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![]() This time around, there are no RVs or signs carrying the "awesome news" of the end of the world.
October 21st, 2011
06:00 AM ET
The End, again? If it is, we thank you for your timeBy Jessica Ravitz, CNN (CNN) - In case you are reading this, might we suggest you read really fast? The world may end any minute now, if the latest doomsday prediction is on target. We realize October 21 didn’t get the shout-out that May 21 did, so our apologies if this comes as a surprise. But if you had heard the complete message the first time, you would have known. “The warning is out,” Dennis Morrell, 44, of Jacksonville, Florida, reminded us a couple of days ago. “There’s nothing else you can do.” Earlier this year, and with the backing of the Christian broadcasting network Family Radio, billboards touting May 21 as Judgment Day dotted the landscape. RVs plastered with the fateful date crisscrossed the country as believers wearing T-shirt announcements and waving fliers sounded the alarm. That was to be the day when a select 2% to 3% of the world’s population, predetermined by God, would be raptured up to heaven. Everyone else, the story went, would endure months-long judgment amid chaos, destruction and unspeakable suffering. A massive earthquake would ravage the land, bodies would be tossed about and terror would reign for the duration. Five months or exactly 153 days later, it was said, the world would disappear – which brings us to today. This was the schedule laid out by God’s word in the Bible, the faithful said. It was the plan deciphered and shared by Harold Camping, now 90, the founder of Family Radio, based in Oakland, California. Camping, who has an engineering degree, had spent more than 50 years combing through his Bible and crunching numbers embedded in scripture. Sure, he’d made a similar end-of-the-world prediction for September 6, 1994, but who hasn’t been tripped up by biblical verses? With additional studying, calculations and new signs that would be revealed later, he said earlier this year that he had no doubts this time around. “I know it’s absolutely true, because the Bible is always absolutely true,” he told CNN before May 21. “If I were not faithful that would mean that I’m a hypocrite.” Problem is, May 21 came and went, and the world remained the same. Soon the billboards disappeared. The T-shirts and hats worn by believers got tossed. The RVs were quietly parked, tucked away in storage yards, possibly sold. Camping came forth, two days later, with an explanation - and his last news conference. October 21 would still be the end, he said, but a “loving and merciful” God had opted to spare humanity the five months of turmoil. A couple of weeks later, Camping had a stroke. He is said to be recuperating at home after a hospital and rehab stay and has only made a handful of radio addresses in the months since. Family Radio declined our requests to interview him. Fred Store, a 66-year-old retired electrician and longtime Family Radio listener, dedicated seven months of his life to sharing the “awesome news” that was the May 21 message. He led a caravan of believers, five RVs strong, on a tour of the United States for Family Radio. He was in Boston in May when he expected to be raptured up to heaven. When nothing happened, “We were caught by surprise. ... But we realize now that it’s very possible that we misunderstood some of the things we thought were true,” Store said this week from his home in Sacramento, California, where he has put up a number of caravan friends. “I believe that October 21 is the end, and I trust in God. Whatever way he chooses to end things will be perfect.” On the Family Radio website, the May 21 events, or nonevents, have been clarified. “What really happened is that God accomplished exactly what he wanted to happen. That was to warn the whole world that on May 21 God’s salvation program would be finished. ... For the next five months, except for the elect (the true believers), the whole world is under God’s final judgment,” the statement reads. As for that massive, body-flinging earthquake anticipated by believers, well, it turned out to be less literal. “We always look at the word ‘earthquake’ to mean the earth, or ground, is quaking or shaking violently. However, in the Bible the word ‘earth’ can include people as well as ground. ... Therefore we have learned from our experience of last May 21 what actually happened. All of mankind was shaken with fear. Indeed the Earth (or mankind) did quake in a way it had never before been shaken.” No one was raptured on May 21, but that’s just because “universal judgment” will come on the last day. “The elect” or “true believers” are still guaranteed their day of rapture, and everyone else will be “annihilated together with the whole physical world.” For Paul Anatiychuk, 36, of Charlotte, North Carolina, the way this played out has been a relief, a blessing. A husband and father of two children, ages 8 and 9, he wasn’t sure if his own family members would be saved. The thought of leaving them behind on May 21, to suffer what would come over the next five months, troubled him. “God tortures them while we’re hanging in the clouds?” he said this week. “It didn’t completely fit.” Now, Anatiychuk said, he can take solace knowing that when he’s saved, sinners will simply die. “Of course (the world) has to be destroyed and burned up by fire,” he said. “But it’s going to be very quiet.” Finding a way to save faith, and face, is part of the process when a prophecy fails, said Lorenzo DiTommaso, an associate professor of religion at Concordia University in Montreal, who has been studying apocalyptic worldviews for a dozen years. He said those who become disillusioned aren’t quick to talk, and the rest find a new way to spin what has transpired. When nothing happened on May 21, Camping was left with a choice, said DiTommaso, whose book, “The Architecture of Apocalypticism,” is scheduled for publication next spring. Camping could have admitted he was wrong. He could have said the calculations were off and needed further analysis. Or he could have spiritualized the apocalypse, which is exactly what he did, DiTommaso said. That tack, that way of looking at the apocalypse, has a long history, he said, and dates back to early Christian theologians. Tyconius, in the late fourth century, took this approach, as - more notably - did Augustine in the early fifth century. Augustine “preferred to understand the millennium predicted in the Revelation of John in spiritual and metaphoric rather than literal terms,” DiTommaso said. He “sought to diminish the emphasis on hard calculations.” The obvious advantage of this sort of interpretation for a man like Camping, who has prided himself on his numbers, is that he can “divorce himself a little bit from the fact that he was so darn wrong.” What Camping will say - if anything - come Saturday, assuming there is a Saturday, is anyone’s guess. But DiTommaso said a new explanation, perhaps a new doomsday date, may be on the horizon. It would be just another in a long line of end-time predictions across the ages. “I wouldn’t be surprised if we see another attempt” by Camping, he said. “If he were an artist, this is his masterpiece, his life work.” |
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The CNN Belief Blog covers the faith angles of the day's biggest stories, from breaking news to politics to entertainment, fostering a global conversation about the role of religion and belief in readers' lives. It's edited by CNN's Daniel Burke with contributions from Eric Marrapodi and CNN's worldwide news gathering team. |
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How these people are not diagnosed clinically insane is beyond me.
In fact, how anybody that truly believes the bible (as opposed to using it as a moral compass) should be declared clinically and legally insane. The very fact that we let these people raise children is absurd in its own right. The fact that these people can vote is also extremely troubling.
I completely agree with your post. Cut and dry.
the day aint over...
Rotflmao
Um...better not. I don't think that is where they are going and you might end up with them anyway!
Sorry. That was supposed to be a reply to someone else's post.
We need to quietly clear out the area of Oakland where Camping lives. Then he will think he was right and that he was left behind. This is OK because God has a sense of humor.
Hehe.
Still waiting..... 🙂
and waiting.....and.....
Ummm...if I make a prediction that the world won't end on May 21'st will you all send me some money!?!
Hey can't blame a girl for trying and I'd probably be closer to right than him!
The woods around my house just set on fire, and there are flying skeletons in the sky.
charge admission
Great idea!
OMG Id better go break some comandments so I can be sure to not got to heaven with these nuts.
So what that they messed up the date, it is not the end of the world.
That's great!
There's no such thing as magical, wish-granting, sky fairies. Come on people, it's the 21st century. Stop believing in this nonsense. You know in your hearts its nonsense.
These people the says the end is near. Should be in an instatution for the mentaly deranged.
also those that beleve these nutt jobs.
Ugh, learn to spell.
Incorrectly predicting the date of Judgement Day three times is pretty damaging to your credibility... let alone misspelling "Judgement Day" on your signs.
Judgment without the extra e is the US spelling. Your spelling is British. Nice try on being judgmental. 😀
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/judgment
Silly Canadian spellings always getting the better of me... touche!
The is no "God" people. I can't believe in this day and age (almost 2012) people still take the bible literally...It just blows my mind people think there is a mysterious omnipotent and all powerful being that governs the entire universe. People that believe this scare the crap out of me for the simple fact ITS NOT REAL!
I agree what is wrong with people, think about what is GOD? From what we are all taught you better follow GOD's way or you will go not go to heaven. Isn't that a called dictator? Wake up people religion is for the weak minded
Niether Religion or Science can Prove or Diprove the Existance of God. Personally, I'd stay out of the Realm of Absolutes. When you adamantly claim that something cant be, it usually is.
Ross, if you've never done so, study Pascal's Wager.
More or less, if there is no God (what you believe), then when I die nothing will happen. However, if God does exist (what I believe), then when you die...
Give it some thought... it is your choice.
And still this nutcase gets "air" time. Why?
Ratings. Shock Value. A Good Laugh.
Can we Jail Camper now? for disruption at least. idiot. and more idiots are his followers.
Um, he has freedom of speech. Blame the media for giving him the time of day. If they ignored him, we wouldn't even know about it.
Well I'm convinced. Time to saw off my shotgun and prepare for the zombie apocolypse that is clearly eminent.
I have great respect for zombies, but their eminence is not imminent 🙂
Mr. Camping has been 100% wrong on his every prediction. Even the weather man does better than that. Colossal fail!
At least the Weather man gets it right most of the time, I think he's more akin to the USGS Siesmologists Predicting the next Big One
soon in bargain basement bookstores near you – "The Life and Times of Harold Camping – Blowhard Senile Crackpot"
To indulge any such claim is bogus. Im not a religious man in any form, But doesn't the bible say that No man shall know the time or hour.
Camping needs to be shut down and have his assets frozen for scamming the population. Only then to be publicly humiliated for ever proposing such a scam.