Testing Kepler's Hypothesis on the Star of Bethlehem: A Kinematic and Astronomical Analysis of the 7 BCE Jupiter-Saturn Conjunction
Marcel Bodor, Francois Bauduin

TL;DR
This interdisciplinary study evaluates whether the 7 BCE Jupiter-Saturn conjunction could explain the Star of Bethlehem, using astronomical data and textual analysis to assess its consistency with the biblical narrative.
Contribution
It provides a systematic, falsifiable framework linking astronomical configurations with the biblical account, avoiding arbitrary assumptions and testing the conjunction's plausibility.
Findings
The 7 BCE Jupiter-Saturn conjunction's motion aligns with key features of the Star of Bethlehem.
The conjunction's stationary phase coincides with a kinematic synchronization window.
Compatibility remains stable under reasonable assumptions, supporting its candidacy as the star.
Abstract
This paper presents an interdisciplinary analysis of the "Star of Bethlehem" narrative described in the Gospel of Matthew (Mt 2:1-12), examining the hypothesis, originally proposed by Johannes Kepler, that the reported phenomenon may be associated with the Jupiter-Saturn conjunction of 7 BCE. The methodology is based on a systematic comparison between the textual account and independently verifiable astronomical data, including retro-calculated ephemerides, sky geometry from Judea, constraints of the Jerusalem-Bethlehem route, and the historical chronology of Herod the Great. The narrative elements are treated as distinct, partially independent constraints required to be jointly satisfied within an explicitly falsifiable framework, under restricted observational and kinematic conditions, avoiding arbitrary parameter choices. The analysis indicates that the 7 BCE Jupiter-Saturn…
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