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United States Eclipse Viewing
00:03:52
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| We talked about and Graham Lot talking about God's judgment coming to America, the sun turning dark. | |
| And then the solar eclipse, ABC News talks about everything to know about the upcoming celestial event. | |
| Well, Pastor, what's so interesting about this eclipse, too, is there's a lot of hype over it in the secular world as well. | |
| I mean, there's so many news articles. | |
| If you just Google this eclipse right now, people are having eclipse parties to watch this thing. | |
| You can buy glasses to look at it. | |
| But something that Anne Graham Loth said in this article, which I think is so interesting, is that the fact that people are having these parties and celebrating it, it reminds her of the mind of the Babylonian king Belshazzar, who through a drunken feast the night of Medes and the Persians crept under the city gate. | |
| You know, Pastor Jim, NBC has this article, and they wanted to tell us that what is so particularly rare about this event, this eclipse, is that this is the first time the path of totality exclusively crossed the continental USA from coast to coast since June 8th of 1918. | |
| It's also the first continent-wide eclipse to be visible only from the United States since 1776, which was the Revolutionary War. | |
| You know, retired NASA astrophysics photographer said the experience usually lasts for just a couple of minutes, but it's truly out of the world. | |
| It's like no other experience you've ever had, that it's an experience, you feel it, the hairs on your arm, on the back of your neck, stand up, you get goosebumps. | |
| It says you have to be there to understand it. | |
| And so this is August 21, when this solar eclipse will arc across the continental United States for the first time in decades. | |
| Yeah, it's the amazing thing they say because it's a total solar eclipse, if you're in that path, the sun literally goes out and you can see the starlit night. | |
| What? | |
| You can see the stars. | |
| I didn't hear it. | |
| I didn't. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| And the path itself, which I think is interesting, is 70 miles wide, the path of totality. | |
| So a lot of interesting things about that. | |
| Well, the fact that the lower 48 states can all see this in some capacity, isn't that significant? | |
| The entire United States will be able to see it. | |
| Some will see the solar eclipse maybe just halfway with like the moon toward the bottom. | |
| Some will see it with the moon toward the top. | |
| It depends on whether you're north or south. | |
| But I think the fact that the entire lower 48 goes dark, you know, sees some of it, that again, this is speaking of our nation as a whole could experience a warning to our nation because it says material. | |
| It crosses the United States and no other country. | |
| Right. | |
| And what's fascinating about the United States, going back to the 100 years ago that you were saying in 1918, that was World War I. That's the eclipse I was talking about when it took place. | |
| But what about this? | |
| Did you hear if this is the first continent-wide eclipse to be visible only from the United States since 1776? | |
| And guess what? | |
| When did we become a nation in 1776? | |
| What day? | |
| 4th of July. | |
| Guess what day the 4th of July was on the biblical calendar in 1776? | |
| I don't know. | |
| It was the 17th of Tammuz, the very day they worshiped the golden calf. | |
| And here we have this big golden calf on Wall Street, and it's the economy that is worshipped. | |