why we cannot see the moon during day?
Answers
Question ⤵
Why we cannot see the moon during day?
Explanation⤵
We CAN see the Moon during the day, half of the time. Idiots who believe that God made the Sun [“the greater light”] to rule the Day, and the Moon [“the lesser light”] to rule the Night — both on the same day, the 4th Day of the week of Creation — probably assume that the moon only comes out at night.
But think about those times when there’s a Solar Eclipse. The Moon is then positioned between the Earth and the Sun, with the lunar disk covering that of the Sun, blocking its rays from reaching the Earth. This can only happen during the Daytime — as perceived by people on the Sun-facing side of the globe. Of course, people on the opposite side of the globe will be experiencing Night, and then both the Sun AND the Moon will not be visible in their sky until the world makes a half turn around its axis and BOTH the Sun and the Moon — just after the New Moon alignment — rise over the horizon.
It’s true that the stars, generally speaking, cannot be seen during the daytime, as the intensity of the Sun’s brightness washes out the sky. But if the planets Mercury or Venus are above the horizon when the Sun is just below it, they’ll be seen as Morning or Evening ‘stars’, even though they aren’t literally stars, just as meteorites aren’t “shooting stars” from a literal standpoint. They may be “shooting” across the sky, but they aren’t “stars” by any means. So, too, can the moon be seen in the Daytime, as long as it’s showing a crescent.