The moon will hide the face of the sun again this month (Wednesday, July 22, 2009) in the longest solar eclipse in this 21st century. "It will be a monster, with a totality lasting more than 6.6 minutes at maximum," say Fred Espenak and Jay Anderson, writers for Sky & Telescope magazine. You may recall that when we interviewed Mark Biltz for our May 2008 issue of Prophecy in the News magazine, we noted that he had discovered three solar eclipses that would occur on each of three annual calendar dates that introduce the Jewish month of Av for the years 2008, 2009, and 2010. The first eclipse occurred on August 1, 2008. The second solar eclipse is coming up this month on July 22, 2009, and the third will happen on July 11, 2010. Though these dates vary in our Gregorian calendar, they occur on the same calendar date in the Jewish calendar Av 1. A solar eclipse occurs when the moon travels across the face of the sun, thus blocking out its sunlight. A "total" solar eclipse means that the moon is large enough (closer to Earth) to completely cover the surface of the sun, whereas, an "annular" solar eclipse means that the moon is farther away from Earth and appears smaller than the suns disk. A "partial" solar eclipse means that the moon only crosses part the suns surface, but does not completely block out its light. These three solar eclipses are "total" eclipses last year in the far north, this year across the middle of Earths surface, and next year in the far south.
The moon will hide the face of the sun again this month (Wednesday, July 22, 2009) in the longest solar eclipse in this 21st century. Are you aware that this is the first of the month of AV this year. There was an eclipse last year on the first of AV.
Next year there will be an eclipse on the first of AV.
This is in middle from the 17th of Tammuz
to the Ninth of AV when both of the temples were destroyed.
shalom b'SHEM Yah'shua HaMashiach