Why does the sun shine?

Where on Earth is the land of the midnight sun and why did God make it a truth for the sun to shine @midnight?

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God didn't make any truth about teh Sun shining at midnight - the Sun shines every second, every day. At arctic areas there is a period of 24 hr sunlight every summer....but that's all because of the tilt of the earth, not god

Jack

God didn't make any truth about teh Sun shining at midnight - the Sun shines every second, every day. At arctic areas there is a period of 24 hr sunlight every summer....but that's all because of the tilt of the earth, not god

Jack

*Face palm*

Jordan

*Face palm*

Jordan

hi

K ✡

In the regions near the north and south Poles, the tilt of the Earth allows the sun to shine all the time for a while each year. At the north pole, it's during late May, June, and July. At the south pole, it's during late November, December, and January. The further away from the poles you go, the shorter these midnight sun weeks last, until by the time you get to temperate latitudes, you simply have long summer days and short summer nights, and short winter days and long winter nights. When we traveled to northern Norway, we saw the midnight sun. It felt strange to face due north and see the sun shining toward us. It was quite low in the sky. People living there had laundry hanging on clothes lines outside. I imagine the items dried quickly with sunlight on them all the time. Hotel rooms were furnished with opaque shades so people could sleep normally. Over the course of a year, every place on earth gets the same amount of sunlight and darkness. During late December, the people in northern Norway have almost constant night, with only a bit of twilight at noontime. It's the South Pole that gets the midnight sun then.

marys.momma

Starts Twenty June, 7:09 pm EDT in the North of Sweden. Summer sosltice, the longest day and the shortest night.... the sun won't go down. It just touches the horizon. I'll be there. If it was created, or coincidenvce or just because, does not change a thing. Peace.

yyyyzz (wise)

. North Cape. Norway. The Sun doesn't shine like it is noontime. It is just very light. .

Sheltie Lover

In the regions near the north and south Poles, the tilt of the Earth allows the sun to shine all the time for a while each year. At the north pole, it's during late May, June, and July. At the south pole, it's during late November, December, and January. The further away from the poles you go, the shorter these midnight sun weeks last, until by the time you get to temperate latitudes, you simply have long summer days and short summer nights, and short winter days and long winter nights. When we traveled to northern Norway, we saw the midnight sun. It felt strange to face due north and see the sun shining toward us. It was quite low in the sky. People living there had laundry hanging on clothes lines outside. I imagine the items dried quickly with sunlight on them all the time. Hotel rooms were furnished with opaque shades so people could sleep normally. Over the course of a year, every place on earth gets the same amount of sunlight and darkness. During late December, the people in northern Norway have almost constant night, with only a bit of twilight at noontime. It's the South Pole that gets the midnight sun then.

marys.momma

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