Allegedly, by September 23rd, Jupiter will have been in the womb of Virgo for 9 months, the moon will be at her feet,
and the sun will be just above her left shoulder "clothing her," and three planets will be in alignment within Leo
(Leo has 9 prominent stars + 3 planets = 12) which will be a crown above her head.
There is also, Allegedly, something hidden by NASA right between Virgo's legs waiting to devour the birth of Jupiter.
You can see on star images, provided by NASA, an area blocked out with a black rectangle.
All very exciting coincidences if they are true, but I'm no astronomer. No worries. Wait and see. Pray to Jesus.
the assertion that Virgo is the woman of Revelation 12 is groundless.
For untold centuries, individuals have endeavored to predict the future by reading
their own meaning into Bible scriptures—but with an abysmal track record.
God created the stars and grouped them together into constellations, as seen from Earth
(Job 38:1, 31-33). But it was not God who decided that the configuration of stars between
152.75 and 180 degrees of celestial longitude look like a woman. It wasn’t Him who determined
that the group spanning 120 to 150 degrees of celestial longitude have the appearance of a lion.
And He did not name those groupings Virgo and Leo.
To look at a group of stars and perceive a woman requires both imagination and pareidolia,
a psychological phenomenon in which the mind fills in the blanks to see a familiar pattern
where none actually exists. After removing the man-made lines that connect the dots, the star
cluster commonly called Virgo looks as much like a salamander or a skydiver as it does a woman.
the Greeks acknowledged that their astrological interpretations were based heavily on ancient
Babylonian, or Chaldean, mythology. In the first century b.c., Greek historian Diodorus Siculus
wrote (Diodorus, ii, 30, 6-7):
Under the course in which the planets move are situated, according to them, 30 stars, which they
designate as “counseling gods”; of these, one half oversee the regions above the Earth and the
other half those beneath the Earth, having under their purview the affairs of mankind and likewise
those of the heavens …. Twelve of these gods, they say, hold chief authority, and to each of these
the Chaldeans assign a month and one of the sign of the zodiac, as they are called. And through
the midst of these signs, they say, both the sun and moon and the five planets make their course.
One could not argue that the constellation of Virgo is the travailing woman of Revelation 12:1-5
without first proving that God had inspired the ancient Babylonians and/or Greeks to practice
astrology, and to perceive a woman in that cluster of stars. That is not provable, and contrary
to several biblical passages regarding astrology.
For example, speaking through Moses in Deuteronomy 4:19, God forbids serving and worshiping
the heavenly bodies. In chapter 18:10-14, He forbids divination, fortune telling and interpreting omens—
all of which were often done by reading meaning into the constellations.
Isaiah 47:13-14 say individuals seeking to tell the future by reading the cosmos are ineffectual:
“Thou art wearied in the multitude of thy counsels. Let now the astrologers, the stargazers, the monthly
prognosticators, stand up, and save thee from these things that shall come upon thee. Behold, they shall
be as stubble; the fire shall burn them; they shall not deliver themselves from the power of the flame ….”
The Prophet Daniel encountered astrologers in King Nebuchadnezzar’s court, and found them to be useless: “Then came in the magicians, the astrologers, the Chaldeans, and the soothsayers: and I told the dream before them; but they did not make known unto me the interpretation thereof” (Daniel 4:7).