Heavenly Clocks
He
reveals deep and hidden things;
He knows what is in the darkness,
and the light dwells with Him. (Daniel 2:22 ESV)
(Daniel 2:22 ESV)
There are some really interesting stories about the stars and clocks.
Two tales come to mind. One is Galileo and the first study he made
of Jupiter. And then a century or two later, the story of the
British watchmaker, John Harrison.
Galileo took his first successful telescope and turned it on the
planet Jupiter on Jan. 7, 1610. He recorded the sight in his
notebook, making a sketch of the planet which had become larger
than a pinpoint of light in the eyepiece. But he also noticed three
stars near the view of the planet that happened to be in a straight
line, with that line passing through the center of Jupiter.
The second night he looked again, and something seemed wrong. He
faithfully sketched this new view, comparing it with the first one,
and the stars were not in the same arrangement that they had been
the first night, although they still were in a straight line. Had
he made a mistake the first night?
He could not wait until the 3rd night, but alas! It was raining
that night. Later in the week, he was able to look again at Jupiter
and these strange stars and see that the arrangement was indeed
different from either of the other two sketches. What was going
on?
It took him several days finally to catch on. These points of light
were not stars, but four moons of Jupiter orbiting quite close to
the planet, with the moon (now called Io) nearest Jupiter, making
a complete circle around the host planet in a mere 42 hours. Note:
frequently you can only see 2 or 3 of them, because one or more of
them are behind or in front of the planet, which is why it took
several days to see all four.
What was really significant about this, and it got him in trouble
with the church hierarchy, was that here was a clear example of
something in orbit around a body other than the earth. Much debate
was going on at that time because many believed that the whole
universe revolved around the earth, including the sun. But Galileo
was able to agree with Copernicus that the earth is not at the
center of everything, and here was proof in the Jovian system.
(Jove = Jupiter).
The second story is about the first clock made accurately enough
to carry on a ship and yield accurate navigation data on a round
trip voyage from England to the New World. I will write about that
story soon.
And how did they check the clock for accuracy? By the moons of
Jupiter! This was in 1714, and by then tables for the times of the
motions of these 4 moons of Jupiter were published for navigation,
with accurate predictions of these motions for several months into
the future.
So, once again, here is a beautiful example of the Designer of the
universe giving us a hidden source of knowledge - a mystery - that
has been uncovered, revealed to mankind. In fact the Greek word
translated as mystery in the Bible means something hidden that has
been uncovered. Isn't our Lord wonderful!