Monday, 24 June 2013

Bears, bibles, dippers & dragon

IOPNA looks to the north of Cancer, the 11th constellation of the ‘Mazzaroth’ (Zodiac):

 Aha!!...so the Great Bear mentioned in the Bible keeps Cancer company. There’s the Lesser Bear too, with Polaris on his tail.
Maybe…maybe not. 

Align top to west

What do you mean - may be not? Didn’t you say that “Arcturus with his sons” in Job 9 and 38 is generally accepted to be the Great Bear with its cubs?  That’s what all the translations and concordances say.
The King James Bible doesn’t say that - it just leaves it as Arcturus meaning ‘keeper of the bear’ - but the original Hebrew name was ash meaning ‘group’.                    

Huh??...there’s something wrong there.                                                                  
Where are the cubs anyway?...I can only see one…and have you ever seen bears with long tails like that?

Well no, I suppose not. You don’t think this is all based on mythology do you?
Well the story goes they‘ve got long tails because that’s how Zeus threw them up there!

Aw, sure!
So let’s take a close look at this name ‘Arcturus’.  The Greeks have apparently invented this, with arktikos in Greek meaning ‘bear’, hence arcticus in Latin from which we have ‘arctic in English. We have assumed the Bible’s Hebrew couldn’t mean the brilliant star in Bootes because the original name meant ‘group’ so it must refer to a constellation, obviously the Great Bear, while overlooking the mythology or any flaw.   However…..                                                                         
If we could take a bird’s eye view from the North Pole, of the 30 brightest stars in the heavens only 9 are north of the ecliptic line …and guess which is the brightest of those?                                                           
Not Arcturus in Bootes?  Is that the brightest star north of the ecliptic?

It sure is – Arcturus is the brightest of ‘the group’!...followed closely by Vega and Capella, then Altair, Pollux and 4 more. It was the first star ever seen in the daytime – in 1635.

Really? So Job highlights the starry southern sky as “the chambers of the south” then God reminds him of the northern constellations with: “Arcturus (Ash) with his sons”! That in itself was worth discovering!
God is thinking bigger than us….

…as usual!  Seeing mythology seems to have messed up the Redemption story at this point, can we briefly check what there is to see here?
In Ursa Major (Great Bear): the stars Alkaid, Mizar, Alioth, Megrez, Phad, Merak and Dubhe form the Big Dipper or Plough.  Mizar (2nd last on the tail) is a quadruple star and has a twin, Alcor, which itself is a binary star….

…and together they make for the famous eyesight test known as ‘the horse & rider’ - once used by the Roman army!  
Now extend a line from Merak thru Dubhe on the bear’s flank leading direct to Stella Polaris marking the North Celestial Pole.                                          
Yes but apparently that’s only been the case since 1900 BC; precession of the Earth’s rotation shifted it from being marked by Thuben in Draco the dragon.
Interesting hey!?                                                                       
Polaris, Kocab, Pherkad and 2 other stars form the Little Dipper in Ursa Minor (Lesser Bear). At least that’s what they tell me – we might have a brilliant starry sky ‘downunder’ but we can’t see the Little Dipper.                                                                    

I know this hasn’t done much for our search for the Redemption story but it sure is remarkable.
Did you say 1900 BC?...wasn’t that Abraham’s era?
That was about when he went to sacrifice Isaac on Mount Moriah, where Jesus was finally crucified: “God will provide Himself a lamb”.

Whoa!!  God started to move with His plan of Redemption and so did Earth’s axis!  
So we didn’t draw a complete blank after all.                                                                       

Is there any other constellation associated with Cancer?


NEXT: Welcome aboard the ‘Argo’ - and don’t miss the comment below

 The series: Constellations of the 'Mazzaroth' can be found on hotspuds.blogspot.com.au

 

Acknowledgements:   
Stellarium 
Wallace K, Dawes G, Northfield P, Astronomy Australia 2013, Quasar Publishing 
Photo credit: Egnorance.blogspot.com.au                                                                                                                                  

1 comment:

  1. I really puzzled over this one - more than a stretch of the imagination, it just didn’t make sense. As a last resort I prayed: “Lord, you were the One who said this to Job – what did you mean by ‘Arcturus with his sons’?” I share with you the answer He gave me: “The star you call Arcturus is the brightest in the north.” Opening a secular astronomy guide to confirm this, I knew the answer before finding the page.
    Guess who else is interested in our heavenly slide show!

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