Considerations XIX: 1
The t D y is placed mostly over the western US when observed from these same charts. This points to stormy conditions over the Great Basin and Rocky Mountains around the 6th. Just a few days later on the 8th when t activates the solar eclipse of 4th December 2002 this same area is under the gun. t will be on the Midheaven through southern California, Nevada and Idaho. On 16th and 17th April, the q will conjoin retrograde e. This combination correlates with high barometer and strong winds. The Solar Ingress chart shows the q and e ascending through Paris and central France. The Last Quarter Moon chart that starts on the 11th may help set up this weather event since the r D y of the 14th places y setting through Paris only four degrees from the opposition of i. There is more happening than meets the eye with this r-y combination. They exactly conjoin and square the solar eclipse degree of 31st May 2003. At the time of the eclipse, the q and w were rising through western France. r and y are warm in nature so the beginning of this period around the 14th may be marked by an increase in temperature before the q A e takes effect around the 16th. Stateside, the Northeast looks like it will bear the brunt of the q A e. The Solar Ingress places the windy combo on the IC between Washington DC and New York. Their influence is again doubled since the Full Moon chart has them rising over New York. Even the Last Quarter Moon gets into the act by placing r on the descendent through the Northeast as is semi-squares e on the 17th. Having worked with this system for a number of years, I never cease to be amazed at the beauty and the “down-to-earth” practicality that its designer bestowed upon the heavenly bodies. The members of our solar system no longer appear to be unrelated and meaningless masses of rock and gas circling the q as science sometimes leaves us feeling. Instead God has given purpose to the planets and equipped his offspring with a built-in, environmentally safe, long-range weather forecasting tool for our service. Long-range weather forecasting is more than just observing planetary positions and their effects on our atmosphere. In the words of Johannes Kepler, a man of science, astrology, and astro-meteorology, it’s “thinking God’s thoughts after him.”
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