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26°40’. Yama, <strong>the</strong> god of death or <strong>the</strong> setting sun, presides, and <strong>the</strong> planet Venus rules<br />

Bharani. This sign implies a “cutting” energy, and is a good time to do unpleasant but<br />

necessary activities; people may be more mentally quick and spontaneous, while also<br />

exhibiting tendencies towards amorality or fickleness during this time.<br />

—Pramela Thiagesan<br />

The Bible and Astrology<br />

THE BIBLE AND ASTROLOGY<br />

The Hebrew and Christian Bibles are a complex set of documents. To advocates of<br />

<strong>astrology</strong>, it is not difficult to find passages presenting <strong>the</strong> science of <strong>the</strong> stars in a positive<br />

light. If, on <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r hand, one wishes to attack <strong>astrology</strong>, it is also possible to find<br />

passages condemning stargazing. Certain Scriptures appear—at least in <strong>the</strong> King James<br />

Version (KJV)—to condemn astrologers as those who keep, watch, or observe <strong>the</strong><br />

times; e.g., “Ye shall not eat anything with <strong>the</strong> blood, nei<strong>the</strong>r shall ye use enchantment,<br />

nor observe times” (Lev. 19:26). This allusion to <strong>astrology</strong>, however, was an<br />

interpolation by KJV translators. In modern translations, it is clear that <strong>the</strong> original<br />

biblical condemnation was against divination in general, ra<strong>the</strong>r than <strong>astrology</strong> in particular:<br />

“You shall not eat meat with <strong>the</strong> blood in it. You shall not practise divination or<br />

soothsaying” (New English Bible); and “You shall not eat any flesh with <strong>the</strong> blood in it.<br />

You shall not practice augury or witchcraft” (Revised Standard Version).<br />

Advocates of <strong>astrology</strong>, however, can point to such passages as “God created<br />

lights in <strong>the</strong> heavens, and He made <strong>the</strong>m for signs and for seasons” (Gen. 1:14), which<br />

is capable of being interpreted as a reference to <strong>astrology</strong>. More generally, because <strong>the</strong><br />

God of Western religions is a sky-god, many different scriptural passages portray God<br />

as utilizing heavenly signs to instruct <strong>the</strong> faithful. These signs are often ambiguous<br />

enough to be given an astrological interpretation. With a little reworking, it is not difficult<br />

to read many o<strong>the</strong>rwise innocent passages in an astrological manner, for example,<br />

<strong>the</strong> Lord’s Prayer, as noted in Don Jacobs’s Astrology’s Pew in <strong>the</strong> Church):<br />

Our Fa<strong>the</strong>r who lives in <strong>the</strong> heavens,<br />

Let your name be honored,<br />

Let your Kingdom come,<br />

Let your will be done down here on <strong>the</strong> earth,<br />

As perfectly as it is in <strong>the</strong> sky.<br />

From <strong>the</strong>se examples, it is not difficult to see that both supporters and detractors<br />

must “massage” various biblical passages to get an unambiguous message on <strong>the</strong><br />

status of <strong>astrology</strong>. One of <strong>the</strong> few biblical accounts in which we can clearly perceive<br />

<strong>the</strong> practice of <strong>astrology</strong> is <strong>the</strong> story of The Three Wise Men. The Magi were clearly<br />

astrologers, and <strong>the</strong> Star of Bethlehem, as scholars have long pointed out, was actually<br />

a major planetary conjunction. The Magi believed, as do many of our contemporaries,<br />

that our planet was on <strong>the</strong> verge of entering a “new age,” and this particular conjunction<br />

was taken to indicate <strong>the</strong> birth of a new world teacher.<br />

Sources:<br />

Jacobs, Don. Astrology’s Pew in <strong>the</strong> Church. San Francisco: The Joshua Foundation, 1979.<br />

THE ASTROLOGY BOOK<br />

[87]

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