Apocalypse Judgment Day Harold Camping predicts Doomsday End of the
Apocalypse, Judgment Day, Harold Camping predicts Doomsday, End of the...
See also: Shannon Stapleton/Reuters A volunteer holds a sign warning of the end of the world. At exactly 6 p.m. on Saturday, Camping has promised, a monster earthquake will wreak global havoc, sending 2 percent of the world's God-fearing, commandment-following population while the remaining 98 percent of us mere mortals will be spewed into the jaws of hell. According to his biblical "calculations," God will then rain shame on the world for five terrible months before annihilating the whole Earth on Oct. 21. Though Camping may seem kooky to some, hundreds of his followers have left behind jobs, homes, even children in preparation for Judgment Day. And get this: His doomsday obsession is anything but original. People have been predicting the end of the world for millennia. The Norse called it Ragnarok; the Hindus, Pralaya; the Muslims, Qayamat; the Jews, the End of Days. Europeans predicted the end of the world would occur in the year 1000. In the Middle Ages, the bubonic plague was believed to augur the beginning of the Last Wrath. In 1835, Mormon Church founder Joseph Smith warned church leaders that Jesus would return in 56 years. Jehovah Witnesses claimed that the war of Armageddon would start in 1914, while Pat Robertson of the 700 Club announced that the world would end in 1982. Then there was the hysteria over Y2K, and 2012 in the Mayan calendar. Camping himself first predicted the end back in 1994, later claiming that his math was wrong. (Now, he insists that May 21 is 7,000 years to the day since God's first warning of the flood in the Bible.) The question is: Why are we so obsessed with the end of the world? According to Lorenzo DiTommaso, a professor of religion at Concordia University in Montreal, "It's a very persistent and potent way of understanding the world." Next:
' The Apocalypse Is Coming '
A skeptic ponders the prediction that May 21 is Judgment Day He' s not worried Are you
Fasten your seat belts, ye miserable sinners. It's going to be a bumpy weekend, according to the Prophets of Doom. In case you haven't seen the billboards, on May 21, 2011 (yikes! that's this weekend), life on Planet Earth will be destroyed. For months now, doomsday followers of Harold Camping — an 89-year-old preacher whose Oakland, Calif.-based company, Radio One, is worth an estimated $100 million — have been traveling around the country spreading the "awesome news" that the .See also: Shannon Stapleton/Reuters A volunteer holds a sign warning of the end of the world. At exactly 6 p.m. on Saturday, Camping has promised, a monster earthquake will wreak global havoc, sending 2 percent of the world's God-fearing, commandment-following population while the remaining 98 percent of us mere mortals will be spewed into the jaws of hell. According to his biblical "calculations," God will then rain shame on the world for five terrible months before annihilating the whole Earth on Oct. 21. Though Camping may seem kooky to some, hundreds of his followers have left behind jobs, homes, even children in preparation for Judgment Day. And get this: His doomsday obsession is anything but original. People have been predicting the end of the world for millennia. The Norse called it Ragnarok; the Hindus, Pralaya; the Muslims, Qayamat; the Jews, the End of Days. Europeans predicted the end of the world would occur in the year 1000. In the Middle Ages, the bubonic plague was believed to augur the beginning of the Last Wrath. In 1835, Mormon Church founder Joseph Smith warned church leaders that Jesus would return in 56 years. Jehovah Witnesses claimed that the war of Armageddon would start in 1914, while Pat Robertson of the 700 Club announced that the world would end in 1982. Then there was the hysteria over Y2K, and 2012 in the Mayan calendar. Camping himself first predicted the end back in 1994, later claiming that his math was wrong. (Now, he insists that May 21 is 7,000 years to the day since God's first warning of the flood in the Bible.) The question is: Why are we so obsessed with the end of the world? According to Lorenzo DiTommaso, a professor of religion at Concordia University in Montreal, "It's a very persistent and potent way of understanding the world." Next: