Heavens Declare, The

Astronomy from a Biblical Perspective -part 3

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

Program transcript

Participants: Jim Burr

Home

Series Code: HDS

Program Code: HDS000006A


00:25 Welcome to Heavens Declare, I'm Jim Burr.
00:27 We're continuing on
00:29 and this should be a third part series
00:31 talking about astronomy from a biblical perspective.
00:35 We have in this series over 300 pictures,
00:39 most of them from the Hubble space telescope.
00:42 This Hubble's doing fantastic,
00:44 fantastic images of the heavens
00:47 and but I thought I'd share a little experience,
00:50 I travel a lot lecturing, my wife and I travel a lot,
00:54 we do camp meetings in many,
00:56 many countries in and around the US
00:58 and often get a chance to witness on the aeroplane.
01:02 And I had to go back to New Jersey, New York,
01:05 every year in the spring of the year
01:07 and had a really interesting experience,
01:11 I was getting on the shuttle bus,
01:15 I drop my car off with budget,
01:18 car rentals and got on the shuttle bus
01:19 and I was the only one on the bus.
01:21 It was in the evening and the driver said,
01:24 "Are you a musician?"
01:26 I must have been carrying a case or something.
01:28 "Oh, no, I build telescopes."
01:29 He says, "You build telescopes, is it?
01:30 I wanna know about aliens."
01:34 And I said, "Well, you know, I think aliens..."
01:38 UFO was that actually what he was saying, UFOs and aliens.
01:41 I said, "I think UFOs probably could be
01:43 some experimental government activity
01:46 and I think some were maybe demonic activity
01:50 and I think, you know, the Bible tells us that
01:54 there will be false Christ and false prophets.
01:58 In the last days, we should not be deceived
02:00 and I think Satan maybe preparing the world
02:04 for a deception of false Christ coming."
02:09 And so he's, as I think, you know,
02:14 "This could be secret government activity,
02:17 maybe alien."
02:18 "That's what I wanna hear," he says,
02:20 "You're a scientist and you believe in God?"
02:21 I said, "Yeah."
02:22 You know what he says, "Well, man, I got questions."
02:26 And so he started asking questions and in fact,
02:29 he droves us to LaGuardia Airport New York and I said,
02:33 "You know, I'm in no hurry to leave,
02:34 I'm turning my car into night, I'm leaving in the morning,
02:36 I got a motel, hotel."
02:38 And so he drove around the drop off area in LaGuardia
02:42 so that he could ask more questions.
02:45 I had one video left on Creation Evolution,
02:47 I shared that with him, gave my emails,
02:49 you know, email me,
02:50 I've got more, more stuff I'd like to share with you.
02:54 And so that was cool but he never emailed me,
02:56 well, guess what?
02:58 A year later in April, I'm going back,
02:59 I get on the bus,
03:01 turn in to my car again at Budget
03:04 and I'm the only one on the bus
03:06 and here is the same man driving.
03:10 And he said this didn't just happen.
03:12 So once again we got into the conversation,
03:14 I mean, in the New York city,
03:16 how many people in New York city,
03:17 I'm the only guy in the bus.
03:19 Well, guess what?
03:20 The third year I go back, I get on the bus,
03:22 this time I'm getting on arrival,
03:25 at 11 in the morning, I get on the bus
03:27 and I have one person in the back,
03:32 I'm getting on the side
03:34 and the man driving up front,
03:36 I said, "Do you know who Elliot is?"
03:39 He goes, "I'm Elliot."
03:41 He said this didn't just happen,
03:42 you know, and I said,
03:44 "The Lord's got plans for you,
03:45 I'm preaching in west,
03:49 out in long island.
03:52 Tomorrow," I said, "I'll pick you up
03:53 and take you out there."
03:55 Well, it did actually had to work,
03:58 so we didn't get to do that.
03:59 But it was exciting,
04:02 sharing in many, many stories on the aeroplanes
04:05 and sharing things with people that just really make life fun.
04:10 But one of these flights from New York,
04:11 I got into Denver, 2:00 in the morning
04:13 with a red eye.
04:15 So I get in my car, turn on the radio station KOA
04:19 and I was, well,
04:22 have all these calling stations on my speed dial.
04:26 So I turned on the radio station in KOA
04:28 and just in time to hear the announcer say,
04:30 "Professor, you had said, you have written a book
04:33 that you can prove there's no God through Physics?"
04:36 And the professor said, "Well, that's a little strong,
04:39 I would say I can show through Physics
04:41 that there's no God."
04:44 And I thought, "Man, I've got to get on the radio,
04:46 " so I speed dialed right in KOA on the phone
04:51 and I get right in.
04:53 And I said to the professor, I say, "You know,
04:55 you say that you can show there's no God through Physics,
04:58 I think that I can show you,
05:00 you could trust the bible through Physics.
05:03 And, professor, I'm on the freeway until...
05:07 I wanna paraphrase some statements
05:10 from different magazines that I've read
05:12 and in fact, in July of 2001,
05:17 Sky & Telescope Magazine issues had a report on the fact
05:22 that now the universe seems to be expanding.
05:26 You would think that
05:27 the universe gravity would pull it back together
05:30 and we'd have a big crunch
05:31 and for many years they thought
05:32 that's how the universe would end.
05:34 You know, the big bang and then the big crunch,
05:36 it comes back together but now
05:38 as they look at this type A Supernova,
05:40 it seems to be study after, study after, study
05:44 that not only is the universe continuing to expand,
05:47 it is expanding faster everyday.
05:51 And there's an article,
05:53 I mentioned in Sky & Telescope Magazine in July of 2001,
05:56 this article said, if this is true,
05:59 you know, this violates all standard Physics.
06:03 How can you show there's no God through Physics?
06:05 That this discover violates all physics."
06:09 And I said, "Another report was written
06:11 and this was an astronomy magazine
06:14 and this will report about Laura and Postman,
06:17 two well known astrophysicists
06:20 and they've been watching the universe
06:21 and all of the sudden,
06:22 they seem to have discovered a river of...
06:24 The article said they've discovered
06:26 what looks like a river of galaxies
06:28 going off in another direction.
06:30 And the article said, if this is true,
06:33 we know less than nothing."
06:37 And I said, "Professor, you know,
06:40 that most scientists say when life arose on earth,
06:42 it was a reducing atmosphere, there was no oxygen.
06:47 And they used methane, ammonia
06:48 and hydrogen to stimulate this early atmosphere of what,
06:55 how life could have gotten started Miller and Urey,"
06:57 and we talked about that in previous programs.
07:01 And so most scientists would agree that life arose on earth,
07:03 we couldn't have oxygen,
07:05 oxygen wouldn't oxidize everything.
07:06 So I said, "But, professor, when you read the books,
07:10 they will tell you that in the Supernova,
07:13 eruptions is exploding stars are created
07:16 all of the elements for life including oxygen.
07:19 So, professor, they say oxygen's made
07:22 in the Supernovas which created,
07:23 they help create the sun and yet,
07:26 when life arose on earth, there was no oxygen
07:27 and then when you get the first living cell,
07:29 what do you need? Copious amounts of oxygen."
07:32 And the professor said,
07:34 "Will you just stop reading those magazines?"
07:38 So about this time the radio,
07:44 you know, station says,
07:48 "We got the 3 o'clock, it's 3:00 in the morning."
07:50 You now, I've been around the sun already
07:51 seven to eight times,
07:53 I should be in bed sleeping but,
07:54 man, I was pumped.
07:56 3:00 in the morning, the announcer said,
07:58 "We have the 3 o'clock news breaking, it's coming up."
08:01 Can I stay over in an interview with this guy
08:03 after the news break?
08:04 Which I did, I was happy to do it,
08:06 in fact, I live in the mountainside,
08:08 I pulled over and I found a place
08:09 where I could talk on the phone.
08:11 In Colorado, you can talk on the telephone
08:13 when you're driving, you don't have to,
08:14 in some country places, you can't do that.
08:17 So we had the news break
08:19 and I had six of these things that I want to share with him.
08:24 And see what his response was.
08:27 And in fact, with all of these problems,
08:30 how can you say,
08:31 you can show through Physics, there's no God.
08:34 Another one was an article in Sky & Telescope Magazine,
08:37 they said, the question headlines was,
08:40 'How can astrophysicists keep a straight face?'
08:44 This magazine, a whole article on this
08:45 because they say all these,
08:47 there's so much disagreement in the Big Bang,
08:50 so much disagreement.
08:53 They present to the public, they come across to the public
08:57 as though the Big Bang is a fact,
08:59 it's a done deal, it's good science,
09:01 it's testable science and yet there,
09:05 in this article, it said,
09:06 "They argue over five major areas of the Big Bang.
09:10 How they can keep a straight face?"
09:12 And one of the thing,
09:14 there was a noted astrophysicist,
09:18 his name was Harwitt and he said...
09:25 well, practically the same thing but he says,
09:28 "We have a hundred billion stars
09:30 in the Milky Way galaxy
09:31 and we have a hundred billion galaxies."
09:33 Yes, they believe, you know, as I've said,
09:37 maybe in the galaxy milky way,
09:39 maybe a 100 billion suns, maybe 200 billion
09:42 depending on which book you read.
09:44 We really can't get a good count
09:48 but he was saying
09:50 and we believe there's many galaxies
09:52 as there are stars in our galaxies.
09:54 So maybe a 100 billion,
09:56 200 billion galaxies out there.
09:58 We're gonna be showing you a picture of the Hubble
10:00 took in the sky through a straw
10:06 and a very little tiny portion of the sky in the north.
10:11 Looking out of our galaxy,
10:12 when we're looking to the north,
10:14 we're looking out of the galaxy,
10:15 when we look to the south,
10:17 we're looking to the centre of the galaxy
10:18 and we can't really see
10:20 because the maze of stars in the centre,
10:22 we can't really see, you know,
10:24 what's behind that area.
10:25 But looking to the north,
10:27 we're looking out of the galaxy
10:28 and the Bible even has that right
10:29 because your Bible says,
10:31 "God hangs the north over the empty space."
10:34 And so the Hubble look through there,
10:37 the initial photograph back in 1990
10:40 or it was '95, they let,
10:43 it was a time exposure for 10 days,
10:45 they let the light come through that little spec of the sky
10:48 and they got 3,000 galaxies.
10:50 Then they improve the Hubble, new cameras,
10:52 new computers on the Hubble,
10:54 instead of going for a 10 day exposure
10:56 where they got 3,000 galaxies,
10:58 they then exposed for 8.4 hours and they got twice as the,
11:03 6,000 galaxies in 8.4 hours.
11:06 And then another photo you'll see will be showing you
11:09 coming up in another series.
11:12 They went to 84 hours,
11:13 so they went from 10 days to eight hours,
11:16 8.4 hours and they went from 8.4 to 84 hours
11:19 and in that image, you'll see about
11:21 20, 000 galaxies through this little straw.
11:24 And so they believe,
11:26 they would tell you there is probably
11:28 as many galaxies out there
11:30 as there are our stars in our galaxy.
11:32 If you're gonna photograph the whole sky through a straw,
11:34 how many pictures will you have to take?
11:37 About 27 million pictures.
11:40 Now we got a problem because today,
11:41 all day the sun is covering up, a bazillion stars,
11:46 there's no such word but I kind of like that word anyway.
11:49 And so we can't see all of the stars that would,
11:52 all of the galaxies that would be in the sky during the day
11:54 but six months from now,
11:55 the earth is gonna be over there
11:57 on the other side of the sun,
11:58 the sun will be this side, behind us.
12:00 And we'll be able to see the rest of the galaxies
12:02 and then we need to go to the southern hemisphere
12:07 to cover the stuff we can't see.
12:10 You know, the people from the southern hemisphere
12:12 can't see the Big Dipper and many other constellations.
12:14 You know, we can't see the Southern Cross
12:16 and many of the things they see.
12:18 So you'd have to take 27 million pictures
12:20 to cover the whole sky
12:22 if you're gonna
12:24 and if each picture had 20, 000 galaxies,
12:26 how big is God?
12:29 "And my ways are not your ways,
12:30 my thoughts are not your thoughts,
12:32 as high as the heavens are above the earth,
12:33 are God's ways above our ways."
12:35 So Harwitt said, "We have a 100 billion,
12:40 200 billion stars in the Milky Way
12:43 and we have a 100, 200 billion other galaxies."
12:47 He said, "The silent embarrassment
12:51 to astrophysics is they cannot tell you
12:54 how even one star formed."
12:56 We've got a graphic coming up of a galaxy face on
13:00 and if just to give you an idea of the size of the galaxy,
13:06 you'll see at the top,
13:07 you'll see an arrow at the top of the galaxy
13:10 and an arrow at the bottom of the galaxy.
13:11 And suppose you are to travel across the galaxy
13:16 and you got to the other side of the galaxy,
13:18 get your cell phone out and you say,
13:20 "And, you know, I should call home
13:21 and see how everything's is doing back home."
13:23 You can see, you've traveled across the galaxy,
13:25 you get to the other side of the galaxy
13:27 and you're gonna make a phone call.
13:28 Now these radio waves,
13:30 they're traveling at 186, 000 miles a second,
13:32 it's gonna take you at least a 100, 000 years
13:35 to get the phone to ring.
13:38 And if your mama's at the other end says, "Hello."
13:41 It would take you 200,000 years to hear the hello,
13:44 that's the size of these galaxies.
13:46 A hundred, two hundred thousand years,
13:48 travelling at the speed of light,
13:49 a 186, 000 miles a second will take you
13:51 a 100,000 to 200, 000 years
13:53 to get a phone call across the galaxy,
13:56 so that gives you some idea of the size of the galaxy.
14:00 I wanna show you a couple of other pictures of galaxy,
14:03 the best illustration that we wanna show you kids are,
14:06 take two papers, chinet paper plates,
14:08 put them together
14:09 and you'll see they'll be like a circle in one way
14:13 and you'll see a thin line with the bulge in there.
14:15 Our next graphic shows an edge on galaxy
14:19 and you'll see the bulge in the centre,
14:21 that still gonna take you a 100,000, 200,000 years
14:23 to get a phone call from the top to the bottom of that
14:26 but just as an example,
14:28 we see galaxies from all different directions
14:31 and we have one more graphic coming up
14:34 and that one is very interesting
14:36 and it's a real problem for evolution because we,
14:40 it seems that the arms are going both ways,
14:42 the law of conservation of angular momentum,
14:45 they should be spending the same way,
14:46 you see arms going in and going out,
14:49 actually revolving in and out
14:52 and so that's a real problem for evolution.
14:56 The next picture we have is a beautiful picture of Orion,
14:59 this is a nebula.
15:01 There are basically four type of nebula in the sky,
15:04 there are nebula that glow because they're hot,
15:06 there's nebula that glow
15:08 because they're embedded with hot stars,
15:10 there's dark nebula, which Harwitt said,
15:12 you'll be seeing coming up
15:13 in some of our programs is just dust,
15:16 an interstellar dust.
15:17 And then we have exploding stars
15:20 which we've talked about.
15:22 The biggest stars seem to be use up their fuel
15:25 and as they burn up their fuel, they tend to expand,
15:29 it get bigger and bigger like a balloon,
15:31 it's, we pretty much know this happens,
15:34 they get bigger and bigger till they can like a balloon
15:37 and they pop, they explode,
15:39 can't support this outer shell and they...
15:45 When this happens, we get this explosion,
15:47 the gas is travelling out at hundreds of thousands,
15:51 you know, 200,000, 300,000, 400,000 miles,
15:53 a half a million miles an hour,
15:55 this gas expands out in all directions.
15:58 And some of these they've actually photographed,
16:01 you can actually photograph,
16:03 this expanding gas over a period of every 10, 15 years
16:07 and you can play it back on a computer
16:08 and see and verify when it happened.
16:11 Doesn't happen very often in the Milky Way galaxy.
16:13 In fact since the invention of the telescope,
16:15 in the last 400 years,
16:17 we have not seen a supernova in the Milky Way galaxy.
16:20 We did see one quite close to our galaxy,
16:23 a little companion galaxy,
16:25 in the south we have the Magellanic Clouds
16:30 and in February 25, 1987
16:34 we had a star, nobody noticed this star,
16:36 it was like another star and all of the sudden,
16:39 it just went supernova, went bright,
16:42 brightest thing in the whole galaxy.
16:44 Some of these can actually be seen in the day time
16:47 and we talked about that before actually,
16:51 look at the Scripture what,
16:52 if you like to put that together with the God
16:54 and the Creator in heaven.
16:57 If you look at Hebrews 1:3, it said, no, actually 1:11,
17:04 where it says, "Of old, He laid the foundations of the earth,
17:06 and the heavens are the work of His hands.
17:08 They will perish..."
17:09 The heavens are gonna perish,
17:10 "Yea, all of them shall wax old like a garment,
17:12 as a vesture shalt thou change them,
17:14 and they should be changed."
17:17 Psalm 102:25 and 26,
17:19 it repeats almost the same thing.
17:21 And so some stars just my vesture,
17:23 King James talks about a vesture,
17:25 this outer jacket.
17:26 And some stars repeatedly cast off an outer shell.
17:29 Eta Carinae for instance does it about every 5.2 years,
17:34 we see a blast come off.
17:36 Some people find that Scripture to be helpful
17:39 but I wanna share,
17:42 talk a little bit about comets and as an illustration,
17:48 this would be kind of what a comet looks like.
17:50 Now a comet is the biggest thing
17:52 and the smallest thing in the solar system.
17:54 A comet, we have an ice cube,
17:56 okay, a chunk of ice,
17:58 the comet, the nucleus is just a chunk of ice
18:02 and it travels in our solar system,
18:05 you know, and when it gets out,
18:07 it will travel out past Jupiter,
18:09 Saturn, maybe Uranus, Neptune
18:11 and then it begins falling towards the sun.
18:14 And so it'll orbit the sun
18:16 and as it gets close to the sun,
18:18 this ice cube vaporises.
18:20 So what could be five mile chunk,
18:22 five mile ice cube,
18:23 okay, the nucleus could be
18:25 a five mile ice cube in diameter
18:28 but when it gets close to the sun,
18:30 as it comes in towards the sun, let's suppose,
18:31 this my computer is the sun, the heat from the sun,
18:35 the solar wind causes this ice to vaporise.
18:38 This little, you know,
18:39 five mile ice cube could become a hundred thousand mile,
18:42 we call this now the comet.
18:44 So the core is the nucleus and that's the ice cube
18:49 but then the vapor, cloud around it,
18:51 we call this the nucleus
18:53 and the tail is formed by the solar wind.
18:57 So as the comet comes in to go
18:59 and remember the sun is my computer,
19:00 now as it goes around the sun,
19:03 the tail always point away from the sun.
19:08 And what's really interesting,
19:09 the comet leaves the sun running into its tail.
19:13 Solar wind is crossing this tail
19:16 and yet the comet is moving away,
19:18 still causing the comet,
19:20 and so as it travels out in space,
19:22 it gets, you know,
19:24 smaller and smaller and smaller,
19:25 till when it gets out by Neptune, Uranus,
19:27 then we can't even see it.
19:29 Now what's interesting,
19:31 the comet leaves behind it, okay,
19:33 particles.
19:34 It is dust, it has a dusty tail in it,
19:37 it has the ion tail and vapor tail
19:42 and so behind the comet,
19:45 it has this debris that's spread out.
19:48 Now this debris is mass,
19:52 it's gonna follow the same order.
19:53 So as the comet has gone,
19:56 it's gonna leave a long tail of dust behind it.
19:59 Now it goes past Venus, it does a little dance,
20:02 it goes past Jupiter, does a little dance.
20:04 So it tends to wanna spread out, so in space,
20:06 even though the comet may have already been around the sun,
20:10 we still have this debris of particles behind it.
20:15 Even though or maybe way past the sun,
20:17 we still have these particles from the comet tend,
20:21 they want to follow the comet, orbit of the comet,
20:24 follow the same orbit.
20:25 Well, now we've got the earth going around the sun,
20:28 the earth is going around the sun
20:29 at 66,000 miles an hour.
20:32 What happens if the earth runs into these particles of dust?
20:36 Well, you can rub your hands together tight
20:38 and you get friction, they get hot,
20:40 you see, at 66, 000 miles an hour these dust particles
20:44 hit the upper atmosphere of our earth and vaporise.
20:48 Now we say, we saw a falling star, shooting star.
20:52 If you remember from our previous program,
20:54 we show you our sun, the star,
20:57 really big
20:58 and we showed you how little our earth is.
21:01 Well, what happened if a star fell on earth?
21:04 It would vaporize,
21:06 the earth would be gone
21:08 but when the Bible says,
21:10 the stars are gonna fall from heaven,
21:13 the Bible talks like we would look at the sky and see things.
21:17 We say a shooting star, a falling star
21:19 because they look like stars
21:20 but actually particles of dust
21:23 because our earth is travelling
21:26 66,000 miles an hour thorough space,
21:28 it goes through areas
21:29 and we have this periodic comet,
21:32 meteor showers like August,
21:34 around the 12th of August is the Perseid meteor shower
21:36 and the name comes from the constellation,
21:39 the stars appear to be falling
21:42 from the constellation of Perseus
21:44 and that's where we get the name.
21:45 In November, we have the Leonids,
21:47 they appear to be come from the constellation of Leo.
21:50 In December, we have the Gemini
21:52 and these were all the comets that have gone,
21:54 almost every month we have,
21:56 what we call periodic meteor showers
21:59 because the earth is going around
22:02 where a comet has gone.
22:04 Now we had a pretty spectacular one in 1833.
22:09 It was, in fact, we have, first of all,
22:12 I need to show you
22:14 a fantastic picture of comet McNaught.
22:18 Comet McNaught,
22:21 it's been three, four years ago,
22:24 most fantastic comet I've ever seen.
22:27 It was actually visible in the day time,
22:30 I went up to the top of our building,
22:33 right at sunset
22:35 and you could actually see this comet in the day time.
22:38 And so but you see the particles behind it,
22:40 that it leaves behind,
22:43 this comet McNaught and you can imagine
22:46 the particles that the earth would have travelled
22:48 through there at 66,000 miles an hour,
22:52 now what would happen.
22:53 In 1833, we had the meteor shower,
22:58 were called the Leonids, around the middle of November
23:01 and you can still go out and see
23:03 particles left over from that shower
23:05 but it turns out a comet Tempel-Tuttle
23:08 was responsible for that meteor shower.
23:10 Comet Tempel-Tuttle is a 33 year comet,
23:13 so every 33 years, it goes around.
23:16 That was 1833
23:19 and even down in 1966, 1999,
23:24 it's continued to go around
23:25 but it still has its whole path of debris
23:28 that it has left behind it.
23:31 And so if you go out, about the middle in November,
23:35 15th, 16th of November,
23:37 you can see the remnant of that.
23:39 And the next of that would be in 2033
23:45 and it'll be on the news.
23:47 In 1999, it was on the news like crazy.
23:50 In fact, they were saying
23:52 they really had plotted this comet very well
23:55 and they were able to predict
23:59 that the best views of this meteor shower of 1999
24:05 would be in the Orient.
24:07 And I went on Travelocity and made a...
24:10 There you could bid on airline tickets,
24:12 to go to Hawaii,
24:13 so I could see the meteor shower.
24:15 Well, I didn't get the offer,
24:16 so I didn't get to go but they were correct,
24:19 it was actually the most spectacular in the Orient.
24:23 Well, there's one more graphic coming up
24:27 and that shows you,
24:28 you know, they didn't have good cameras in 1833
24:31 but it shows you an artist conception of what the stars,
24:34 the falling stars of 1833 and this, of course,
24:40 create a great interest in the second coming of Christ
24:43 because people saw it as a sign, you know,
24:46 that the time of the end of this,
24:48 the stars were falling
24:50 as the Bible talks about the end of time.
24:52 The sun will be dark, the moon will turn to blood
24:55 and not give her light
24:57 and the stars will fall from heaven
24:58 and so this was a great exciting event of 1833.
25:04 Now these stars are falling at the rate of actually,
25:11 they figured about a 100,000 an hour.
25:13 It seemed like a 100,000 an hour.
25:15 They were coming straight down, from Leo, in November,
25:18 Leo was straight over head and we had though,
25:21 I watched the one in 1999 and these are fireballs,
25:25 they are very bright, in fact they actually,
25:28 some of them created shadows on the ground of the pine trees
25:31 where I live in the mountains.
25:32 And so it was a pretty spectacular event,
25:34 a most spectacular one I've seen.
25:36 But they're coming straight down out of Leo in November
25:39 because Leo's straight over head.
25:42 And so people thought
25:44 this was really a sign of time of the end.
25:46 One farmer went out and said that
25:50 he was gonna see if there were any stars left.
25:54 He was sure that all of the stars
25:56 fell the night before.
25:58 Well, the Bible tells us that
26:01 because He's strong and power and not one fail,
26:04 and once again and you'll be seeing in this series I guess,
26:07 the last weeks program,
26:09 we showed you the size of our sun,
26:11 we showed you the size of, you know, Arcturus
26:15 and Betelgeuse and Canis Majoris,
26:17 these huge, huge stars
26:19 and when we put these stars on the screen,
26:21 these big, huge stars,
26:22 you can't even see the size of the earth.
26:24 You can't even put a pin on the screen
26:25 and show you the size of the earth.
26:29 And so when we say a star fell, a star did not fall,
26:32 it was a meteor shower caused by friction
26:34 as our earth is travelling 66,000 miles an hour
26:37 around the sun
26:39 and the little particles of dust that create...
26:41 They burn up, they actually burn up
26:44 in the upper atmosphere
26:45 as we are orbiting about the sun.
26:49 So our time goes by so fast
26:53 and we wanna thank you for watching Heavens Declare
26:59 and just remind you that if you don't know the Lord,
27:03 you can find Him, you can seek Him and find Him.
27:05 The Bible tell us that you can seek Him and find Him
27:08 if you search for Him with all your heart,
27:10 we live in troublesome world, troublesome times everyday,
27:13 I think the world can't get any worse,
27:15 it seems like everyday it does get worse
27:17 and the Bible tells us that there's signs and at the end,
27:22 famines and pestilences and earthquakes
27:24 and so the day is coming when Jesus is coming,
27:27 you wanna be ready for that
27:29 and so thank you again for watching
27:31 our Heavens Declare.


Home

Revised 2016-11-28