Apocalypse now?
Politicians and political activists frequently declare the end of the world will occur if their candidate isn’t elected, or if the debt ceiling isn’t raised. Some conservative Christians think the end is on the way because of behavior and practices they judge immoral. Somehow the country, not to mention the planet, survives and when “doomsday” passes, the prognosticators live to predict Armageddon on another day.
Now comes radio preacher Harold Camping, the nearly-90-year-old owner of a network of stations he calls “Family Radio.” Camping once belonged to a traditional church. He then decided all churches are corrupt and people should leave whatever congregation they’re in and listen only to him because only his interpretation of Scripture is true. I believe that is one characteristic of a cult.
Camping paid for a full-page color ad in USA Today, proclaiming May 21 as the day the world will end. According to the biblical standard, a prophet must always be right to be a spokesman for God. Camping falls considerably short of that standard because he has previously declared the world would end on other days, though the last time he left the door open, saying, “I could be wrong.” At least that “prophecy” came true.
The late Jeane Dixon fancied herself a psychic. She made many predictions that went unfulfilled. The one prediction that did come true was President John F. Kennedy’s assassination and that lucky “prophecy” made her an international celebrity. It doesn’t take much to get attention these days.
The earliest recorded doomsday forecaster, according to Isaac Asimov’s Book of Facts (1979), was written on an Assyrian clay tablet circa 2800 BC. It bore the words “Our earth is degenerate in these latter days. There are signs that the world is speedily coming to an end. Bribery and corruption are common.”
That guy should have lived to see modern-day Washington, D.C.!
Down through the ages many people have made predictions that the world would end—in AD 70 (a group of Jewish ascetics with apocalyptic beliefs), the year 365 (credit that one to Hilary of Poitiers), and 500, the year Roman theologian Sextus Julius Africanus calculated the End would come, 6,000 years after his dating of Creation.
There are many more of these characters—all of them wrong. A prominent contemporary “prophet” is Iran’s president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. He claims he got word from Allah that he—Ahmadinejad—has been chosen to help end the world by making war on Israel, at which time the 12th imam will reveal himself and create a worldwide caliphate. He also claims there are no homosexuals in Iran. Judge the validity of his prophetic voice for yourself.
Google “A Brief History of the Apocalypse” and be entertained by the many false prophets through the ages.
Camping and his acolytes ignore what the Jesus they claim to represent said about such things. When asked about the end of the age (see Matthew 24), Jesus said wars and rumors of wars, earthquakes, famines, nation rising against nation and a lot of other bad stuff would come first. All of these are part of the daily news. But then he said these things are just “the beginning.”
Jesus then said His followers would be afflicted, even killed; they will betray and hate one another, many false prophets will arise, and the “Gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness to all nations; and then shall the end come.”
That last part hasn’t yet occurred, though people who study such things say they see signs of it approaching. Consider the futuristic book, Revelation.
I’m not expecting the end on May 21. That’s because of something else Jesus said. He said he would return when people “least expect it” (Luke 12:40). By that standard, Mr. Camping is wrong because he expects the end to come this Saturday. And so it won’t.
© 2011 Tribune Media Services Inc.
See “Static on the Airways,” by Elbert Chu and Paul Glader from the current issue of WORLD.

















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back to top45 Comments to “Apocalypse now?”
Let me see if I have this right: According to most evangelicals, a “Rapture” and a “Tribulation” and a “Second Coming” WILL eventually occur, it’s just that no one knows exactly when. In fact, a significant number of people actually believe that a “Rapture” will happen during their own lifetimes, and they will be beamed up to Heaven, leaving little more than their clothes and their dentures behind.
So far it sounds pretty nutty. So why is it that Harold Camping is somehow NUTTIER because he’s determined a DATE for all this mumbo-jumbo?
I find it extremely disturbing that so many people, even many elected officials, think in such Apocalyptic terms. How it must cloud their long-term view of the future! Imagine: All of our science and technology and exploration and investment in the Advancing Modern World is all for naught, because it will simply be swept away in some grand battle between the armies of Heaven and Hell! How utterly depressing and nihilistic!
Maybe it would be far better if people would just grow up, get over their fairytales and superstitions, and learn how to live in the REAL WORLD. Trust me, you can enjoy a perfectly happy, decent, and meaningful life without having to worry about “The Rapture.”
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Oh Harold . . . give me Rob Bell any day
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He then decided all churches are corrupt and people should leave whatever congregation they’re in and listen only to him because only his interpretation of Scripture is true. I believe that is one characteristic of a cult.
Or just any church. Including yours.
As for the rest of it, does it make any more sense to believe that some man was dead and buried for three days, then crawled out of his grave, walked around for a while, and then vanished?
The “central miracle” of Christianity is one of its silliest. And once one has surrenderd one’s credulity, all manner of damaging beliefs becom possible.
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Let me see if I have this right: According to most evangelicals…
I’m not sure most evangelicals are pre-trib. Maybe they are, but it isn’t obvious to me that’s the case.
All evangelicals likely believe Jesus will one day return and the world as we know it will end, but they may not expect to be spared from the really crappy period that is expected to proceed Christ’s return.
In this view we (believers and non) are essentially “in it together” up until the very end. This meshes better with my understanding of the character of God.
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For the record, we’re having a baby shower at our house on Saturday.
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In the United States there are hundreds of people who have quit their jobs, sold their possessions, and even abandoned their own families so that they could join Harold Camping’s apocalypse caravan. Don’t you think they’re going to be just LITTLE bit irritated when Sunday rolls around and life goes on as usual?
If you look at Mr. Camping’s “WeCanKnow” website, it’s clear that thousands of impoverished people in Third World countries have surrendered what little money they have to this guy, apparently in hopes of buying a ticket to Heaven.
Worldwide there could be millions of people who have been suckered in to Harold Camping’s delusions. What kind of emotional upheaval will they be going through next week when there has been no global earthquake, no “Rapture” (as I’m sure you know there will not be)?
The cumulative emotional and financial damage that Harold Camping has already caused is incalculable. AND FOR WHAT?
If anything good comes out of this, after May 21st has uneventfully come and gone, it may be that more people decide that it’s time to take responsibility for themselves and learn to live in the real world.
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C.S. Lewis put it best:
* “A continual looking forward to the eternal world is not a form of escapism or wishful thinking… If you read history, you will find that the Christians who did the most for the present world were just those who thought the most of the next.” C.S. Lewis. Book III, Chapter 10 (’Hope’) in Mere Christianity.
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More from Lewis:
* “Aim at Heaven and you will get earth ‘thrown in’: aim at earth and you will get neither.” ~ C.S. Lewis, From “Mere Christianity,” Chapter 10, Hope.
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Cultures do decay and nations do decline and fall. We ignore serious evil to our peril. Thus, it is foolish to lump all prophetic warnings into a group and call them nutters. Some are, some aren’t. One must apply wisdom and take all warnings for what they are worth as best we can.
Extra wisdom is needed when election campaigns heat up. Sadly, the windows for non-election time periods are gitting too tiny to see out of.
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Harold Camping is attractive and popular to many (even believers) because he sees all churches as corrupt and tells people to leave them. The details don’t matter. Yippee! This may be especially attractive to the Emergent generation and people who read or follow George Barna (who seems to always find a way to put the traditional church in a negative light).
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What was it that P.T. Barnum said about the frequency of suckers being born?
This illustrates well how important it is for people to be biblically literate. Anyone who knows their Bible would not give Camping the time of day.
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“Cultures do decay and nations do decline and fall.”
And there have always been other cultures and nations to replace those that have run their course. There is nothing new under the Sun as far as THAT goes. Overall I think civilization is doing pretty well. Our technology, transportation, science, and understanding of our world and Universe has never been better. The main thing I worry about is the ever-growing human population, which has more than doubled in my lifetime alone. At some point, if we haven’t reached that point already, it will become unsustainable in terms our ability to provide an improving standard of living for everyone.
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“At some point, if we haven’t reached that point already, it will become unsustainable in terms our ability to provide an improving standard of living for everyone.”
Didn’t you just chastise so “many people, even many elected officials” for apocalyptic terms…
How utterly nihilistic and depressing of you.
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“Didn’t you just chastise so “many people, even many elected officials” for apocalyptic terms… How utterly nihilistic and depressing of you.”
Quite the contrary: I think there may be hope for us yet, although it may take some serious ecological and environmental catastrophe to get us to wise up. God is not going to solve these problems for us.
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Within the context of orthodox Christian theology, eschatology is and has been a fascinating and, understandably, popular topic, but one fraught with danger and, often, the temptation of presumption.
There are a number of positions that have been (and are) held by the church at large — the particular form of premillennial dispensationalism we hear about mostly (as in the “Last Days” novels) is actually fairly recent. While wildly popular in America, it’s hardly the only position espoused within the church (the other positions that still have many adherents among believers being historic premillennialism, amillennialism and postmillennialism).
Even more confused now?
The Bible isn’t always as clear about some of these issues as we’d like. But what it is clear about is that Jesus will return and that there is a day of reckoning, a day of judgement we all will face.
Our pastor wrote a column recently on the topic:
http://www.dailybreeze.com/ci_18045166
It’s sad that “predictions” and false prophecies like Camping’s become the cause for a mocking of the truth that we are all accountable to a higher authority who will one day come to judge. The precise details of how or when that comes about we may not be entirely sure, but we can depend on the truth that it will one day occur — and that until then, we are to be watchful and ready.
For those who are serious about the topic, a recent book that explores some of the themes and differing approaches within the church (from a Reformed perspective) is “These Last Days: A Christian View of History” (P&R Publishing).
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“Quite the contrary: I think there may be hope for us yet, although it may take some serious ecological and environmental catastrophe to get us to wise up. God is not going to solve these problems for us.”
State of denial about the log in your own eye eh?
By the way, I’m sure that’s how all those “many elected officials” feel too…
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Cal Thomas: When asked about the end of the age (see Matthew 24), Jesus said wars and rumors of wars, earthquakes, famines, nation rising against nation and a lot of other bad stuff would come first. All of these are part of the daily news. But then he said these things are just “the beginning.”
Jesus then said His followers would be afflicted, even killed; they will betray and hate one another, many false prophets will arise, and the “Gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness to all nations; and then shall the end come.”
That last part hasn’t yet occurred, though people who study such things say they see signs of it approaching. Consider the futuristic book, Revelation.
Frank: While this is one view, it is not the only view.
Having originated in Scotland in the 1830s, it is not even the view most held throughout the history of the church.
But guys like Hal Lindsey and Tim LaHaye — with the help of resources such as the Scofield Reference Bible — have promulgated the “future tribulation” for so long that it is assumed to be the true eschatological paradigm.
One part of Matthew 24 that Cal forgot to mention:
So when he says, “That last part hasn’t yet occurred,” that fails to take into account Jesus’ own words telling the time in which these things would all come to pass.
Too many Christians assume that “the end” means the End of the World. Jesus’ own words indicate otherwise.
(And incidentally, how to dispensational premillennialists have the audacity to criticize Camping when so many of their own have been so wrong so many times in recent memory? Is it just because their own have not named a specific date for “the end”?)
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#12 – “And there have always been other cultures and nations to replace those that have run their course.”
True, and those “other cultures and nations” have often been horrific for humanity. Huge setbacks in civilization are common in human history and many have suffered greatly as a result. Thus, prophetic warnings to the wise are often highly warrented. The operative word here is “wise.”
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#12 – “Our technology, transportation, science, and understanding of our world and Universe has never been better.”
Henry David Thoreau once said of presumed technological progress: “Improved means to an unimproved end.”
________________
While I am grateful for technological progress, I keep it in perspective and am not seduced or blinded by utopianism.
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In reference to post #6 – I reckon all those disappointed people (if they are indeed disappointed) will go back to the scriptures and take more seriously the words of Jesus that says “no one knows the date or the time!” I will be a learning experience for them and those that watched them.
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I’m sorry – IT will be a learning experience for them…..
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Speaking of the wisdom to discern genuine alarm from irresponsible alarmism with regard to our civilization, C.S. Lewis makes a good point:
* “Perhaps civilization will never be safe until we care for something else more than we care for it.” ~ C.S. Lewis, “God in the Dock”, First and Second Things (1942).
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Ha! Fascinating! That little tidbit alone is worth the price of admission. Most interesting thing I’ve read all day, perhaps.
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“So far it sounds pretty nutty.”
Indeed, until you look at the facts. Over 100 prophecies were fulfilled when Jesus came the first time. They were all in print when the Word set foot on earth. Amazingly, Daniel 9:24-26 even tells us what year the Messiah would be on earth! Any search for prophecies of the Messiah would bring up lists of the most astounding passages.
“Maybe it would be far better if people would just grow up”
Actually, it would be far better if people believed that God has more than proved Himself in the Bible by the fulfilled prophecies. He specifically tells us that He’ll use this method of self-vindication to separate Himself from all the false idols Israel had. Anyone can make predictions, but God specifically made predictions to prove Himself, and to let us know how to judge whether the Messiah really had come or not.
Based on the many fulfilled prophecies about His first coming, I have no problem believing in His second.
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(And incidentally, how to dispensational premillennialists have the audacity to criticize Camping when so many of their own have been so wrong so many times in recent memory? Is it just because their own have not named a specific date for “the end”?)
Frank: What are you talking about here?
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Tychicus,
The date-setter Camping is being criticized — and rightly so.
But we never hear of premillennialists criticizing the “soft” predictions of their very own date-teasers, men like Tim LaHaye, Hal Lindsay, Jack Van Impe, etc. They get a pass because they use words like “could” instead of “will,” and for suggesting the rapture will occur during this or that decade, rather than on a specific date.
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Harold Camping is a good guy who has painstakingly studied the bible for nearly his entire life. Just because he’s incredibly old and (likely) suffering from dementia doesn’t mean he’s intentionally trying to mislead, Joel Mark.
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In my younger years I used to come home late in the night after consuming a few too many of Canada’s finest rye and watch Jack Van Impe — I knew I really had too many when he made sense and his daughter looked attractive.
May 21 — can’t happen, its the first long weekend of the summer in Canada (summer is a debatable term).
Seriously — Frank has a point in 26 as does Polish Bear in #1. how different is this guy from more acceptable predicters who hedge their bets.
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I think Camping probably genuinely believes what he’s saying.
The problem is, long ago he separated himself from his church and from accepting or listening to any kind of counsel. Dangerous territory for any Christian leader. Only he understands what the Bible says about the end times?
Interesting to read through some of the documents from his former home church and their efforts to discuss with him the heretical directions he appeared to be going a few years back:
http://www.rcus.org/index.php/doctrine/position-papers/263-harold-camping
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#27 – Huh? Who knows?
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#28 – HRW asked, “how different is this guy from more acceptable predicters who hedge their bets.”
Intelligent people have no trouble avoiding the fallacies of blending by stereotype, lumping categories, creating straw men, or poinsoning the well by implication, or whatever fallacy critics want to bring to the table to justify their preconceived notions. Intelligent people will take each person (including preachers) on his own merits or demerits and criticize specifically and honestly. My impression is that Camping is EXREMELY different from most preachers I have ever known.
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I was echoing Frank’s comparision between VanImpe and Camping — similar to you most preachers I’ve met don’t resemble either man.
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The end is nigh—be very afraid. All preachers have used that kind of fear for centuries. Camping is no diferent from them. And they have caused untold misery.
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Humorous hysteria there, ARCADIA.
“All preachers…” and “…no diferent from them” and “…caused untold misery.” betrays your lack of objectivity and absense of critical thinking skills.
Again, let me say that more biblical literacy would render preachers like Camping completley powerless.
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JOEL MARK (34): … more biblical literacy would render preachers like Camping completley powerless.
FRANK: … to say nothing of date-teasing authors like Lindsey and LaHaye.
I’m no friend to Camping’s eschatology, but one thing you can say: AT least he ain’t peddling a 16-book fiction series and 3 movies based on the (also fictional) eschatology of dispensational premillennialism.
Talk about your “humorous hysteria.”
Left Behind?
Why not Right Behind?
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“Just because he’s incredibly old and (likely) suffering from dementia doesn’t mean he’s intentionally trying to mislead, Joel Mark.”
Yeah JOEL, Come on man, it’s not like he’s Rob Bell…
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“The end is nigh—be very afraid. All preachers have used that kind of fear for centuries. Camping is no diferent from them. And they have caused untold misery.”
Funny how one could exchange the word “preachers” for “environmentalists” these days…
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Thorn (37), that’s pretty funny. The hard-core, global warming true-believers definitely convey a religious fervor.
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“Thank you for caring and sharing”
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Next week the evangelicals will be out in force doing damage control. They’ll insist that Harold Camping was always wrong, that he was a “false prophet” … but they will ALSO insist that the “Rapture” and the “Tribulation” and the “Second Coming” WILL eventually occur, so we need to surrender to Jesus and make sure we’re prepared.
Personally, I hope people will take time to reflect that we are living in the REAL WORLD, not a world of angels and demons, voodoo dolls and Santa Claus. There is no such thing as prophecy, except for the ambiguous, self-fulfilling kind. There is just the here and now, and our world is what WE make of it, not some imaginary beings up in the clouds somewhere.
This coming Sunday, after Harold Camping’s apocalyptic dreams have failed to come true, take time to listen to John Lennon’s “Imagine.” Listen to the words and think about them. It’s probably the best wisdom we have in this day and age.
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Virtually no Christian I know of — and certainly no church — is taking this prediction seriously.
Interesting (and sad), though, how it certainly has again exposed the world’s outright hatred of God; displaying once again human nature’s ability to suppress the truth.
The appeal of not being answerable to our creator, of living life the way we want to live it, is powerful stuff, indeed.
In that light, some of these comments here are fascinating — though, sadly, hardly breaking new ground in the long trail human history. Examples of radical unbelief abounded in biblical times. The attitudes were encountered by Jesus all the time.
And so it goes.
http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/148461/20110519/doomsday-may-21-harold-camping-christianity-theologian.htm#ixzz1MtuXrg7a
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Good morning, World … Christ is risen!
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As the late Dr. Greg Bahnsen noted in 1994 (the year of Camping’s first false prediction), “If You Received this, the World Did Not End.”
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It is amazing how we just ignore God and say He’s not going to come down here and solve our problems. He already has, read the first four books of the NT in the Holy Bible. Of course we ignore His counsel and continue in our “self” mentality. Will somebody tell me why we don’t give more priority to the brotherhood of the gospel?
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Frank, thanks for posting the Bahnsen link. With regard to his remarks about Camping, it sounds like it could have been written this week.
And I wasn’t aware that Chuck Smith had actually named a date way back when. Interesting. ….
I do think the media will grow weary of Camping pretty quickly, so we can only hope it won’t spark the frenzy in October that it did last week.
But then again, memories are short.
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