Astronomical and Historical Evaluation of Molnar's Solution for the Star of Bethlehem
Bradley E. Schaefer

TL;DR
This paper evaluates Molnar's astrological hypothesis for the Star of Bethlehem, proposing it as a natal horoscope report from 6 BC, and discusses its implications and limitations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of Molnar's astrological explanation, highlighting its strengths and clarifying its scope compared to previous astronomical theories.
Findings
Molnar's solution is plausible for the Star's origin.
The natal horoscope aligns with the biblical timeline.
The hypothesis does not address other biblical elements.
Abstract
Previously, the most prominent explanation for the Star of Bethlehem was to identify one of many astronomical events in the sky as being the inspiration for the trip of the Magi. However, all the astronomical answers have detailed refutations, and general disproofs, so all the astronomical answers for the Star are dead. In 1999, Michael Molnar put forth a completely new solution, where the Star originated as a report of a natal horoscope for 17 April 6 BC. This natal horoscope shows very impressive regal portents and points to Judea. It is very improbable that such a very rare planet configuration (averaging only once per millennium or longer) would coincide with the very restricted day of Jesus' birth (springtime in a year shortly before Herod's death in 4 BC), unless there is some causal connection. The Magi (as labeled by the gospel author) were astrologers, so they were only…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistorical Astronomy and Related Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Historical and Architectural Studies
