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Blood moon prophecy
Blood moon prophecy
from Wikipedia
Preacher John Hagee, 2007

The blood moon prophecies were a series of prophecies by Christian preachers John Hagee and Mark Biltz, related to a series of four full moons in 2014 and 2015. The prophecies stated that a tetrad (a series of four consecutive lunar eclipses—all total and coinciding on Jewish holidays—with six full moons in between, and no intervening partial lunar eclipses) which began with the April 2014 lunar eclipse was the beginning of the end times as described in the Bible in the Book of Joel 2:31, Acts 2:20, and Revelation 6:12. The tetrad ended with the lunar eclipse on September 27–28, 2015.

Overview

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On April 15, 2014, there was a total lunar eclipse which was the first of four consecutive total eclipses in a series, known as a tetrad; the second one took place on October 8, 2014, the third on April 4, 2015, and the fourth on September 28, 2015. It is the second of eight tetrads to take place during the 21st century AD.[1] As with most lunar eclipses, the moon appeared red during the April 15, 2014, eclipse.[2][3] The red color is caused by Rayleigh scattering of sunlight through the Earth's atmosphere, the same effect that causes sunsets to appear red.

The claim of a blood moon being a sign of the beginning of the end times originates in the Book of Joel, where it is written "the sun will turn into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great and terrible day of the Lord comes."[4] This prophecy was repeated by Peter during Pentecost, as stated in Acts,[5] though Peter says that the date of Pentecost, not a future date, was the fulfillment of Joel's prophecy. The blood moon also is prophesied in the Book of Revelation chapter 6 verses 11–13,[6] where verse 12 states, "And I beheld when he had opened the sixth seal, and, lo, there was a great earthquake; and the sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the moon became as blood."

Hagee later wrote Four Blood Moons, that became a best-seller, being more than 150 days in Amazon.com's top 150 by April 2014.[3] For the week ending March 30, 2014, it was the ninth best selling paperback, according to Publishers Weekly.[7] By mid-April, Hagee's book was No. 4 on The New York Times best-seller list in the advice category.[3] Hagee's book (and subsequent preaching series at his home congregation, Cornerstone Church) did not claim that any specific "end times" event would occur but claimed that every prior tetrad of the last 500 years coincided with events in Jewish and Israeli history that were originally tragic, yet followed by triumph.

Media attention

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Hagee and Biltz's claims gained mainstream media attention in publications such as USA Today and The Washington Post.[2][3] Earth & Sky reported receiving "a number of inquiries about Blood Moon".

Rarity

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The frequency of tetrads varies by century with the frequency of total lunar eclipses.

Writing for Earth & Sky, Bruce McClure and Deborah Byrd point out that the referenced verse also says the "sun will be turned into darkness", an apparent reference to a solar eclipse. (There was a total solar eclipse on March 20, 2015, but it appeared partial except near the North Pole. Another occurred on March 9, 2016.) They note that since the Jewish Calendar is lunar, one-sixth of all eclipses will occur during Passover or Sukkot.

Furthermore, there have been 62 tetrads since the 1st century AD, though only eight of them have coincided with both feasts. There are eight tetrads between 1949 and 2051 (see Tetrad (astronomy)). In these, half of the eclipses in the (Northern Hemisphere) spring coincide with Passover and the subsequent eclipse with Sukkot. We are currently in a period when tetrads are more common than average. As seen in the graph, such periods happen every 600 years or so. The eclipses of a tetrad occur around the time of Passover and Sukkot (halfway between the Earth's perihelion and aphelion).

Additionally, three of the four eclipses in the tetrad were not even visible in the biblical homeland of Israel, casting further doubt on Hagee and Biltz's interpretation; even then, only the very end of the last eclipse was visible in Israel.[1]

See also

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Blood Moon prophecy is an eschatological interpretation promoted by Christian pastor John Hagee and rabbi Mark Biltz, claiming that tetrads—sequences of four consecutive total lunar eclipses appearing reddish due to atmospheric refraction of sunlight—coinciding with major Jewish holidays serve as divine signals of impending biblical fulfillments, such as those described in Joel 2:31 and Revelation 6:12, foretelling judgment, war, or restoration for Israel and the world. Hagee's 2013 book Four Blood Moons: Something Is About to Change popularized the theory by linking historical tetrads to events like Israel's 1948 independence and the 1967 Six-Day War, using NASA eclipse data to highlight the rarity of such alignments on Passover and Sukkot, though astronomical records show tetrads occurring in 62 instances from 1 to 3000 CE, with eight in the 20th century alone and their frequency tied to orbital cycles rather than supernatural intent. The 2014–2015 tetrad, comprising eclipses on April 15, 2014, October 8, 2014, April 4, 2015, and September 28, 2015, drew widespread attention as a potential harbinger of upheaval, yet no specific prophetic events materialized beyond ongoing geopolitical tensions, prompting critiques that the theory relies on selective pattern-matching without falsifiable predictions or causal evidence beyond correlation. While inspiring renewed focus on scriptural astronomy among evangelicals, the prophecy underscores tensions between empirical celestial mechanics—where "blood moons" result from Earth's shadow filtering longer wavelengths of light—and interpretive traditions that attribute prophetic weight to predictable phenomena, with subsequent tetrads in 2032–2033 offering no unique eschatological distinction.

Astronomical Phenomenon

Definition and Causes of Blood Moons

A blood moon refers to the reddish coloration of the observed during a total , when the Moon passes fully into the 's umbral shadow. This arises because direct is blocked by Earth, but indirect sunlight filtered through Earth's atmosphere reaches the Moon. The atmosphere refracts and scatters incoming sunlight, preferentially dispersing shorter blue wavelengths while allowing longer red wavelengths to predominate, a process known as . The extent of the red hue can vary based on atmospheric conditions, such as the presence of , aerosols, or , which may intensify the color by further scattering blue light. Lunar eclipses occur only at full moon when the Sun, Earth, and Moon align such that Earth lies between the Sun and Moon. In a total lunar eclipse, the entire Moon enters the umbra, the darkest central shadow, leading to the potential blood moon appearance across its disc. Partial lunar eclipses involve only a portion of the Moon entering the umbra, resulting in a shadowed arc but no uniform red tint over the full surface. Penumbral lunar eclipses, where the Moon passes solely through the faint outer penumbra, produce minimal darkening without significant reddening, as some direct sunlight still illuminates the Moon. Visibility of any blood moon effect requires the eclipse to be observable from the viewer's location on Earth's night side, with clearer skies enhancing the display. Ancient civilizations documented these events, confirming their natural recurrence independent of interpretive frameworks. Babylonian astronomers recorded lunar eclipses as early as 747 BCE, noting timings and magnitudes that align with modern calculations of total eclipses exhibiting red hues. Similarly, Chinese records from antiquity describe eclipses with reddish moons, often linking observations to celestial patterns discernible through systematic tracking. These empirical accounts, preserved in tablets and historical annals, demonstrate the phenomenon's predictability via , with no reliance on extraordinary causation.

Nature and Frequency of Lunar Tetrads

A lunar tetrad is defined as a sequence of four consecutive total lunar eclipses, occurring at intervals of approximately six lunar months (or six lunations) between each, typically spanning a period of about two years. This configuration arises when the alignment of the Sun, , and allows the Moon to pass through Earth's umbral shadow four times in succession without intervening non-total eclipses. The predictability of such events stems from the Saros cycle, a period of roughly 18 years and 11 days (6585.3 days) during which eclipse patterns recur due to the near-repeat of the Moon's orbital nodes and synodic month. The frequency of lunar tetrads is governed by the dynamics of lunar Saros series, of which there are about 42 active for lunar eclipses, with varying durations of totality influenced by orbital precession and the inclination of the Moon's orbit. Astronomical records indicate 91 tetrads occurring between 1 CE and 3000 CE, averaging roughly one every 33 years but clustered in periods of higher eclipse activity due to the 600-year tetrad cycles alternating between frequent and infrequent occurrences. Factors such as the gradual shift in eclipse seasons relative to the equinoxes and the Moon's nodal regression contribute to this variability, making tetrads a regular astronomical phenomenon rather than isolated rarities. Alignments of tetrads with specific calendrical dates, such as those in the , occur as statistical intersections of astronomical cycles with fixed holiday timings, which are based on the Hebrew calendar's molad (new moon conjunctions). In the , approximately eight tetrads have coincided with both and , including examples from 1949–1950 and 1967–1968, reflecting the periodic synchronization between eclipse predictability and structures rather than exceptional deviations from . These instances underscore the deterministic nature of celestial events, computable via ephemerides without invoking non-astronomical .

Biblical and Theological Foundations

Key Scriptural Passages

The primary biblical text invoked in discussions of blood moon imagery is Joel 2:31, rendered in the English Standard Version as: "The sun shall be turned to darkness, and the moon to blood, before the great and awesome day of the Lord comes." This verse forms part of the prophet Joel's oracle concerning the Day of the Lord, portrayed as a cataclysmic era of judgment on Judah for covenant unfaithfulness, symbolized initially by a locust plague representing invading armies, followed by supernatural cosmic portents heralding divine intervention and ultimate restoration for the repentant remnant. The Hebrew noun dām (דָּם), translated "blood," denotes literal blood—as the fluid of life whose shedding causes death—or figuratively a deep red hue evoking bloodshed, violence, or mourning, without specifying a mechanism like atmospheric refraction; ancient Near Eastern apocalyptic motifs often employed such symbols for upheaval rather than precise celestial mechanics. New Testament parallels include Acts 2:20, where Peter cites Joel 2:31 verbatim during his Pentecost address to explain the Spirit's outpouring on believers as the prophecy's commencement in the "last days," yet the absence of observed solar eclipse or lunar reddening at that event indicates a non-exhaustive fulfillment focused on spiritual renewal, with the full cosmic signs deferred. Revelation 6:12 similarly describes, upon the sixth seal's opening, "the full moon became like blood" amid a blackened sun and earthquake, integrating the motif into a sequence of heavenly disturbances signaling escalating divine judgments on earthly powers. The Greek haima (αἷμα) mirrors dām in connoting blood's visceral associations, reinforcing symbolic dread in Johannine eschatology.

Historical Interpretations in Eschatology

Early Christian interpreters, such as (c. 100–165 AD), viewed the imagery of the moon turning to blood in Joel 2:31 as a prophetic sign of cosmic upheaval preceding and the second coming of Christ, rather than a reference to observable lunar eclipses. In his , Justin linked such portents to future tribulations and , emphasizing their role in confirming messianic fulfillment without tying them to specific astronomical sequences or tetrads. Similarly, other patristic writers like associated the prophecy with eschatological events, interpreting the blood moon as symbolic of judgment and the outpouring of the Spirit, but not as predictable celestial cycles. In medieval Christian thought, lunar eclipses were frequently regarded as divine omens signaling impending calamities, wars, or ecclesiastical upheavals, though chroniclers often noted their natural explanations alongside supernatural interpretations. Observers imbued reddish lunar colorations with ominous significance, viewing them as warnings from , as evidenced in monastic records linking eclipses to events like volcanic impacts or societal distress. During the , (1483–1546) interpreted celestial signs, including solar and lunar eclipses observed in the 1520s and 1530s, as providential warnings of the end times per Luke 21:25–36, but focused on their role as general harbingers of judgment rather than patterned tetrads or direct fulfillments of Joel's . Luther rejected astrological while affirming God's use of such phenomena to call for , without emphasizing solar darkening as a strictly daytime event exclusive of eclipses. The 19th-century rise of , systematized by (1800–1882), shifted toward a more literal reading of end-times prophecies, including celestial signs in Joel 2:31 and Revelation 6:12, as future events tied to Israel's national restoration and the tribulation period. This framework distinguished Israel's prophetic program from the church age, positing that unfulfilled promises—such as land restoration and literal cosmic disturbances—would precede Christ's millennial kingdom. Popularized in Cyrus Scofield's Reference Bible (1909), dispensational literalism laid groundwork for associating astronomical events with eschatological timelines, diverging from earlier allegorical or general portent views by anticipating precise, sequential fulfillments amid Israel's regathering.

Historical Development of the Prophecy

Early Observations of Tetrads and Jewish Holidays

A lunar tetrad consisting of four consecutive total lunar eclipses occurred in 1493–1494, with eclipses on April 2 and September 25, 1493, and March 23 and September 17, 1494, aligning with the Hebrew dates of (Nisan 15) and (Tishrei 15) in the lunisolar Jewish calendar. This tetrad followed the 1492 expelling Jews from Spain, though contemporary records of the eclipses rely on predictive astronomical models rather than direct observations, as systematic global eclipse logging was limited. Subsequent tetrads in the 20th century also aligned with these holidays. The 1949–1950 series featured total eclipses on April 13 and October 7, 1949, and April 2 and September 26, 1950, coinciding precisely with and as calculated by the (e.g., beginning at sunset on October 7, 1949). Similarly, the 1967–1968 tetrad included eclipses on April 24 and October 18, 1967, and April 13 and October 6, 1968, falling on the holiday full moons. These alignments were documented post-event through NASA's eclipse catalogs, confirming the eclipse timings and visibility from the . Empirically, such tetrad-holiday overlaps arise from the Jewish calendar's synchronization of full moons with (spring) and (autumn), spaced roughly six lunar months apart, matching the semiannual cycle of potential lunar s in a tetrad. Historical analyses of eclipse data reveal at least seven such instances from 1 CE to 2000 CE, indicating they occur periodically rather than exceptionally rarely, with variability tied to the fluctuating frequency of total lunar eclipses per century (e.g., five tetrads in the , two aligning with the holidays). NASA's comprehensive catalogs enable verification, showing no supernatural deviation from .

Mark Biltz's Initial Formulation

Mark Biltz, a Messianic and founder of Ministries, initiated his research into lunar tetrads in 2008 after observing a total over Jerusalem's on February 20. This event prompted him to examine NASA's eclipse data alongside the , identifying patterns where sequences of four consecutive total lunar eclipses—known as tetrads—coincided with major Jewish holidays such as and . Biltz's methodology involved cross-referencing historical tetrads with significant events in Jewish and Israeli history, noting alignments such as the 1949–1950 tetrad following Israel's declaration of independence in 1948 and the 1967–1968 tetrad after the . He emphasized that only eight such holiday-aligned tetrads have occurred since the time of , with the most recent prior ones linked to pivotal moments like the 1493–1494 tetrad amid the . This empirical correlation formed the basis of his argument that these celestial events serve as divine indicators rather than random astronomical occurrences. At the core of Biltz's thesis is the biblical assertion in Genesis 1:14 that God appointed the sun, moon, and stars "for signs and for seasons," interpreting these as purposeful "clocks" signaling impending historical or eschatological shifts. He connected this to prophecies in Joel 2:31, where the moon turns to blood before the "great and awesome day of the Lord," positing the 2014–2015 tetrad—falling entirely on Passover and Sukkot—as a contemporary warning of potential judgment, restoration for Israel, or global upheaval, without specifying exact timelines for messianic events. Biltz disseminated his findings initially through teachings and conferences at El Shaddai Ministries, producing DVDs and materials that highlighted the Hebrew calendar's role in biblical feasts as interpretive keys, while explicitly avoiding date-setting for the return of to align with scriptural cautions against such precision. These early presentations framed the prophecy as an invitation to vigilance and repentance rather than deterministic prediction.

Promotion and Key Proponents

John Hagee's Role and Publications

, senior pastor of Cornerstone Church in , , encountered the research of Mark Biltz on lunar tetrads aligning with Jewish feasts during interactions that informed his prophetic interpretations. Building on Biltz's observations, Hagee authored Four Blood Moons: Something Is About to Change, published on October 8, 2013, by Worthy Publishing. The book examines historical tetrads, asserting their correlation with pivotal events for the Jewish people, including the 1492 and Columbus's voyage, Israel's 1948 founding, and the 1967 . Hagee presents the 2014–2015 tetrad as a divine signal of forthcoming upheavals centered on , framing it within eschatological expectations without predicting a precise timeline for apocalyptic fulfillment. Hagee maintained that the tetrad served as a "" for nations, particularly urging reflection on U.S. stances toward and , while stressing personal amid potential end-times shifts rather than date-setting for Christ's return. He explicitly stated that such celestial signs indicate "something is about to change" but do not pinpoint the exact day of prophetic events. Through weekly sermons at Cornerstone Church, which draws over 20,000 attendees, and nationwide broadcasts via Ministries, Hagee disseminated these views to millions, integrating them into teachings on biblical and Israel's role in salvation history. A companion documentary, Four Blood Moons, released in 2015 and based on the book, featured Hagee alongside astronomers and historians, dramatizing past tetrad-linked events to underscore their prophetic import.

Collaboration and Popularization Efforts

Mark Biltz first shared his discovery of lunar tetrads aligning with Jewish holidays with John Hagee during a 2012 visit to Biltz's church in Washington state, prompting Hagee to investigate the phenomenon further through NASA's eclipse data and biblical correlations. This exchange laid the groundwork for collaborative promotion, with Hagee acknowledging Biltz's influence in his writings and teachings while amplifying the message via his established media platforms. Hagee published Four Blood Moons: Something Is About to Change on , 2013, framing the upcoming 2014-2015 tetrad as a prophetic harbinger tied to 's significance, which Biltz echoed in his own book Blood Moons: Decoding the Imminent Heavenly Signs, released March 18, 2014. Their efforts extended to joint references in sermons and interviews, where the prophecy was positioned within wider end-times discussions, including calls for Christian solidarity with against perceived global threats. Hagee integrated the tetrads into events hosted by (CUFI), his organization founded in 2006, using them to underscore biblical mandates for supporting the amid geopolitical tensions. Popularization reached millions through Hagee's broadcasts, which aired in over 190 countries, alongside teachings and prophecy conferences where both proponents urged audiences to interpret the signs as urgent spiritual warnings rather than routine astronomy. These platforms emphasized the tetrads' rarity—occurring only eight times since the in alignment with biblical feasts—as evidence of divine intent, encouraging and advocacy without specifying outcomes.

Specific Predictions and Events

The 2014-2015 Tetrad Details

The 2014-2015 lunar tetrad comprised four successive total lunar eclipses spaced at approximately six-month intervals, with each occurring on key Jewish holidays. The sequence began on April 15, 2014, during Passover, followed by October 8, 2014, on the first day of Sukkot; April 4, 2015, again on Passover; and concluded on September 28, 2015, during Sukkot. All events were total eclipses, during which the Moon took on a reddish hue due to atmospheric refraction of sunlight, visible from various regions globally depending on the time and location, including the Americas for the April 2014 and 2015 events, and parts of Asia and Australia for the October 2014 eclipse.
DateEclipse TypeJewish HolidaySaros Series
April 15, 2014TotalPassover122
October 8, 2014TotalSukkot127
April 4, 2015TotalPassover132
September 28, 2015TotalSukkot137
Proponents of the blood moon prophecy, including Mark Biltz and John Hagee, interpreted this tetrad's alignment with Passover and Sukkot—holidays commemorating Israel's deliverance and dwelling in booths—as a divine signal of imminent major upheavals for Israel and the Jewish people, invoking Joel 2:31's description of the moon turning to blood before the "great and terrible day of the Lord." Hagee emphasized in his 2013 book Four Blood Moons that such tetrads historically preceded transformative events for Jews, like the 1948 founding of Israel, predicting analogous shifts without specifying exact dates or apocalyptic timelines to frame the period as one of heightened prophetic activity. Biltz, who initially identified the holiday-eclipse patterns via NASA data, similarly viewed the tetrad as heralding end-times fulfillment centered on Israel, urging vigilance for associated signs amid regional tensions.

Associated Prophesied Signs and Israel Events

Proponents of the blood moon prophecy, drawing from passages such as Zechariah 12:2–3, anticipated the 2014–2015 tetrad as heralding intensified global opposition to Israel, depicted as Jerusalem becoming "a cup of trembling" to surrounding nations and a "burdensome stone" provoking conflict. This interpretation posits the tetrad as a celestial warning of eschatological wars and persecution against the Jewish state, aligning with broader end-times signs in Joel 2:31 and Acts 2:20 where the moon turns to blood before divine judgment. Mark Biltz and John Hagee emphasized that such tetrads historically preceded pivotal restorations or trials for Israel, expecting similar dynamics without specifying exact cataclysms. Contemporaneous with the tetrad, Israel endured the 2014 Gaza War (Operation Protective Edge), launched on July 8, 2014—between the first blood moon on April 15 and the second on October 8—amid over 4,500 rockets fired by and allied militants toward Israeli population centers, resulting in 73 Israeli and 2,251 Palestinian deaths. Proponents cited this escalation as partial fulfillment of prophesied encirclement and attacks on , though no of nations materialized. In , amid the third blood moon on April 4 and the fourth on September 27–28, tensions peaked with the July 14 interim agreement on Iran's nuclear program, which Hagee explicitly framed as a divine warning via the final blood moon, endangering Israel's security by potentially enabling nuclear armament against the . Advocates viewed these pressures, including rising antisemitic incidents worldwide, as incremental signs of Zechariah's foretold alliances against , despite the absence of apocalyptic resolution. Some interpreters later retroactively associated the tetrad with the May 14, 2018, relocation of the U.S. embassy to , interpreting it as a step toward prophetic restoration and recognition of Israeli sovereignty over the city, though this occurred years after the eclipses. Hagee and allies maintained such developments underscored the tetrad's role in alerting to unfolding end-times patterns centered on , prioritizing vigilance over precise timelines.

Assessments and Subsequent Interpretations

Evaluation of 2014-2015 Outcomes

The 2014-2015 lunar tetrad, comprising total eclipses on April 15, 2014, October 8, 2014, April 4, 2015, and September 28, 2015, was interpreted by proponents Mark Biltz and as signaling "something big" for , drawing parallels to prior tetrads linked to events like the founding of the state and the 1967 . Biltz specifically forecasted the Second Coming of in fall 2015 based on the tetrad's alignment with Jewish feasts. Hagee emphasized divine warnings of impending upheaval, potentially involving war or restoration, per Talmudic views on eclipses as omens for . Empirical assessment reveals no fulfillment of these core expectations. The Second Coming did not occur in 2015 or subsequently, with no verifiable global or messianic events aligning post-tetrad. The Third Temple has not been rebuilt on the , where Islamic holy sites persist without displacement or reconstruction as of 2025, despite ongoing preparations by some Jewish groups. Armageddon-scale conflict failed to materialize; Israel's Operation Protective Edge in Gaza (July 17–August 26, 2014) involved approximately 4,500 rockets fired at Israel and over 2,100 Palestinian deaths but resolved without broader escalation or prophetic culmination. Israel maintained territorial stability post-tetrad, retaining control over and facing recurrent but non-apocalyptic tensions, such as the 2021 Gaza escalation, without unique causal ties to the eclipses. Global conflict metrics, including ongoing casualties (over 500,000 by 2015) and ISIS territorial losses, showed persistence rather than tetrad-induced surge toward end-times . Proponents reframed the tetrad as a call to vigilance rather than unfulfilled . Hagee continued to cite it as a heavenly signal without conceding , attributing non-specific outcomes to interpretive flexibility in biblical signs like Joel 2:31. Biltz similarly viewed eclipses as harbingers prompting , not rigid timelines. Critics, however, classify the absence of predicted escalations as empirical disconfirmation, noting historical tetrads lack consistent causal links to events beyond .

Recent and Future Tetrads (2023-2033)

A partial occurred on October 28, 2023, approximately three weeks after the attacks on on October 7, 2023, with some proponents interpreting this as a celestial sign related to the ensuing Israel- conflict. No total lunar eclipses took place in 2023 or 2024, precluding any tetrad during that interval. In 2025, two total lunar eclipses occurred on March 14 and September 7-8, visible primarily in the , , , and parts of , but not forming a tetrad due to intervening partial eclipses in subsequent years. The event coincided precisely with , a Jewish holiday commemorating deliverance from genocide in the , prompting some evangelical interpreters to view it as a harbinger amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas war that began in 2023. The September eclipse preceded by about two weeks, with proponents extending blood moon symbolism to suggest continued divine signaling of escalation in Middle Eastern conflicts. The next verified lunar tetrad, consisting of four consecutive total lunar eclipses, is scheduled for 2032-2033, with dates of April 25 and October 18, 2032, followed by April 14 and , 2033. This series aligns with Jewish feast periods, including and approximations, leading followers of Mark Biltz and to speculate it may mark a prophetic milestone roughly 2,000 years after the Christ circa 33 CE. Such observers anticipate heightened scrutiny for associated geopolitical or eschatological developments, though no specific predictions have been universally endorsed among proponents.

Criticisms and Counterarguments

Scientific and Astronomical Rebuttals

Lunar tetrads, consisting of four consecutive total s spaced approximately six months apart, occur with regularity over long timescales and are not astronomically rare. NASA's comprehensive catalogs indicate that roughly 16.3% of all total lunar eclipses from 1 CE to 3000 CE form part of a tetrad, with 142 such series documented across that span. While periods of scarcity exist—such as none between 1600 and 1900 CE due to the clustering nature of seasons—tetrads appear in batches, with eight projected for the alone. Historical records list 91 tetrads from 1 CE to 3000 CE, averaging one every 33 years, demonstrating their predictability within rather than exceptional rarity. The "blood moon" appearance arises from the refraction of sunlight through Earth's atmosphere during totality, where preferentially disperses shorter blue and green wavelengths, transmitting longer red ones to illuminate the eclipsed . This reddish tint is a standard feature of total lunar , varying in intensity with atmospheric conditions like dust or aerosols, and is not unique to any prophetic context. Alignments of tetrads with , such as and , stem from the lunisolar nature of the , which synchronizes s with these observances; can only occur at full moon, elevating the baseline probability of coincidence over millennia without invoking supernatural orchestration. Lunar eclipses, including tetrads, are fully predictable centuries or millennia in advance using Keplerian orbital models refined by of gravitational perturbations from the sun, planets, and Earth's oblateness. Ancient cycles like the Saros (18 years, 11 days) enable accurate forecasting, as evidenced by Babylonian predictions and modern computations matching observations to arcseconds. Claims of divine timing falter against this , as historical tetrads—such as those in 162–163 CE or the CE—coincided with no documented global cataclysms, underscoring that earthly events like wars persist independently of orbital alignments. Post hoc associations ignore baseline frequencies of geopolitical strife, committing the of assuming implies causation absent empirical linkage.

Theological and Biblical Objections

Christian theologians, particularly from cessationist and eschatological perspectives, contend that the blood moon prophecy misinterprets key biblical passages by conflating natural lunar eclipses with apocalyptic signs. In Joel 2:31 and :12, the moon turning to blood is depicted as occurring after the sun is darkened, amid earthquakes and other cosmic upheavals during or sixth seal judgment, portrayed as globally visible and simultaneous rather than isolated nighttime phenomena limited by . These descriptions align with apocalyptic literature's use of hyperbolic cosmic imagery to symbolize divine intervention and judgment, not literal astronomical forecasts applicable to tetrads. Moreover, Acts 2:20's quotation of Joel by Peter applies the signs to the outpouring of the at , indicating partial fulfillment in the church age rather than a future tetrad signaling Israel's . A primary objection centers on the 's implicit date-setting, which futurists argue anticipates tribulation signs prematurely, as prerequisite events like the Antichrist's rise and Israel's full regathering remain unfulfilled. This approach violates ' explicit warning in :36 (paralleled in Mark 13:32) that "no one knows about that day or hour, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the ," rendering specific timeline predictions biblically untenable and akin to false . Cessationists extend this critique by rejecting ongoing revelatory signs through celestial patterns, viewing such claims as sensationalism that distracts from Scripture's sufficiency and the gospel's primacy, since miraculous authentication was foundational to the apostolic era but ceased thereafter. The prophecy's emphasis on a singular end-times blood moon, rather than recurring tetrads, further underscores the interpretive overreach, as Joel prophesies one such event tied to final judgment, not historical patterns selectively correlated with Jewish feasts or events. Critics note that major biblical signs function in concert with multiple disturbances, not standalone eclipses, and Genesis 1:14's mandate for lights in the heavens pertains to calendrical and seasonal order, not prophetic . This framework prioritizes undiluted scriptural over speculative correlations, cautioning against pursuits that echo sign-seeking skepticism rebuked by in John 4:48.

Responses from Proponents

Proponents of the blood moon prophecy, including pastors and Mark Biltz, maintain that the tetrads function as heavenly warnings of impending significant events related to and biblical fulfillment, rather than rigid date-setting for the . Hagee's ministry has explicitly stated that the 2014–2015 eclipses were not linked to the immediate end of days, positioning them instead as calls to vigilance and repentance amid escalating global tensions involving . Similarly, Biltz describes the phenomena as "signs in the heavens" per Genesis 1:14, urging observation without pinpointing exact outcomes, akin to ancient precedents like the star guiding the to . In response to claims of failed predictions following the 2014–2015 tetrad, advocates invoke interpretive flexibility, asserting that prophecies often manifest in stages or partial fulfillments to foster faith rather than provide exhaustive timelines. For instance, the rebirth of on May 14, 1948, is cited as a precondition from , retrospectively aligned with the preceding 1949–1950 tetrad of lunar eclipses on and , which occurred amid the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. The 1967–1968 tetrad, featuring total lunar eclipses on April 24 and October 18, 1967, and April 13 and October 6, 1968—all falling on Jewish feasts—is defended as correlating with the (June 5–10, 1967), during which captured , fulfilling preconditions in Luke 21:24 for end-times sequences. These patterns, proponents argue, outweigh isolated non-events, as non-feast tetrads lack such alignments and thus prophetic weight. Theological objections, such as viewing Joel 2:31 ("the sun shall be turned into darkness, and into ") as mere apocalyptic symbolism, are countered by insisting on literalism rooted in scriptural precedents for astronomical signaling, rejecting what they term skeptical or allegorical dilutions that undermine prophetic authority. Empirical defense emphasizes selective historical clustering: of approximately 62 tetrads since the time of Christ, only eight coincide precisely with and , each preceding major upheavals for (e.g., 1492–1493 tetrad after Spain's expulsion of ). Proponents posit that ongoing and future tetrads, such as the 2032–2033 series, offer continued verifiability, reinforcing the framework's viability over dismissal as .

Cultural and Societal Impact

Media Coverage and Public Attention

John Hagee's 2013 book Four Blood Moons: Something Is About to Change achieved significant commercial success, reaching number 10 on the New York Times bestseller list and selling over 390,000 copies by 2014. The publication, which popularized the tetrad's prophetic interpretation, contributed to heightened public discourse leading into the 2014-2015 eclipses. Major news outlets amplified interest during the tetrad period. Fox News featured articles and segments linking the blood moons to end-times speculation, including coverage in October 2013 that referenced Hagee's predictions and a December 2015 analysis questioning their meaning. reported on the prophecy's implications in September 2015, noting expectations of world-shaking events tied to the final , while also covering the astronomical spectacles themselves, such as the April 2014 event visible across the . platforms facilitated rapid dissemination, with users sharing eclipse imagery and prophetic interpretations, contributing to viral trends around the April 15, 2014, and subsequent events. Documentaries further boosted visibility. The 2015 film Four Blood Moons, adapted from Hagee's book, screened as a one-night theatrical event on and explored celestial signs in relation to biblical . This production, directed with input from Hagee, reached audiences through theaters and later streaming, sustaining media buzz into the tetrad's conclusion. Following the September 28, 2015, eclipse, public and media attention diminished as anticipated apocalyptic events failed to materialize, leading to critiques framing the prophecy as unfulfilled. Interest revived sporadically, particularly after the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel, with outlets like CBN connecting subsequent blood moons to escalating regional tensions and global spikes. These linkages, though less intense than the 2013-2015 peak, appeared in prophecy-focused commentary tying lunar events to Israel's conflicts.

Influence on Evangelical Communities

The blood moon prophecy, popularized by pastors Mark Biltz and , significantly amplified eschatological awareness within evangelical circles, particularly among dispensational premillennialists, by framing the 2014-2015 tetrad as a divine signal of impending end-times events tied to . Hagee's 2013 Four Blood Moons, which linked the eclipses to biblical passages in Joel, Acts, and , achieved bestseller status, spending over 150 days on Amazon's lists and reaching wide audiences through his television ministry and (CUFI), an organization he founded in 2006 to advocate for the . This promotion correlated with heightened pro-Israel activism, as proponents viewed the tetrads as confirmations of God's ongoing covenant with amid perceived global threats, fostering greater evangelical support for policies favoring Israel's security. However, the prophecy engendered internal divisions, with Reformed and cessationist evangelicals critiquing it as speculative that overemphasizes astronomical signs at the expense of scriptural and personal sanctification. Baptist scholars, for instance, argued that Hagee's interpretations misconstrue Joel 2:31 and related texts, which describe cataclysmic events during rather than routine lunar eclipses, potentially distracting believers from core priorities. Such objections highlighted tensions between sign-focused prophecy enthusiasts and those prioritizing , leading to debates in forums like The Berean Call, where the tetrad's lack of fulfilled "world-shaking" predictions post-2015 further fueled . In the long term, the blood moon narrative reinforced premillennial dispensationalism's literalist approach to among conservative , emphasizing vigilance against and while countering progressive theological trends that downplay apocalyptic literalism. Despite unfulfilled specifics, it sustained interest in tetrads as harbingers, influencing ongoing on Israel's role in and subtly aligning with right-leaning geopolitical stances rooted in biblical realism over symbolic or amillennial views.

References

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