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William's avatar

Excellent, Sarah. Very encouraging. Merry Christmas!

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William's avatar

Colin Nicholl’s book, “The Great Christ Comet” is a well-researched, compelling look at this subject. He looks at all the major theories in this regard. Worth reading. Merry Christmas!

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Robert Graham's avatar

Hi. I enjoy and am encouraged by your articles. I’d love to hear your thoughts on this Bethlehem star observation. https://bethlehemstar.com. The author believes there was a typo on a date that changes the star activities.

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Sarah Salviander's avatar

I had a quick look, and I wonder if they're confusing a nova with a supernova. Novas aren't necessarily spectacular, whereas supernovas (if they occur in our Galaxy) are.

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Robert Graham's avatar

Hi, it’s much more detailed than that. He ties in movements of several heavenly bodies that combine in an amazing way that a casual observer probably wouldn’t notice but someone expecting something would. It could be possibly from some influence from Daniel’s understudies. His presentation goes in to a lot of detail (seems like it’s about an hour). It could be a good Christmas video for your family. Thanks for replying!

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Robert Italia's avatar

"Personally, I like the idea of a nova as the star of Bethlehem. Something that was there all along, invisible until the perfect time, heralded the once invisible God who was now physically with his people."

Very good. (Or, how about a whitehole nova, through which the angels traveled from and back to Heaven?) Merry Christmas.

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Sarah Salviander's avatar

I like the idea of a white hole. Not sure how physically plausible it is, but it's a neat idea.

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