their memory. Simple as the astronomical references are, they are very +stringent, and can only have been supplied by those who were actually +present. + +Nothing can be more unlike poetic hyperbole than the sum of actual +miles marched to the men who trod them; and these very concrete miles +were the gauge of the lapse of time. For just as "nail," and "span," and +"foot," and "cubit," and "pace" were the early measures of small +distance, so the average day's march was the early measure of long +distance. The human frame, in its proportions and in its abilities, is +sufficiently uniform to have furnished the primitive standards of +length. But the relation established between time and distance as in the +case of a day's march, works either way, and is employed in either +direction, even at the present day. When the Israelites at the end of +their campaign returned from Makkedah to Gibeon, and found the march, +though wholly unobstructed, was still a heavy performance for the whole +of a long day, what could they think, how could they express themselves, +concerning that same march made between noon and sundown? Whatever +construction we put upon the incident, whatever explanation we may offer +for it, to all the men of Israel, judging the events of the afternoon by +the only standard within their reach, the eminently practical standard +of the miles they had marched, the only conclusion at which they could +arrive was the one they so justly drew-- + + "The sun stayed in the midst of heaven and hasted not to go + down about a whole day. And there was no day like that before + it or after it, that the Lord hearkened unto the voice of a + man: for the Lord fought for Israel." + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[351:1] Revised and reprinted from the _Sunday at Home_ for February and +March, 1904. + +[372:1] Marcel Dieulafoy, _David the King: an Historical Enquiry_, pp. +155-175. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +THE DIAL OF AHAZ + + +The second astronomical marvel recorded in the Scripture narrative is +the going back of the shadow on the dial of Ahaz, at the time of +Hezekiah's recovery, from his dangerous illness. + +It was shortly after the deliverance of the kingdom of Judah from the +danger threatened it by Sennacherib king of Assyria, that Hezekiah fell +"sick unto death." But in answer to his prayer, Isaiah was sent to tell +him-- + + "Thus saith the Lord, the God of David thy father, I have + heard thy prayer, I have seen thy tears: behold, I will heal + thee: on the third day thou shalt go up unto the house of the + Lord. And I will add unto thy days fifteen years; and I will + deliver thee and this city out of the hand of the king of + Assyria; and I will defend this city for Mine own sake, and + for My servant David's sake. And Isaiah said, Take a lump of + figs. And they took and laid it on the boil, and he recovered. + And Hezekiah said unto Isaiah, What shall be the sign that the + Lord will heal me, and that I shall go up into the house of + the Lord the third day? And Isaiah said, This sign shalt thou + have of the Lord, that the Lord will do the thing that He hath + spoken: shall the shadow go forward ten degrees, or go back + ten degrees? And Hezekiah answered, It is a light thing for + the shadow to go down ten degrees: nay, but let the shadow + return backward ten degrees. And Isaiah the prophet cried unto + the Lord: and He brought the shadow ten degrees backward, by + which it had gone down in the dial of Ahaz." + +The narrative in the Book of Isaiah gives the concluding words in the +form-- + + "So the sun returned ten degrees, by which degrees it was gone + down." + +The narrative is complete as a record of the healing of king Hezekiah +and of the sign given to him to assure him that he should recover; +complete for all the ordinary purposes of a narrative, and for readers +in general. But for any purpose of astronomical analysis the narrative +is deficient, and it must be frankly confessed that it does not lie +within the power of astronomy to make any use of it. + +It has been generally assumed that it was an actual sundial upon which +this sign was seen. We do not know how far back the art of dialling +goes. The simplest form of dial is an obelisk on a flat pavement, but it +has the very important drawback that the graduation is different for +different times of the year. In a properly constructed dial the edge of +the style casting the shadow should be made parallel to the axis of the +earth. Consequently a dial for one latitude is not available without +alteration when transferred to another latitude. Some fine types of +dials on a large scale exist in the observatories built by Jai Singh. +The first of these--that at Delhi--was probably completed about 1710 +A.D. They are, therefore, quite modern, but afford good illustrations +of the type of structure which we can readily conceive of as having been +built in what has been termed the Stone Age of astronomy. The principal +of these buildings, the Samrat Yantra, is a long staircase in the +meridian leading up to nothing, the shadow falling on to a great +semicircular arc which it crosses. The slope of the staircase is, of +course, parallel to the earth's axis. + +It has been suggested that if such a dial were erected at Jerusalem, and +the style were that for a tropical latitude, at certain times of the +year the shadow would appear to go backward for a short time. Others, +again, have suggested that if a small portable dial were tilted the same +phenomenon would show itself. It is, of course, evident that no such +suggestion at all accords with the narrative. Hezekiah was now in the +fourteenth year of his reign, the dial--if dial it was--was made by his +father, and the "miracle" would have been reproduced day by day for a +considerable part of each year, and after the event it would have been +apparent to every one that the "miracle" continued to be reproduced. If +this had been the case, it would say very little for the astronomical +science of the wise men of Merodach-Baladan that he should have sent all +the way from Babylon to Jerusalem "to inquire of the wonder that was +done in the land" if the wonder was nothing more than a wrongly mounted +dial. + +Others have hazarded the extreme hypothesis, that there might have been +an earthquake at the time which dipped the dial in the proper direction, +and then restored it to its proper place; presumably, of course, without +doing harm to Jerusalem, or any of its buildings, and passing unnoticed +by both king and people. + +A much more ingenious theory than any of those was communicated by the +late J. W. Bosanquet to the Royal Asiatic Society in 1854. An eclipse of +the sun took place on January 11, 689 B.C. It was an annular eclipse +in Asia Minor, and a very large partial eclipse at Jerusalem, the +greatest phase taking place nearly at local noon. Mr. Bosanquet +considers that the effect of the partial eclipse would be to practically +shift the centre of the bright body casting the shadow. At the beginning +of the annular phase, the part of the sun uncovered would be a crescent +in a nearly vertical position; at mid eclipse the crescent would be in a +horizontal position; at the end of the annular phase the crescent would +again be in a vertical position; so that the exposed part of the sun +would appear to move down and up in the sky over a very small distance. +It is extremely doubtful whether any perceptible effect could be so +produced on the shadow, and one wholly fails to understand why the +eclipse itself should not have been given as the sign, and why neither +the king nor the people seem to have noticed that it was in progress. It +is, however, sufficient to say that modern chronology shows that +Hezekiah died ten years before the eclipse in question, so that it fell +a quarter of a century too late for the purpose, and no other eclipse is +available to take its place during the lifetime of Hezekiah. + +But there is no reason to think that the word rendered in our Authorized +Version as "dial" was a sundial at all. The word translated "dial" is +the same which is also rendered "degrees" in the A.V. and "steps" in the +R.V., as is shown in the margin of the latter. It occurs in the prophecy +of Amos, where it is rendered "stories" or "ascensions." It means an +"ascent," a "going up," a "step." Thus king Solomon's throne had six +_steps_, and there are fifteen Psalms (cxx.-cxxxiv.)--that are called +"songs of degrees," that is "songs of steps." + +We do not know how the staircase of Ahaz faced, but we can form some +rough idea from the known positions of the Temple and of the city of +David, and one or two little hints given us in the narrative itself. It +will be noted that Hezekiah uses the movement of the shadow downward, as +equivalent to its going forward. The going forward of course meant its +ordinary direction of motion at that time of day; so the return of the +shadow backward meant that the shadow went up ten steps, for in the Book +of Isaiah it speaks of the sun returning "ten degrees by which degrees +it was gone down." It was therefore in the afternoon, and the sun was +declining, when the sign took place. It is clear, therefore, that the +staircase was so placed that the shadow went down the stairs as the sun +declined in the sky. The staircase, therefore, probably faced east or +north-east, as it would naturally do if it led from the palace towards +the Temple. No doubt there was a causeway at the foot of this staircase, +and a corresponding ascent up the Temple hill on the opposite side of +the valley. + +We can now conjecturally reproduce the circumstances. It was afternoon, +and the palace had already cast the upper steps of the staircase into +shadow. The sick king, looking longingly towards the Temple, could see +the lower steps still gleaming in the bright Judean sunshine. It was +natural therefore for him to say, when the prophet Isaiah offered him +his choice of a sign, "Shall the shadow go forward ten steps, or back +ten steps?" that it was "a light thing for the shadow to go down ten +steps: nay, but let the shadow return backward ten steps." It would be +quite obvious to him that a small cloud, suitably placed, might throw +ten additional steps into shadow. + +It will be seen that we are left with several details undetermined. For +the staircase, wherever constructed, was probably not meant to act as a +sundial, and was only so used because it chanced to have some rough +suitability for the purpose. In this case the shadow will probably have +been thrown, not by a properly constructed gnomon, but by some building +in the neighbourhood. And as we have no record of the direction of the +staircase, its angle of inclination, its height, and the position of the +buildings which might have cast a shadow upon it, we are without any +indication to guide us. + +When the queen of Sheba came to visit king Solomon, and saw all his +magnificence, one of the things which specially impressed her was "his +ascent by which he went up unto the house of the Lord." This was "the +causeway of the going up," as it is called in the First Book of +Chronicles. We are told of a number of alterations, made in the Temple +furniture and buildings by king Ahaz, and it is said that "the covered +way for the sabbath that they had built in the house, and the king's +entry without, turned he unto (_margin_, round) the house of the Lord, +because of the king of Assyria." That is to say, Ahaz considered that +Solomon's staircase was too much exposed in the case of a siege, being +without the Temple enclosure. This probably necessitated the +construction of a new staircase, which would naturally be called the +staircase of Ahaz. That there was, in later times, such a staircase at +about this place we know from the route taken by the triumphal +procession at the time of the dedication of the wall of Jerusalem under +Nehemiah:-- + + "At the fountain gate, which was over against them, they went + up by the stairs of the City of David, at the going up of the + wall, above the house of David, even unto the water gate + eastward." + +In this case there would be a special appropriateness in the sign that +was offered to Hezekiah. The sign that he would be so restored, as once +again to go up to the house of the Lord, was to be given him on the very +staircase by which he would go. He was now thirty-eight years old, and +had doubtless watched the shadow of the palace descend the staircase in +the afternoon, hundreds of times; quite possibly he had actually seen a +cloud make the shadow race forward. But the reverse he had never seen. +Once a step had passed into the shadow of the palace, it did not again +emerge until the next morning dawned. + +The sign then was this: It was afternoon, probably approaching the time +of the evening prayer, and the court officials and palace attendants +were moving down the staircase in the shadow, when, as the sick king +watched them from above, the shadow of the palace was rolled back up the +staircase, and a flood of light poured down on ten of the broad steps +upon which the sun had already set. How this lighting of the ten steps +was brought about we are not told, nor is any clue given us on which we +can base a conjecture. But this return of light was a figure of what was +actually happening in the life of the king himself. He had already, as +it were, passed into the shadow that only deepens into night. As he sang +himself after his recovery-- + + "I said, In the noontide of my days I shall go into the gates of + the grave: + I am deprived of the residue of my years. + I said, I shall not see the Lord, even the Lord in the land of + the living: + I shall behold man no more with the inhabitants of the world." + +But now the light had been brought back to him, and he could say-- + + "The living, the living, he shall praise Thee, as I do this day: + The father to the children shall make known Thy truth. + The Lord is ready to save me: + Therefore we will sing my songs to the stringed instruments + All the days of our life in the house of the Lord." + + + + +CHAPTER III + +THE STAR OF BETHLEHEM + + +No narrative of Holy Scripture is more familiar to us than that of the +visit of the wise men from the East to see Him that was born King of the +Jews. It was towards the end of the reign of Herod the Great that they +arrived at Jerusalem, and threw Herod the king and all the city into +great excitement by their question-- + + "Where is He that is born King of the Jews? For we have seen + His star in the east, and are come to worship Him." + +Herod at once gathered all the chief priests and scribes of the people +together, and demanded of them where the Messiah should be born. Their +reply was distinct and unhesitating-- + + "In Bethlehem of Judaea: for thus it is written by the Prophet, + And thou Bethlehem, in the land of Juda, art not the least + among the princes of Juda: for out of thee shall come a + Governor, that shall rule My people Israel. Then Herod, when + he had privily called the wise men, inquired of them + diligently what time the star appeared. And he sent them to + Bethlehem, and said, Go and search diligently for the young + Child; and when ye have found Him, bring me word again, that + I may come and worship Him also. When they had heard the king, + they departed; and, lo, the star, which they saw in the east, + went before them, till it came and stood over where the young + Child was. When they saw the star, they rejoiced with + exceeding great joy." + +So much, and no more are we told of the star of Bethlehem, and the story +is as significant in its omissions as in that which it tells us. + +What sort of a star it was that led the wise men; how they learnt from +it that the King of the Jews was born; how it went before them; how it +stood over where the young Child was, we do not know. Nor is it of the +least importance that we should know. One verse more, and that a short +one, would have answered these inquiries; it would have told us whether +it was some conjunction of the planets; whether perchance it was a +comet, or a "new" or "temporary" star; or whether it was a supernatural +light, like the pillar of fire that guided the children of Israel in the +wilderness. But that verse has not been given. The twelve or twenty +additional words, which could have cleared up the matter, have been +withheld, and there can be no doubt as to the reason. The "star," +whatever its physical nature, was of no importance, except as a guide to +the birthplace of the infant Jesus. Information about it would have +drawn attention from the object of the narrative; it would have given to +a mere sign-post the importance which belonged only to "the Word made +flesh." + +We are often told that the Bible should be studied precisely as any +other book is studied. Yet before we can criticize any book, we must +first ascertain what was the purpose that the author had in writing it. +The history of England, for instance, has been written by many persons +and from many points of view. One man has traced the succession of the +dynasties, the relationships of the successive royal families, and the +effect of the administrations of the various kings. Another has chiefly +considered the development of representative government and of +parliamentary institutions. A third has concerned himself more with the +different races that, by their fusion, have formed the nation as it is +to-day. A fourth has dealt with the social condition of the people, the +increase of comfort and luxury. To a fifth the true history of England +is the story of its expansion, the foundation and growth of its colonial +empire. While to a sixth, its religious history is the one that claims +most attention, and the struggles with Rome, the rise and decay of +Puritanism, and the development of modern thought will fill his pages. +Each of these six will select just those facts, and those facts only, +that are relevant to his subject. The introduction of irrelevant facts +would be felt to mark the ignorant or unskilful workman. The master of +his craft will keep in the background the details that have no bearing +on his main purpose, and to those which have but a slight bearing he +will give only such notice as their importance in this connection +warrants. + +The purpose of the Bible is to reveal God to us, and to teach us of our +relationship to Him. It was not intended to gratify that natural and +laudable curiosity which has been the foundation of the physical +sciences. Our own efforts, our own intelligence can help us here, and +the Scriptures have not been given us in order to save us the trouble of +exerting them. + +There is no reason for surprise, then, that the information given us +concerning the star is, astronomically, so imperfect. We are, indeed, +told but two facts concerning it. First that its appearance, in some way +or other, informed the wise men, not of the birth of _a_ king of the +Jews, but of _the_ King of the Jews, for Whose coming not Israel only, +but more or less consciously the whole civilized world, was waiting. +Next, having come to Judaea in consequence of this information, the +"star" pointed out to them the actual spot where the new-born King was +to be found. "It went before them till it came and stood over where the +young Child was." It may also be inferred from Matt. ii. 10 that in some +way or other the wise men had for a time lost sight of the star, so that +the two facts mentioned of it relate to two separate appearances. The +first appearance induced them to leave the East, and set out for Judaea; +the second pointed out to them the place at Bethlehem where the object +of their search was to be found. Nothing is told us respecting the star +except its work as a guide. + +Some three centuries ago the ingenious and devout Kepler supposed that +he could identify the Star with a conjunction of the planets Jupiter and +Saturn, in the constellation Pisces. This conjunction took place in the +month of May, B.C. 7, not very long before the birth of our Lord is +supposed to have taken place. + +But the late Prof. C. Pritchard has shown, first, that a similar and +closer conjunction occurred 59 years earlier, and should therefore have +brought a Magian deputation to Judaea then. Next, that the two planets +never approached each other nearer than twice the apparent diameter of +the moon, so that they would have appeared, not as one star, but as two. +And thirdly, if the planets had seemed to stand over Bethlehem as the +wise men left Jerusalem, they most assuredly would not have appeared to +do so when they arrived at the little city. Ingenious as the suggestion +was, it may be dismissed as unworthy of serious consideration. + +Another suggestion shows upon what slight foundations a well-rounded +legend may be built. In the year 1572 a wonderful "new star" appeared in +the constellation Cassiopeia. At its brightest it outshone Venus, and, +though it gradually declined in splendour, it remained visible for some +sixteen months. There have been other instances of outbursts of bright +short-lived stars; and brief notices, in the annals of the years 1265 +and 952 may have referred to such objects, but more probably these were +comets. The guess was hazarded that these objects might be one and the +same; that the star in Cassiopeia might be a "variable" star, bursting +into brilliancy about every 315 or 316 years; that it was the star that +announced the birth of our Lord, and that it would reappear towards the +end of the nineteenth century to announce His second coming. + +One thing more was lacking to make the legend complete, and this was +supplied by the planet Venus, which shines with extraordinary +brilliance when in particular parts of her orbit. On one of these +occasions, when she was seen as a morning star in the east, some hazy +recollection of the legend just noticed caused a number of people to +hail her as none other than the star of Bethlehem at its predicted +return. + +There is no reason to suppose that the star of 1572 had ever appeared +before that date, or will ever appear again. But in any case we are +perfectly sure that it could not have been the star of Bethlehem. For +Cassiopeia is a northern constellation, and the wise men, when they set +out from Jerusalem to Bethlehem must have had Cassiopeia and all her +stars behind them. + +The fact that the "star" went before them and stood over where the young +Child lay, gives the impression that it was some light, like the +Shekinah glory resting on the Ark in the tabernacle, or the pillar of +fire which led the children of Israel through the wilderness. But this +view raises the questions as to the form in which it first appeared to +the wise men when they were still in the East, and how they came to call +it a star, when they must have recognized how very unstarlike it was. +Whilst, if what they saw when in the East was really a star, it seems +most difficult to understand how it can have appeared to go before them +and to stand over the place where the young Child lay. + +I have somewhere come across a legend which may possibly afford the +clue, but I have not been able to find that the legend rests upon any +authority. It is that the star had been lost in the daylight by the time +that the wise men reached Jerusalem. It was therefore an evening star +during their journey thither. But it is said that when they reached +Bethlehem, apparently nearly at midday, one of them went to the well of +the inn, in order to draw water. Looking down into the well, he saw the +star, reflected from the surface of the water. This would of course be +an intimation to them that the star was directly overhead, and its +re-observation, under such unusual circumstances, would be a sufficient +assurance that they had reached the right spot. Inquiry in the inn would +lead to a knowledge of the visit of the shepherds, and of the angelic +message which had told them where to find the Babe born in the city of +David, "a Saviour, Which is Christ the Lord." + +If this story be true, the "Star of Bethlehem" was probably a "new +star," like that of 1572. Its first appearance would then have caused +the Magi to set out on their journey, though it does not appear how they +knew what it signified, unless we suppose that they were informed of it +in a dream, just as they were afterwards warned of God not to return to +Herod. Whilst they were travelling the course of the year would bring +the star, which shone straight before them in the west after sunset +every evening, nearer and nearer to the sun. We may suppose that, like +other new stars, it gradually faded, so that by the time the wise men +had reached Jerusalem they had lost sight of it altogether. Having thus +lost it, they would probably not think of looking for it by daylight, +for it is no easy thing to detect by daylight even Venus at her greatest +brilliancy, unless one knows exactly where to look. The difficulty does +not lie in any want of brightness, but in picking up and holding +steadily so minute a point of light in the broad expanse of the gleaming +sky. This difficulty would be overcome for them, according to this +story, by the well, which acted like a tube to direct them exactly to +the star, and like a telescope, to lessen the sky glare. It would be +also necessary to suppose that the star was flashing out again with +renewed brilliancy. Such a brief recovery of light has not been unknown +in the case of some of our "new" or "temporary" stars. + +I give the above story for what it is worth, but I attach no importance +to it myself. Some, however, may feel that it removes what they had felt +as a difficulty in the narrative,--namely, to understand how the star +could "stand over where the young Child lay." It would also explain, +what seems to be implied in the narrative, how it happened that the Magi +alone, and not the Jews in general, perceived the star at its second +appearance. + +For myself, the narrative appears to me astronomically too incomplete +for any astronomical conclusions to be drawn from it. The reticence of +the narrative on all points, except those directly relating to our Lord +Himself, is an illustration of the truth that the Scriptures were not +written to instruct us in astronomy, or in any of the physical sciences, +but that we might have eternal life. + + "AND THIS IS LIFE ETERNAL, THAT THEY MIGHT KNOW THEE THE ONLY + TRUE GOD, AND JESUS CHRIST, WHOM THOU HAST SENT." + + + + + A TABLE OF SCRIPTURAL REFERENCES + + + +-------+---------------+-----------------------+ + | Page. | Book. | Chap. and Verse. | + +-------+---------------+-----------------------+ + | 9 | I. Kings | v. 29-34 | + | 10 | Wisdom | vii. 17-22 (R.V.) | + | 11 | Psalm | viii. 3, 4 | + | 15 | Eccl. | i. 9 | + | 17 | Gen. | i. 1 | + | " | I. Chron. | xvi. 26 | + | " | Deut. | vi. 4 | + | " | Mark | xii. 29 | + | " | Neh. | ix. 6 | + | 19 | Heb. | xi. 23 | + | 20 | II. Pet. | iii. 8 | + | 22 | Psalm | cxi. 2-4 (R.V.) | + | " | Gen. | ii. 3 | + | 23 | Exod. | xx. 10, 11 | + | " | " | xxxi. 16, 17 | + | " | Gen. | i. 14 | + | 25 | " | i. 1 | + | 32 | Exod. | xv. 4, 5 | + | 35 | Gen. | i. 6-8 | + | " | " | i. 14 | + | 36 | " | i. 20 | + | " | Job | xxxvii. 18 (R.V.) | + | " | Num. | xvii. 39 | + | " | Isaiah | xl. 19 | + | 37 | Jer. | x. 9 | + | " | Psalm | cxxxvi. 6 | + | 38 | Heb. | i. 3 | + | 39 | II. Sam. | xxii. 8 | + | " | Job | xxvi. 11 | + | " | " | xxvi. 7 | + | " | I. Sam. | ii. 8 | + | 40 | Psalm | lxxv. 3 | + | " | " | civ. 2 | + | " | Isaiah | xl. 22 | + | " | Amos | ix. 6 | + | " | Num. | xxxiv. 4 | + | " | II. Sam. | xv. 30 | + | 41 | Psalm | cxlviii. 4 | + | " | Song of Three | | + | | Children | 38 | + | " | Amos | v. 8 | + | " | " | ix. 6 | + | " | Eccl. | i. 7 | + | " | Isaiah | lv. 10 (R.V.) | + | 42 | " | lv. 11 | + | " | Job | xxxvi. 26-28 | + | | | (R.V.) | + | " | Judges | v. 4 | + | " | Psalm | lxxvii. 17 | + | " | " | cxlvii. 8 | + | " | Prov. | xvi. 15 | + | " | Eccl. | xii. 2 | + | " | Isaiah | v. 6 | + | " | Jude | 12 | + | " | Nahum | i. 3 | + | " | Isaiah | xviii. 4 | + | 43 | Eccl. | xi. 3 | + | " | Job | xxvi. 8 | + | " | " | xxxviii. 34-37 | + | 44 | " | xxxviii. 19-29 | + | | | (R.V.) | + | " | Psalm | xviii. 6-17 (R.V.) | + | 45 | Jer. | x. 13 (R.V.) | + | " | Psalm | cxxxv. 7 | + | 46 | Job | xxxvii. 16 | + | 49 | " | xxxvi. 29 | + | " | Gen. | vii. 11 | + | 50 | II. Kings | vii. 1, 2 | + | " | Mal. | iii. 10 | + | " | Hos. | vi. 4 | + | " | Dan. | viii. 8 | + | " | Ezek. | xxxvii. 9 | + | 51 | Jer. | xlix. 36 | + | " | Eccl. | i. 6 | + | " | Isaiah | xi. 12 | + | " | " | xl. 22 | + | " | Prov. | viii. 27 | + | 52 | Job | xxii. 14 (R.V. | + | | | margin) | + | " | " | xxvi. 10 (R.V.) | + | " | Gen. | i. 9 | + | " | Psalm | xxiv. 2 | + | " | " | cxxxvi. 6 | + | 53 | Ezek. | xxxi. 4 | + | " | Gen. | vii. 11 | + | " | " | viii. 2 | + | " | Job | xxxviii. 16 | + | " | Prov. | iii. 20 | + | " | Jer. | v. 22 | + | 54 | Job | xxxviii. 8 | + | " | Prov. | viii. 27, 29 | + | 55 | Josh. | x. 13 | + | " | Psalm | xix. 1-6 (R.V.) | + | 56 | I. Kings | xxii. 19 | + | 57 | Jer. | xxxiii. 22 | + | " | Deut. | iv. 15, 19 | + | 58 | Job | xxxviii. 7 | + | " | Judges | v. 20 | + | " | II. Kings | vi. 14-17 | + | 60 | Job | xxxviii. 52 (R.V.) | + | " | Psalm | cxi. 2 | + | " | Rev. | ii. 26, 28 | + | 61 | Isaiah | xiv. 12-14 | + | " | Rev. | xxii. 16 | + | 62 | Jer. | xxxi. 36 | + | " | Isaiah | xl. 26-31 (R.V.) | + | 63 | Gen. | i. 14-19 | + | 64 | Deut. | xxxiii. 14 (R.V.) | + | " | I. John | i. 5 | + | " | Psalm | xxvii. 1 | + | " | Isaiah | lx. 19 | + | " | John | i. 9 | + | " | Psalm | lxxxiv. 11 | + | " | Mal. | iv. 2 | + | 65 | James | i. 17 | + | " | Psalm | cxxxix. 12 | + | " | Deut. | iv. 19 | + | " | " | xvii. 2, 3 | + | 66 | II. Kings | xxiii. 11 | + | " | Ezek. | viii. 11 | + | " | " | viii. 16 | + | " | Job | xxxi. 26 | + | " | Cant. | vi. 10 | + | 67 | Judges | viii. 13 | + | 67 | Judges | xiv. 18 | + | " | Jer. | xliii. 13 | + | 68 | Isaiah | xix. 18 | + | " | Cant. | vi. 10 | + | 69 | Psalm | lxxii. 5 | + | " | " | lxxii. 17 | + | 70 | " | lxxxix. 36 | + | " | " | l. 1 | + | " | " | cxiii. 3 | + | " | " | xix. 6 | + | " | Eccl. | i. 3 | + | 71 | Job | xxxviii. 12-14 | + | " | " | xxxviii. 14 (R.V.) | + | " | Eccl. | i. 5 | + | 72 | Job | xxvi. 7 | + | " | Psalm | xix. 6 | + | " | II. Kings | iv. 19 | + | " | Psalm | cxxi. 6 | + | " | Isaiah | xlix. 10 | + | " | Rev. | vii. 16 | + | " | Deut. | xxxiii. 14 | + | 73 | James | i. 17 | + | " | Job | xxxviii. 33 | + | " | Wisdom | vii. 18 | + | 78 | Rom. | i. 20-23 | + | 79 | John | ix. 4 | + | 80 | Psalm | lxxxi. 3 | + | " | Prov. | vii. 20 | + | 82 | Isaiah | lx. 20 | + | 83 | Num. | x. 10 | + | " | Psalm | lxxxi. 3 | + | " | Isaiah | iii. 18 | + | 84 | Gen. | xxxvii. 9 | + | " | Jer. | viii. 2 | + | " | Psalm | civ. 19 | + | " | " | lxxxix. 36, 37 | + | " | " | cxxxvi. 9 | + | " | Jer. | xxxi. 35 | + | " | Eccl. | xii. 2 | + | " | Isaiah | xiii. 10 | + | " | Ezek. | xxxii. 7 | + | " | Joel | ii. 10, 31 | + | " | " | iii. 15 | + | " | Hab. | iii. 11 | + | " | Exod. | ii. 2 | + | 85 | Deut. | xxxiii. 13, 14 | + | " | II. Kings | xv. 13 | + | " | Dan. | iv. 29 | + | " | Ezra | vi. 15 | + | " | Neh. | i. 1 | + | " | I. Kings | vi. 1, 37, 38 | + | " | " | viii. 2 | + | " | Cant. | vi. 10 | + | " | Isaiah | lxxiv. 23 | + | 86 | " | xxx. 26 | + | " | Rev. | xix. 6-8 | + | " | Gen. | xxxvii. 9 | + | 87 | " | xxxvii. 10 | + | " | Job | xxxi. 26-28 (R.V.) | + | 88 | Deut. | iv. 12, 15, 16, 19 | + | " | Judges | viii. 21 | + | " | Isaiah | iii. 18 | + | " | II. Kings | xxiii. 13 | + | 89 | Gen. | xiv. 5 | + | " | I. Sam. | xxxi. 10 | + | " | II. Kings | xxiii. 13 | + | 89 | Jer. | vii. 18 | + | 90 | " | xliv. 17, 18 | + | 91 | Isaiah | xxx. 26 | + | " | " | lx. 20 | + | 92 | Psalm | cxxi. 6 | + | " | " | civ. 19-24 (R.V.) | + | 96 | Gen. | xv. 5 | + | 97 | Psalm | cxlvii. 4 | + | " | Isaiah | xl. 22 | + | 98 | I. Cor. | xv. 41 | + | 99 | Prov. | xxv. 3 | + | " | Job | xi. 7, 8 | + | " | " | xxii. 12 | + | " | Jer. | xxxi. 37 | + | 100 | Psalm | ciii. 11, 12 | + | 107 | Joel | ii. 30 | + | " | Gen. | iii. 24 | + | " | Heb. | i. 7 | + | " | I. Chron. | xxi. 16 | + | 108 | Jude | 13 | + | 113 | Acts | xix. 35 (R.V.) | + | 116 | Rev. | vi. 13 | + | " | Isaiah | xxxiv. 4 | + | " | Rev. | viii. 10 | + | " | Jude | 13 | + | 117 | Job | iii. 9 (margin) | + | " | " | xli. 18 | + | " | " | xxxvii. 22 (R.V.) | + | 119 | Jer. | x. 2 | + | 122 | Wisdom | vii. 18 | + | 123 | Amos | i. 1 | + | " | Zech. | xiv. 5 | + | " | Gen. | i. 14 | + | 124 | Joel | ii. 10 | + | " | " | ii. 30, 31 | + | " | Acts | ii. 19, 20 | + | " | Rev. | vi. 12 | + | " | Amos | viii. 9 | + | 125 | Micah | iii. 6 | + | " | Isaiah | xiii. 10 | + | " | Jer. | xv. 9 | + | " | Ezek. | xxxii. 7, 8 | + | 129 | Mal. | iv. 2 | + | " | James | i. 17 (R.V.) | + | 131 | Gen. | xiv. 5 | + | " | Isaiah | xlvi. 1 | + | 132 | " | xiv. 12 | + | " | II. Peter | i. 19 | + | " | Isaiah | lxv. 11 | + | " | Dan. | v. 26 (R.V.) | + | 133 | Amos | v. 25, 26 | + | " | Acts | vii. 43 | + | 143 | Isaiah | viii. 19 | + | 144 | Ezek. | xxi. 21 (R.V.) | + | " | Isaiah | xlvii. 12, 13 | + | " | Jer. | x. 2 | + | 150 | Acts | xvii. 24-28 | + | 163 | Gen. | ix. 13 | + | 164 | " | iii. 15 | + | 166 | " | iii. 24 | + | " | Ezek. | i. 5 | + | " | Rev. | iv. 7 (R.V.) | + | " | Ezek. | x. 20 | + | " | I. Kings | vi. 29, 32 | + | 167 | Gen. | x. 9 | + | 169 | Psalm | lxxx. 1 | + | 173 | Gen. | vi. 19 | + | " | " | vii. 2 | + | 184 | Psalm | l. 5 | + | 186 | Gen. | xxxvii. 9 | + | 189 | " | xlix. 9 | + | " | Rev. | v. 5 | + | 190 | Deut. | xxxiii. 17 (R.V.) | + | " | Gen. | xlix. 6 (R.V.) | + | " | " | xlix. 4, 17 | + | 191 | Num. | xxiii. 7, 24 (R.V.) | + | " | " | xxiv. 9 (R.V.) | + | " | " | xxiv. 8 (R.V.) | + | " | " | xxiv. 7 (R.V.) | + | 193 | Exod. | xxxii. 1 | + | " | Acts | vii. 41, 42 | + | " | Exod. | xx. 3 | + | " | " | xx. 4, 5 | + | 194 | Deut. | iv. 15 | + | " | Psalm | cvi. 20 | + | " | Acts | vii. 42 | + | " | I. Kings | xii. 28 | + | 195 | Rev. | v. 5 | + | 203 | Job | iii. 8, 9 (R.V.) | + | " | " | xli. | + | " | Psalm | civ. 25 | + | " | Isaiah | xxvii. 1 | + | 204 | Job | xxvi. 12, 13 | + | 205 | Isaiah | xxx. 7 (R.V.) | + | " | " | li. 9, 10 (R.V.) | + | " | Psalm | lxxxix. 9, 10 | + | 206 | Ezek. | xxxii. 2 (R.V.) | + | " | Rev. | xx. 2 | + | " | Ezek. | xxxii. 4 (R.V.) | + | " | " | xxix. 3, 5 | + | 207 | Rev. | xii. 6 (R.V.) | + | 208 | " | xii. 15, 16 (R.V.) | + | 209 | Job | iii. 9 (R.V.) | + | " | " | xli. 18 (R.V.) | + | 210 | Psalm | xix. 5 | + | 211 | I. Kings | xviii. 27 | + | " | Isaiah | xxx. 31 | + | 212 | Psalm | lxxiv. 12-17 | + | 215 | Job | ix. 9 | + | " | " | xxxviii. 31 | + | " | Amos | v. 8 | + | 217 | Isaiah | lxv. 11 | + | 218 | II. Kings | xvii. 30 | + | " | Gen. | xlix. 22 | + | 220 | Rev. | i. 12, 13, 15 | + | " | " | i. 20 | + | 223 | I. Peter | iii. 20 | + | " | Amos | v. 8 | + | " | Job | xxxviii. 31 | + | 224 | Cant. | ii. 11-13 (R.V.) | + | 225 | Job | xxxviii. 4 | + | " | " | xxxviii. 31 (R.V.) | + | 231 | " | ix. 9 | + | " | " | xxxviii. 31 | + | " | Amos | v. 8 | + | " | Isaiah | xiii. 10 | + | " | Prov. | i. 22 | + | 234 | Gen. | x. 8 | + | 235 | " | x. 10 | + | 238 | Isaiah | xiv. 13, 14 | + | 239 | " | xiii. 9-11 | + | " | Amos | v. 8 | + | 241 | Job | xxxviii. 36 | + | 242 | " | xxvi. 13 | + | " | Isaiah | xlv. 7 | + | 243 | Job | xxxviii. 32 | + | 251 | " | xxxviii. 32 | + | " | II. Kings | xxiii. 5 | + | " | Deut. | iv. 19 | + | " | Job | ix. 9 | + | " | " | xxxviii. 31, 32 | + | " | " | xxxvii. 9 | + | 252 | Exod. | xxxii. | + | " | I. Kings | xii. | + | 253 | II. Kings | xxiii. 5 | + | " | Job | ix., xxxviii. | + | 257 | " | xxxviii. 33 | + | " | Luke | xi. 2 | + | 258 | Job | ix. 9 | + | " | " | xxxviii. 31-33 | + | 259 | " | xxxvii. 9 | + | 260 | Isaiah | l. 9 | + | 262 | Job | xxxvii. 9 | + | 271 | Gen. | i. 14 | + | " | Deut. | iv. 19 | + | 273 | Exod. | xii. 18, 19 | + | " | Lev. | xxiii. 32 | + | 275 | Psalm | lv. 17 | + | " | Job | iii. 9 (margin) | + | " | Cant. | ii. 17 | + | " | Gen. | xxxii. 24, 26 | + | " | Josh. | vi. 15 | + | " | Judges | xix. 25 | + | " | II. Sam. | ii. 32 | + | 276 | Gen. | xxxii. 31 | + " | Exod. | xvi. 21 | + | " | I. Sam. | xi. 9 | + | " | II. Sam. | iv. 5 | + | " | I. Kings | xviii. 26 | + | " | Judges | xix. 8, 9 | + | " | Job | vii. 2 | + | " | Jer. | vi. 4 | + | " | Prov. | vii. 9 | + | 277 | Exod. | xii. 6 | + | " | " | xvi. 12 | + | " | " | xxx. 8 | + | " | Levit. | xxiii. 5 | + | " | Num. | ix. 3 | + | " | " | xxviii. 4 | + | 278 | Deut. | xvi. 6 | + | 279 | Exod. | xxx. 8 | + | 280 | I. Cor. | xv. 52 | + | " | Psalm | lxiii. 6 | + | " | " | cxix. 148 | + | " | Lam. | ii. 19 | + | 281 | Judges | vii. 19 | + | " | Exod. | xiv. 24 | + | " | I. Sam. | xi. 11 | + | " | Matt. | xiv. 25 | + | " | Mark | vi. 48 | + | " | Dan. | iii. 6, 15 | + | " | " | iv. 19, 33 | + | " | " | v. 5 | + | " | Job | xxxviii. 12 | + | 282 | Acts | i. 12 | + | " | Matt. | xx. | + | " | John | xi. 9, 10 | + | 291 | Exod. | xx. 11 | + | " | Psalm | cxviii. 24 | + | 293 | II. Kings | iv. 23 | + | " | Isaiah | i. 13, 14 | + | 294 | Isaiah | lxvi. 23 | + | " | Amos | viii. 5 | + | " | Col. | ii. 16 | + | " | Num. | xxviii. | + | " | I. Chron. | xxiii. | + | " | II. Chron. | ii. | + | " | " | xxix. | + | " | Ezek. | xlv. | + | " | Ezra | iii. | + | " | Neh. | x. | + | 295 | Num. | xxix. 1 | + | " | " | xxix. 7 | + | " | " | xxix. 12 | + | 299 | Deut. | xvi. 1 | + | " | I. Kings | vi. 1, 37 | + | " | " | vi. 38 | + | " | " | viii. 2 | + | 300 | Esther | ii. 16 | + | " | " | iii. 7, 13 | + | " | " | viii. 9, 12 | + | " | " | ix. 1, 17, 19, 21 | + | " | Ezra | vi. 15 | + | " | Neh. | i. 1 | + | " | " | ii. 1 | + | " | Zech. | vii. 1 | + | " | Deut. | xxi. 13 (yerach) | + | " | II. Kings | xv. 13 " | + | " | Gen. | xxix. 14 (chodesh) | + | 301 | Num. | xi. 18-20, 31 " | + | " | Psalm | lxxviii. 27 | + | 302 | Gen. | vii. 11 | + | " | " | viii. 3, 4 | + | 304 | Ecclus. | xliii. 6, 7 | + | " | Psalm | civ. 19 | + | 308 | Exod. | xii. 2 | + | 309 | I. Chron. | xii. 15 | + | " | Jer. | xxxvi. 22, 23 | + | " | Ezra | x. 9 | + | 310 | Neh. | i. 1, 2 | + | " | " | ii. 1 | + | " | " | viii. 14 | + | 311 | Exod. | xxiii. 16 | + | " | " | xxxiv. 22 | + | " | II. Chron. | xxiv. 23 | + | 312 | II. Sam. | xi. 1 | + | " | I. Chron. | xx. 1 | + | " | I. Kings | xx. 26 | + | " | II. Chron. | xxxvi. 10 | + | 313 | Exod. | xii. 2 | + | " | " | xxiii. 16 | + | " | " | xxxiv. 22 | + | 321 | Gen. | i. 5 | + | 322 | " | vii. 11 | + | " | " | viii. 13, 14 | + | 325 | " | viii. 22 | + | " | Psalm | lxv. 9-11 (R.V.) | + | 326 | Exod. | xxi. 2 | + | " | " | xxiii. 10, 11 | + | 327 | Lev. | xxv. 20-22 | + | " | Lev. | xxvi. 2, 21 | + | " | " | xxvi. 33-35 | + | " | Deut. | xv. 1 | + | 328 | " | xxxi. 10, 11 | + | " | Jer. | xxxiv. | + | " | Lev. | xxvi. 32-35 | + | " | II. Chron. | xxxvi. 21 | + | 329 | Neh. | x. 31 | + | " | Lev. | xxv. 8-10 | + | 330 | Num. | xxxvi. 4 | + | " | Isaiah | lxi. 2 | + | " | Ezek. | xlvi. 17 | + | 332 | Lev. | xxv. 8, 10 | + | " | " | xxv. 11, 12 | + | 333 | " | xxv. 22 | + | " | " | xxv. 3 | + | " | " | xxv. 10 | + | 338 | " | xxv. 42 | + | " | Dan. | i. 1, 3, 4, 6, 7, | + | | | 17-20 | + | 340 | " | viii. 13, 14 | + | " | " | xii. 7 | + | " | " | vii. 25 | + | " | Rev. | xii. 14 | + | 341 | " | xiii. 5 | + | " | " | xi. 2, 3 | + | " | " | xii. 6 | + | | Dan. | xi. 13 (margin) | + | " | " | iv. 16 | + | 348 | " | iii. 16-18 | + | 353 | Josh. | x. 12 | + | 355 | " | iv. 19 | + | " | " | v. 10 | + | " | " | vii. 2-5 | + | " | " | vii. 1, 21 | + | " | " | viii. | + | 356 | " | viii. 30-35 | + | " | Exod. | xix. 1, 11 | + | 362 | Josh. | x. 13 | + | 369 | Luke | ii. 44 | + | 371 | Josh. | x. 8 | + | 373 | " | x. 10 | + | 374 | " | x. 12 | + | 375 | " | x. 11 | + | 376 | " | x. 27 (R.V.) | + | 378 | " | x. 13 | + | 382 | " | x. 13 | + | 384 | " | x. 13, 14 | + | 385 | II. Kings | xx. 5-11 | + | 386 | Isaiah | xxxviii. 8 | + | 387 | II. Chron. | xxxii. 31 | + | 389 | Isaiah | xxxviii. 8 | + | 390 | II. Kings | xx. 9 (R.V.) | + | " | I. Kings | x. 5 | + | " | I. Chron. | xxvi. 16 | + | " | II. Kings | xvi. 18 (R.V.) | + | 391 | Neh. | xii. 37 | + | 392 | Isaiah | xxxviii. 10, 11 | + | " | " | xxxviii. 19, 20 | + | 393 | Matt. | ii. 2, 5-10 | + | 396 | " | ii. 10 | + | 399 | Luke | ii. 11 | + | 400 | John | xvii. 3 | + +-------+---------------+-----------------------+ + + + + +INDEX + + + PAGE + Aben Ezra, Rabbi, 260, 278, 305 + + Abib (month of green ears), 299 + + Acronical rising, 223, 246, 261 + + Adar, month, 85, 300, 304 + + Aerolites, 111, 112, 113 + + Ahaz, Dial of, 385-392 + + Alexandria, Museum of, 5, 6, 138, 139, 290 + + Algebar, star-name, 233, 234 + + Allen, R. H., 221, 222 + + "Alroy", 278 + + Aratus, 149, 150, 152, 154, 162, 163, 186, 208, 218, 222, 224 + + Arcturus (_see_ `Ash), 258-266 + + Aristotle, 76, 105 + + `Ash, 214, 215, 216, 243, 251, 258, 259, 260, 261, 264-266 + + Asherah ("groves"), 67, 88 + + Ashtoreth, 67, 88, 89, 90, 131 + + Astrology, 5, 77, 78, 130-145, 248 + + Astruc, Jean, 171, 172 + + Atmospheric circulation, 41-45 + + Aurora Borealis, 117 + + `Ayish, _see_ `Ash + + + Baal, or Bel, 67, 89, 131, 176, 178, 210, 253 + + Bear, the (_see_ Arcturus), 152 + + Benetna`sh, 260 + + Bethlehem, Star of, 393-400 + + Bosanquet, J. W., 388 + + Bosanquet, R. H. M., 315 + + "Boundary-stones", 153, 154, 198, 318, 320 + + Bow-star, the, 240 + + Bradley, third Astronomer Royal, 96 + + Bul, month, 85, 299 + + Burton, Lady, 379 + + + "Canterbury Tales", 277 + + Cardinal points, 50, 51 + + Carrington, R., 220 + + Causality, Law of, 15, 16, 18, 78 + + "Chaldean Account of Genesis", 27 + + Cherubim, 166, 169, 188, 190 + + Cheyne, Dr., 238, 240, 254, 255, 256 + + Chisleu, month, 85, 238, 300, 304, 310 + + Chiun, 133, 134, 144 + + Clouds, 42, 43, 44, 46, 54 + the balancings of the, 46 + the spreadings of, 49 + + Colures, the, 159 + + Comets, 103-108 + Donati's, 105, 107 + Halley's, 103, 104 + + Conder, Col. C. R., 238 + + Constellations, list of, 151-152 + origin of, 149-161 + + Copernicus, 76 + + Cowell, P. H., 303 + + Creation, 12-24 + story of, Babylonian, 26, 170, 178, 240, 242, 246, 252 + Hebrew, 25 + Scandinavian, 29 + + Cycles, Astronomical, of Daniel, 337-348 + + Cylinder seal, 71, 217 + + + Damascius, 26, 27 + + Daniel, Cycles of, 337-348 + + Dawson, Dr. W. Bell, 343 + + Day and its divisions, 269-282 + + Days, different kinds of, 271, 272 + + "Dayspring", 71, 281 + + Decans, 142, 244, 245, 248 + + De Cheseaux, 343 + + Deep (_teh[=o]m_), 25-34, 53, 201, 210, 211, 234 + fountains of, 52-54 + + Delitzsch, Prof. Fr., 31, 157, 170, 171, 285 + + Deluge, 49, 53, 83, 161, 165, 168, 170-185, 254 + + Denning, W. F., 220 + + Dial of Ahaz, 385-392 + + Diana of the Ephesians, 112 + + Dieulafoy, Marcel, 372 + + Disraeli, 278 + + Drach, 221 + + Draconic period, 122 + + Dragon's Head and Tail, 198, 199 + + Driver, Dr., 172, 209 + + + Earth (_eretz_), 39 + corners of, 51 + foundations of, 39, 58 + pillars of, 39, 40 + + East (_kedem_, front), 51 + (_mizrach_, rising), 51 + + Eclipses, 118-129 + + Edda, prose, 29 + + Ellicott, Andrew, 114 + + Epicureans, 71 + + Epping, Dr., 274 + + Equuleus, 152 + + Eratosthenes, 218 + + Ethanim, month, 85, 299 + + Eudoxus, 5, 6, 37, 152, 345 + + Euripides, 218 + + Eusebius, 88 + + Evenings, between the two, 277-279 + + "Eyelids of the Morning", 117, 209, 210 + + + "False Dawn", 117 + + Firmament (_raqia`_), 35-38 + (_stereoma_), 37 + + Flamsteed, first Astronomer Royal, 96 + + Flood, _see_ Deluge + + + _Gad_, 132, 217 + + Galileo, 3, 4, 76 + + Gamaliel, Rabbon, 297 + + Genesis and the Constellations, 162-169 + + Gesenius, 134 + + Gilgamesh, Epic of, 167, 170, 177, 180 + + Gosse, P. H., 209 + + Groves, _see_ Asherah + + Guinness, Dr. H. Grattan, 343 + + + Heaven (_shamayim_), 35, 36, 38 + "bisection of", 55, 362 + foundations of, 39 + host of, 56, 57, 65 + pillars of, 39 + stories of, 40 + windows of, 49, 50, 53 + + Heliacal rising, 59, 222, 224, 261 + + Herschel, Sir W., 75, 76 + + Hershon, P. I., 311 + + Hesiod, 136, 152, 154, 216, 218, 237, 284 + + Hesperus, 137, 232, 258 + + Hipparchus, 5, 96, 250, 345 + + Hoeffler, Dr., 266 + + Hommel, Dr., 240 + + Homer, 136, 153, 154 + + Horace, 287, 288 + + Hour (_sha`ah_), 281 + double- (_kasbu_), 282, 320, 345, 381 + + Humboldt, 114 + + Hyades, 133, 217 + + + Ibrahim ben Ahmed, 114 + + Iliad, 80 + + Istar, 90, 131, 253, 323, 324 + + + Jehuda, Rabbi, 261 + + Jensen, 240 + + Josephus, 68, 187, 222, 279, 288, 289 + + Joshua's Long Day, 351-384 + + Jubilee, the, 326-336 + + Jupiter, 104, 131, 132, 137, 247, 396 + (_Nibir_), 243, 247 + + Juvenal, 288 + + + Karaite Jews, 278 + + Kepler, 4, 96, 396 + + _K[)e]s[=i]l_, 214-216, 231-232, 237-243, 251, 261, 262 + + _Ketu_, 201 + + _Kimah_, 214-216, 223, 231-232, 237, 241, 243, 251, 261, 262 + + King, Dr. L. W., 240, 241, 303 + + Kouyunjik mound, 27, 33 + + + Lance-star, 240 + + Leonid meteors, 114, 116 + + Leviathan, 196-212 + + Longfellow, 233, 236 + + Lucifer, 132 + + + Maedler, 220 + + Maestlin, 219 + + Mazzaroth (or Mazzaloth), 130, 214, 243-257, 270, 280 + + _Meni_, 132, 217 + + Mercury, 131, 137 + + Merodach, 28, 29, 33, 131, 167, 178, 210, 234-242, 247, 252 + + Meteors, 111-117 + + Metonic Cycle, 306, 335, 336, 339, 344 + + Milton, 107 + + Mishna, the, 297, 311 + + Mithraic cult, 160 + + Month, 293-304 anomalistic, 342 + + Months, Hebrew names for, 304 + + Moon, 79-92 + blindness, 92 + -god (Sin), 87, 253, 323, 324 + harvest, 81 + new, 123 + phases of, 80, 91 + + Mueller, Otfried, 262 + + + Newton, 4 + + Nisan, month, 300, 304, 310, 311, 315, 320 + + Node, 121, 122 + + North (_mezarim_), 262, 263 + (_tsaphon_), 51 + + + Onias, 68 + + Orion, 231-242 + + Ovid, 288 + + + Palestine Exploration Fund, map, 360, 362 + + Panyasis 152 + + Parallax, 73, 98, 265 + + Persius, 288 + + Peschitta, 259, 261 + + Philo, 289 + + Phosphorus, 132, 137 + + Pinches, T. G., 27, 28, 30, 31, 90, 176, 235 + + Pleiades, 133, 152, 213-230 + + Precession, 158 + + Pritchard, Prof. C., 397 + + Proctor, R. A., 107, 108, 135, 141 + + Procyon, 152, 240 + + Ptolemy, Claudius, 5, 76, 96, 149-154 + + Ptolemy Philometer, 68 + + Pythagoras, 137, 345 + + + _Rahab_ (the proud one), 204-206, 211 + + _Rahu_, 201 + + Rain, 42-45, 49 + + "Records of the Past", 26, 28 + + _Remphan_, 133, 134 + + Ring with wings, 88, 126, 129 + + Ruskin, 46 + + + Sabbath, 22-24, 283-292 + + Sabbatic Year and the Jubilee, 326-336 + + Samaritans, 278 + + Samas (sun-god), _see_ Sun + + Sanchoniathon, 88 + + _Sanhedrim_, 296 + + Saros, the, 122, 123, 346 + + Saturn and Astrology, 130-145 + + Sayce, A. H., 33, 315 + + Schiaparelli, G. V., 7, 41, 43, 139, 145, 198, 253, 254, 261-263, 269, + 279, 285, 286, 290 + + Septuagint Version, 37, 133, 134, 161, 215, 231, 241, 258, 259 + + Sin (moon-god), _see_ Moon + + Sirius, 98, 240 + + Sivan, month, 303, 320 + + Smith, George, 27, 30 + + South (_darom_, bright), 51 + (_negeb_, desert), 51 + + Star of Bethlehem, 393-400 + + Stars, 75, 95-100 + morning, 59-61 + royal, 160 + shooting, 113 + Triad of, 253, 320 + + Statius, 222 + + Stern, Prof., 261, 262 + + Strassmaier, 274, 285 + + Sun, 55, 63-78 + -god (Samas), 67, 131, 174, 253, 323, 324 + -stroke, 72 + + + Talmud, 222, 279, 297, 311 + + Tammuz, 66 + + Targum, the Jerusalem, 190 + + Tavthe, _see_ Tiamat + + _Teh[=o]m_, _see_ Deep + + Tennyson, 36, 79, 80 + + Thales, 345 + + Thiele, Prof., 15, 16 + + Tiamat, or Tiamtu, 27-29, 32, 34, 201, 210, 234-235, 240-242 + + Tibullus, 288 + + Tides, 41, 53, 92 + + Tribes of Israel and the Zodiac, 186-195 + + Tycho Brahe, 96 + + + Venus, 90, 131, 132, 136, 137 + + Virgil, 160 + + Vulgate, 258, 259 + + + Week and the Sabbath, 283-292 + + West (_meb[=o] hasshemesh_, going down of the sun), 51 + (_yam_, the sea), 51 + + Winckler, Prof. H., 235 + + Winds, 50, 51 + + Wormwood, the star, 116 + + + Xenophanes, 71 + + + Year, 305-325 + (_shanah_), 305 + + Yehoshua, Rabbi, 297 + + + Zeuchros, 142, 249 + + Zif, month, 85, 299 + + Zodiac, constellations of, 141, 151, 152 + sections of (_mizrata_), 243, 251 + signs of, 141, 245, 249 + + Zodiacal Light, 117 + + + RICHARD CLAY & SONS, LIMITED, + BREAD STREET HILL, E.C., AND + BUNGAY, SUFFOLK. + + + + +Transcriber's Notes: + + +Ellipses match the original except in poetry quotations where a row of +asterisks represent an ellipses. + +The following corrections have been made to the text: + + Page 27: shows the god An[vs]ar[original has An[)s]ar] + + Page 29: not a Creation myth at all.[period missing in + original] + + Page 89: representing the sun[original has son] and moon + + Page 140: place of an actual star into a horoscope;[semi-colon + missing in original] + + Page 176: gods and the spirits of heaven.[period missing in + original] + + Page 176: '[quotation mark missing in original]What, has a + soul escaped? + + Page 176: '[original has double quote]Thou sage of the gods, + warrior + + Page 206: "[quotation mark missing in original]I have given + thee for meat + + Page 260: "tail" of the Great Bear[original has extraneous + quotation mark] + + Page 374: and it was now noon,[comma missing in original] the + noon + + Page 389: fifteen Psalms (cxx.-cxxxiv.)[original has + (cxx.-cxxxiv).] + + Page 405: Allen, R. H. 221,[comma missing in original] 222 + + Page 405: "Alroy" 278[original has 221] + + Page 407: Hommel[original has Hoemmel], Dr. 240 + + Page 410: Tavthe[original has Tavthe], _see_ Tiamat + +The following words use an oe ligature in the original: + + Celoeno + manoeuvre/manoeuvres/manoeuvred/Out-manoeuvred + Phoenician + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Astronomy of the Bible, by E. 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