End may be nigh — but we’ve been wrong about these things before
There are now only a few days before the world comes to an end, at least according to 89-year-old Harold Egbert Camping, president of Family Radio, a California-based Christian broadcasting network with 150 outlets. Billboards around the world have been proclaiming for months: “Judgment Day May 21, 2011.” Underneath is a quotation from the New Testament: “But ye, brethren, are not in darkness, that that day should overtake you as a thief.”
The scenario is supposed to play out something like this: the chosen will be lifted to heaven to be with Jesus for eternity and everyone else will be cast into a lake of fire, or at least something uncomfortably warm. In this version of the future, Mr. Camping and his believers follow a long tradition of prophets who have done complex calculations to show that the end is nigh. He is also part of a lineage that (a) is almost always wrong, and (b) will make multiple attempts to get it right. Mr. Camping originally predicted the world would end in September 1994. The best argument in his favour this time is that the world has to end at some point and May 21 is as good a guess as any. (Photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
Here are 10 other doomsday predictions that didn’t pan out.
This fellow is absolutely RIDICULOUS. I really don’t believe that we’ll ever know when the world is going to end. It’ll...
“Only time will tell if Harold and his followers are right but on Saturday morning at 2am EST we’ll know. If you turn on...
He reminds me of the doomsday guy who use to just stand there in Sproul. Let’s see what happens in a few days…
i think we will be okay. but let’s get super wasted just in case!
Wrong again, I’m gonna guess.