C
Crusaderbear
Guest
People in those times were more aware of the sky, they told time by the angle of the sun…as stated elsewhere, the actual times listed are probably for modern benefit.
What version were you using?
I suspect they said “4 in the afternoon” for our sake to understand a vague time in the original.
That’s a reasonable point, but that’s not quite the sense of what I mean.In addition to what Angannas said, I note that the Scripture says, “It was about four in the afternoon.”
This is not a super-accurate time measure, but rather a general knowledge that it’s about four hours past noon based on length of shadows, the position of the sun in the sky etc.
I don’t go around telling time by the sun, yet I could probably tell you when it was “about four in the afternoon” just based on the sun position and how the light looks at that time of day in the place where I live and during the season we’re in. I am sure people who didn’t have watches or phones showing the time and were used to telling time by the sun would have an even better sense of this than I do. It’s not rocket science.
And I will ask one in the next week or so.Only a historian having specific knowledge of Second Temple Judaism could supply that factual information, I think.
It was a set time of the day, before any indication that the sun was on its way across the skies. It required that the persons organising this event knew the exact time. Which goes back to the question asked by the OP.I’m pretty sure people could also tell when sundown “was fast approaching” and that a trumpet was simply a reminder, hurry up and get done. It was also a way of putting everybody in one area, such as a city, on a uniform time.
Another requirement of exactness in time was in the Roman watch. Change of watch through the night also required good time keeping. So how did people do this in the middle of the night. Sleep on your watch or miss your watch and you were punished by death. Not very nice working conditionsI also don’t see why this question is so interesting to people
Thank you! I look forward to learning the facts of the case.And I will ask one in the next week or so.
I think the sun is on its way across the skies all the time, isn’t it? During the daytime, that is. Except sometimes when Joshua has a battle to fight …It was a set time of the day, before any indication that the sun was on its way across the skies.
I respect you Tis_Bearself, so - as the OP - I’ll try to invite you in a little closer, if you like. If you wish to decline, then that is okay, too.I also don’t see why this question is so interesting to people. As has been stated over and over on the thread, people who did not have timepieces, as was the case for hundreds of years, developed a sense of time during the day from watching the sun. Thus, the time could be ascertained from the sun position at any point when the sun was available. There’s nothing that earth-shattering about it. To each his own I guess.
There is one interesting notion about Angels and time, though…Unlike the angels, whose decisions are eternal since they exist outside of time, we can make a mistake and amend it and grow in understanding and be faced with the same decision again and apply what we’ve learned.