We have had rather a feast of eclipses recently. And there is more to come - six lunar months later this year, on September 28, there is another total eclipse of the moon. The Easter lunar eclipse we saw on Saturday night was bright and clear and not altogether unusual.
Jeff Tallon: Biblical lunar eclipse comes full circle
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On the evening of Jesus' crucifixion, the moon rose blood red, the Bible says.
For the early Christian church, Easter was linked to the Jewish feast of Passover which occurred on the 14th day of the first month in the ancient Jewish calendar. It was precisely the first full moon after the Spring equinox and commemorated the night of the departure of the Israelite tribes from slavery in Egypt. Full moon is the only time lunar eclipses can be observed and so from time to time these eclipses coincide with the Jewish Passover.
We are told in the Bible, and also in the Jewish Talmud, that Jesus was crucified on the eve of the Passover - a Friday. Luke's gospel states that John the Baptist began teaching and baptising in the 15th year of Tiberius Caesar which would be AD29. Jesus began his own ministry later the same year and several sources indicate a 3 year teaching ministry so this takes us to his crucifixion at the Passover in AD33. Astronomically, we find the date was 3 April AD33 in our current Gregorian calendar and the only possible date that matches all the historical and astronomical elements.
That evening of the crucifixion, when each household looked for the rising of the full moon so as to start their family Passover feast, the moon rose blood red in eclipse at 6pm. The apostle Peter referred to this seven weeks later when he stated the sun was "darkened and the moon turned to blood". Later that century a Greek writer by the name of Phlegon referred to these events stating that they occurred in the fourth year of the 202nd Olympiad. The first year of the first Olympiad began in the summer of 776BC so Phlegon's date is the spring of AD33 - a perfect match with the astronomical date. All this goes to show the historical accuracy of the Biblical account, a theme which can be repeated again and again.
Last weekend, 110 Saros periods later, we experienced our own Easter eclipse. Interestingly, Good Friday this year was the very same date, April 3.
• Dr Jeff Tallon is a physicist working in the field of superconductivity.