Ok heres what happened, The test light had 12 volts on the coil, as soon as I turned the key to run, I pushed the button to start the car (yes the button, The key ignition stopped working, so It now has a button to crank the engine, It did work for years before the upgrade) and the light stayed lit without flashing.
What shall I do next?
The ground is for the Neutral Safety Switch, ignore it so long as the engine cranks.
Depending on how you have that button wired in... could be a number of problems so check the wiring:
The wiring diagram says you need the following on the solenoid: Dark Green and White to the S terminal; Red and Yellow at the I terminal. I don't see two wires at each terminal, but they may be buried in the harness a little, so follow them back a foot or so and try to see them.
The manual states 6V at the coil while in run, but resistance and voltage are not so straightforward so measure the voltage across a test light from the coil + to a good ground. The load of the light will make sure the reading is true. If you don't have 6v there may be a solenoid problem according to the manual.
Verify you're getting voltage at either the I terminal or the coil + while trying to crank.
On the two-prong connector at the ignition module:
Make sure that the red wire to the Ignition module gets power while at crank and run.
Make sure the white wire at the ignition module is getting power during crank.
Both the ignition module and the computer need to see the start signal, so if that wire does not have power, starting will be difficultOn the four-prong connecter at the ignition module, make sure the black wire is grounding well.
Make sure no other wires go to the coil but the dark green and yellow. Any other wires may be shorting it out, replace the condenser on the + side of the coil.
Your coil should read between 1 and 1.5 ohms.
Next, try a spare ignition module. They go after 20 or 30 years. Clean the connectors.