Aww Shit
American Christian radio host Harold Camping stated that the rapture and Judgment Mean solar day would accept place on May 21, 2011,[1] [2] and that the stop of the globe would take identify 5 months after Oct 21, 2011.
Camping, who was then president of the Family Radio Christian network, claimed the Bible equally his source and said May 21 would exist the appointment of the rapture and the day of judgment "across the shadow of a incertitude".[3] Camping ground suggested that it would occur at six p.grand. local time, with the rapture sweeping the earth time zone past time zone,[iv] [five] while some of his supporters claimed that effectually 200 million people (approximately 3% of the globe's population) would exist 'raptured'.[6] Camping had previously claimed that the rapture would occur in September 1994.
The vast majority of Christian groups, including most Protestant and Cosmic believers, did not accept Camping's predictions;[vii] some explicitly rejected them,[viii] [9] [10] [11] citing Bible passages including the words of Jesus stating "about that day or hour no 1 knows" (Matthew 24:36). An interview with a group of church leaders noted that all of them had scheduled church services as usual for Sunday, May 22.[12]
Post-obit the failure of the prediction, media attending shifted to the response from Camping and his followers. On May 23, Camping stated that May 21 had been a "spiritual" day of judgment, and that the physical rapture would occur on October 21, 2011, simultaneously with the destruction of the universe by God.[xiii] [14] However, on October sixteen, Camping admitted to an interviewer that he did not know when the terminate would come,[15] and made no public comment after October 21 passed without his predicted apocalypse.[sixteen]
In March 2012, Camping "humbly acknowledged" in a alphabetic character to Family unit Radio listeners that he had been mistaken, that the attempt to predict a appointment was "sinful", and that critics had been right in pointing to the scriptural text "of that day and hour knoweth no man". He added that he was searching the Bible "fifty-fifty more fervently [...] non to find dates, simply to be more than faithful in our agreement."[17]
Predictions [edit]
Camping's predictions [edit]
- The rapture would occur on May 21, 2011.[18]
- Massive earthquakes (greater in magnitude than the 2011 Japanese earthquake) would happen across the globe at 6 pm local time.[four]
- The end of the globe would accept identify 5 months afterwards on October 21, 2011.[19]
[edit]
- Approximately iii% of the world'due south population would be called to heaven.[18]
- Earthquakes would begin on May 21 on Kiritimati (Christmas Island), Kiribati at 6 p.k. LINT (0400 UTC).[eighteen] [twenty] [21]
- Citing Jeremiah 25:32, earthquakes would keep "as the sunday advances" with New York, United States, to be affected at approximately half-dozen p.g. EDT (2200 UTC). Some earthquakes will trigger behemothic tsunamis 100 times taller than the boilerplate megatsunami which they claim is 100 meters (330 feet) tall . The waves volition become every bit far inland as Colorado.[eighteen]
Camping's revised prediction [edit]
- On May 23, 2011, Harold Camping stated that May 21 had been a "spiritual" Judgment Day and that the rapture would occur on Oct 21, 2011, together with the destruction of the globe.[22] [23] In a spider web posting titled "What happened on May 21?", Family Radio explained "Thus we can be certain that the whole globe, with the exception of those who are shortly saved (the elect), are under the judgment of God, and will exist annihilated together with the whole physical world on Oct 21, 2011, on the concluding day of the nowadays five months menses."[23]
Rationale [edit]
Camping presented several arguments labeled "numerological" past the mainstream media,[24] which he considered biblical proofs, in favor of the May 21 end time. A civil engineer by training, Camping stated he had attempted to work out mathematically based prophecies in the Bible for decades. In an interview with the San Francisco Relate he explained "... I was an engineer, I was very interested in the numbers. I'd wonder, 'Why did God put this number in, or that number in?' It was non a question of unbelief, information technology was a question of, 'There must exist a reason for it.'"[25]
In 1970, Camping dated the Nifty Alluvion to 4990 BC.[26] Using this date, taking the statement in Genesis 7:4 ("7 days from now I will send pelting on the earth") to be a prediction of the end of the globe, and combining it with ii Peter 3:8 ("With the Lord a day is as a thousand years, and a thousand years are as a solar day"), Camping concluded that the end of the earth would occur in 2011, 7000 years from 4990 BC.[half dozen] Camping ground takes the 17th day of the second calendar month mentioned in Genesis vii:11 to exist May 21, and hence predicts the rapture to occur on this engagement.[half dozen]
Another argument[27] that Camping used in favor of the May 21 date is as follows:
- The number five equals "atonement", the number ten equals "completeness", and the number seventeen equals "heaven".
- The number of days (as calculated below) betwixt Apr 1, 33 AD, and May 21, 2011, AD, is 722,500.
- Christ is believed past Camping ground to have hung on the cross on Apr 1, 33 Advertizement. The fourth dimension betwixt April ane, 33 Advertizing, and April one, 2011, is 1,978 years.
- If i,978 is multiplied by 365.2422 days (the number of days in a solar, as distinct from lunar, yr), the upshot is 722,449.
- The time between Apr ane and May 21 is 51 days.
- 51 added to 722,449 is 722,500.
- (5 × 10 × 17)ii or (amende × abyss × heaven)2 as well equals 722,500.
Camping ground said that 5 × 10 × 17 is telling united states of america a "story from the time Christ made payment for our sins until we're completely saved."[25]
Camping was not precise about the timing of the outcome, proverb that "maybe" we can know the 60 minutes.[28] He has suggested that "days" in the Bible refer to daylight hours particularly.[28] Another account said the "great convulsion" which signals the start of the rapture would "outset in the Pacific Rim at effectually the vi pm local fourth dimension 60 minutes, in each time zone."[29]
In Camping'due south book 1994?, self-published in 1992, he predicted that the end times would come on 6 September 1994.[30] When the rapture failed to occur on the appointed day, Camping said he had made a mathematical mistake.[31]
Criticism [edit]
Camping's rapture prediction, forth with some of his other teachings and behavior, sparked controversy in the Christian and secular Western worlds. His critics ofttimes quoted Bible verses (such as Matthew 24:36) they translate as saying that the date of the finish volition never be known by anyone but God until it actually happens. However, Camping and his followers responded that this principle only practical during the "church age" or pre-Tribulation flow and did not utilize to the nowadays twenty-four hour period, citing other verses (such as i Thessalonians 5:one–5:five) in their rebuttal.[32]
In a 2001 pamphlet, Camping ground asserted that believers should "flee the church", resigning from any church they belong to, because the "Church building Historic period" is over and the "Great Tribulation" has begun.[33] This assertion was controversial[34] and drew "a flurry of attacks".[33]
Edwin M. Yamauchi critiqued Camping's dating of the Flood when Camping showtime published his ideas in 1970.[26]
Criticism of the May 21 prediction ranged from serious critique to ridicule. Theology professor Matthew Fifty. Skinner, writing at the Huffington Mail, noted the "long history of failed speculation" about the finish times and cautioned that end-of-the-world talk tin can lead Christians to social passivity instead of "working for the earth's redemption".[35] Some columnists mocked the prediction with humorous essays.[36] [37] A group of Christians gear up a website called "RaptureFail" with the stated intention of undermining "this embarrassment to the Body of Christ."[38]
Evolutionary biologist and atheist Richard Dawkins dismissed Camping's prediction, writing that "he will inevitably explain, on May 22, that there must take been some error in the calculation, the rapture is postponed to ... and please send more than money to pay for updated billboards."[39] California Director of American Atheists Larry Hicock said that "Camping ground'due south well-intentioned rapture entrada is indicative of the issues with faith".[40]
Prediction for May 21, 2011 [edit]
Information campaign [edit]
Vehicle in San Francisco proclaiming the Harold Camping prediction.
In 2010, Marie Exley of Colorado Springs made news past purchasing advertising infinite in her locality, promoting the alleged rapture date on a number of park benches.[41] Later that, more 5000 "Judgment Twenty-four hours" billboards were erected in locations beyond the world, including the Dominican Commonwealth, Ethiopia, Ghana, Republic of indonesia, State of israel, Jamaica, Hashemite kingdom of jordan, Lebanese republic, Lesotho, the Philippines, Tanzania and the United States.[42] [43] Some people adorned their vehicles with the information.[44] Many who believed in the prediction took fourth dimension off work to prepare for the Rapture.[45] Others spent their life savings on advertising material to publicise the prophecy.[45] One retired transportation agency worker from New York spent $140,000 on ad.[45]
Family Radio spent over US$100 million on the information campaign, financed by sales and bandy of broadcast outlets.[46] On Oct 27, 2010, they launched "Project Caravan". Five recreational vehicles announcing on their sides that Judgment 24-hour interval was to begin on May 21, 2011, were sent out from their headquarters in Oakland, California, to Seattle, Washington. Upon arrival, teams were sent out to distribute tracts.[47] The caravan later on made stops in many states in the U.S.[48] [49] and Canada.[fifty] [51]
Touch [edit]
Camping'due south prediction and his promotion of it via his radio network and other promotional ways spread the prediction globally,[24] which led believers and non-believers to a variety of actions.[52] Some followers of Camping gave upwards their jobs, sold their homes, stopped investing in their children'southward college funds and spent large sums promoting Camping's claims.[53]
About five,000[24] indigenous Hmong gathered at a remote town in Vietnam'due south Mường Nhé District in Điện Biên Province in early May, where they planned to look the inflow of Christ. The Vietnamese government bankrupt upwardly the gathering and arrested some people, describing them as "extremists".[54] Pastor Doan Trung Can indicated that a translated version of Camping'south prediction had influenced nearly 300 of his parishioners to go to the assembly indicate, selling their holding to be able to afford the journey via bus.[55] Many of the Hmong Christians who escaped abort were reportedly forced into hiding later the gathering.[56]
On May 19, 2011, the search term "end of the globe may 21st" reached second position on Google Trends, based on the popularity of the search term in the United States. The related searches "Harold Camping", "May 21 doomsday", and "May 21 rapture" were also represented among the top x positions.[57] The New York Police Department stated: "We don't plan any additional coverage for the end of the world. Indeed, if it happens, fewer officers will be required for streets that presumably will be empty."[58]
Reaction [edit]
Reaction from Family Radio and Harold Camping [edit]
On the weekend of May 21–22, the Family Radio headquarters was closed with a note stating, "This office is closed. Sorry we missed you!"[59] The Family unit Radio network remained on the air during May 21 and May 22, by and large broadcasting its normal schedule of programming, but with no mention of the rapture and without the usual replays of Harold Camping's programme Open up Forum.
On Lord's day, May 22, Camping emerged briefly from his dwelling, saying "Give me a solar day, no interviews today ... I've got to live with information technology, I've got to think it out."[sixty] He said he would make a public statement on Monday, May 23.[61] [62] Camping said he was "flabbergasted" that the rapture did not occur, that he was "looking for answers," and would say more when he returned to piece of work on May 23.[63]
On May 23, he returned to his Open Forum radio program, with members of the press in omnipresence, and, departing from his typical format, took questions from the reporters nowadays instead of from callers.[64] He stated that May 21 had been an "invisible judgment twenty-four hour period" which was purely spiritual in nature, and that he now realized that the concrete rapture would take identify on October 21, simultaneously with the destruction of the universe. "We've e'er said May 21 was the twenty-four hours, but we didn't understand birthday the spiritual meaning," he said. "May 21 is the day that Christ came and put the world under judgment."[xiii] He offered no apology for his earlier interpretation and said that all of his predictions had actually been fulfilled: on May 21, 1988, judgment came upon the churches; on September vii, 1994, judgment continued on the churches; then on May 21, 2011, judgment came upon the entire world.[64]
He said that the publicity campaign would not go along, explaining that since God's judgment had already occurred, at that place was no signal in continuing to warn people about it.[65] He added, "We're non going to put up any more billboards – in fact they're coming down right now."[66] Responding to a question, Camping ground said his organisation would not return money donated past followers to publicize the May 21 prediction, saying "We're not at the end. Why would we return it?"[67]
As October 21 approached, the Family unit Radio website stated:
What actually happened (on May 21) is that God accomplished exactly what He wanted to happen. That was to warn the whole world that on May 21 God's conservancy program would be finished on that solar day. For the next five months, except for the elect (the true believers), the whole globe is nether God's final judgment. To accomplish this goal God withheld from the true believers the way in which ii phases were to be understood. Had He not done and then, the world would never accept been shaken in fear as it was.[68]
A Family Radio staffer suggested that the delay might exist God's mode of separating true believers from those willing to dubiousness the "clear biblical warnings."[13]
Reaction from Harold Camping ground believers [edit]
Family Radio sign in Denver predicting the finish of the world in Spanish on May 21, 2011
Private followers who had spent time and money promoting Camping'southward prediction were "brokenhearted" afterwards May 21 passed without evidence of the rapture. A New York man commented "I was doing what I've been instructed to do through the Bible, but now I've been stymied. It'southward like getting slapped in the confront."[65]
There were rumors that people had killed themselves or attempted suicide to escape the predicted Judgment Day.[69] There was one documented instance, in which a fourteen-year-former Russian girl killed herself on May 21. Her family told a Russian tabloid, LifeNews, that she did it because of her fright of the "terrible sufferings" predicted by Camping;[70] yet, police noted that the daughter had been obsessed with decease and threatening suicide since she was 12.[ citation needed ]
Reaction from other Christians [edit]
A group of Christians in Milpitas, California, offered a session to condolement those who had believed in the prophecy. Church deacon James Bynum told a local paper that "We are here because we care well-nigh these people. It's easy to mock them. But you tin can go kick puppies, too. But why?"[45]
Reaction from non-believers and protesters [edit]
In response to the prediction, more than 830,000 registered as attention a "Post Rapture Annexation" issue on Facebook.[71] [72] The group American Atheists sponsored billboards in several American cities declaring the rapture to be "nonsense".[40] The grouping Seattle Atheists formed the Rapture Relief Fund which they said would be used "to help survivors of whatsoever Armageddon-sized disaster in the Puget Audio area";[73] since the rapture failed to occur on May 21, the money will fund a military camp that teaches children near science and critical thinking.[74]
The comic strip "Doonesbury" spent the calendar week leading up to the predicted day making fun of the prediction.[75] [76]
On May 21, groups of protesters gathered at Family Radio's headquarters in Oakland to mock the evangelical broadcaster'south failed prediction. Ane grouping released human-shaped helium balloons to simulate souls ascension to heaven,[77] while another person played The Doors' song "The Stop" over a boombox.[78] Many atheist and secular groups in the United States hosted "Rapture parties" on May 21.[79]
American Atheists hosted a two-twenty-four hour period briefing over the May 21 weekend in Oakland, not far from Camping ground'south radio station. President David Silverman commented, "We're going to poke fun at these people, but in the end nosotros need to keep in listen that in that location are people beingness hurt here ... We're hoping people wait at this and learn to use their brains … so we don't accept an occurrence of this in 2012" (when some believed the Mayans predicted as the Earth'south last destruction).[80]
Prediction for Oct 21, 2011 [edit]
Camping continued to predict that October 21 would mark the end of the world, based on adding the 153 fish of John 21:11 to May 21,[81] [19] but modified his prediction with words like "probably" and "maybe". "I really am beginning to think as I've restudied these matters that in that location's going to be no large display of whatever kind," Camping said in a podcast. "The end is going to come up very, very quietly."[82] He kept a low profile every bit the date approached, and his daughter responded to a media request by saying, "I'm sorry to disappoint you, but we at Family unit Radio take been directed to not talk to the media or the printing."[83]
Reaction [edit]
No argument was issued past Camping or Family Radio on October 21 or 22.[16] It was afterward reported that Camping ground told an interviewer on October 16 that God has not given anyone the power to know exactly when the rapture would come up.[15] He retired from his leadership position at Family Radio.[xv] Sometime after Oct 21, Family Radio posted an audio message from Harold Camping on their domicile page. In the bulletin, Camping stated, regarding end times prophecy, that "we are finding information technology very very difficult". He also told followers to "not feel abandoned past God" and that "God is nonetheless in charge of everything".
Equally October 21 approached, the Liberty from Religion Foundation bought space on more than 40 billboards in the Bay Area to mock Camping ground'due south predictions and urge viewers to use rational judgment. The billboards featured slogans such as, "Fool me in one case...", "Still hither", and "Every twenty-four hours is judgment day. Use yours. Use reason."[84]
Media reports on Oct 21 and 22 stressed that Camping ground had been "wrong again".[85] [86] The International Business Times proclaimed him a "imitation prophet."[87] On October 21, 2011, Time magazine's website listed Camping's end times predictions every bit one of the "Summit x Failed Predictions", a list compiled in Camping's "award".[88]
Personal developments [edit]
Family unit Radio removed from its web site the archive of audio recordings of Camping ground's Open Forum program recorded prior to May 2011.[89]
On June ix, 2011, Camping suffered a stroke and was hospitalized.[90] Family Radio circulate reruns of his May 23 – June 9 Open Forum segments for several weeks. As of June 23, Family Radio began to provide new programming in his fourth dimension slot.[91]
Camping died on December fifteen, 2013, at the age of 92, as a outcome of complications from a fall at home two weeks earlier. His death was confirmed by an employee of the network.[92] [93]
In September 2018, Family unit Radio announced it would no longer air programs featuring the voice of Harold Camping, and would no longer distribute literature of Camping'southward teachings. The conclusion was made every bit office of an try to both motility abroad from Camping'southward theology, and to reintroduce programs from outside ministries into the network's schedule. The changes went into upshot on October 8, 2018.[94]
Publications [edit]
Camping's writings that detail the timing of the end include:
- Books
- 1994? (1992) – predicts the end times for September 1994
- Time Has An End: A Biblical History of the World 11,013 B.C. - 2011 A.D. (2005) ISBN 978-0533151691 – discusses Camping'southward belief that 2011 is in all likelihood the end of the world.[95]
- Booklets
- The End of the Church Age...and After" (2002) – advises that the Great Tribulation has begun and that Christians should "abscond their churches"[96]
- We Are Near In that location! (2008) – contains information on how the terminate'due south appointment of May 21, 2011 was deduced[97]
- To God Be The Glory! (2008) - a follow-upwardly to the volume We Are Almost In that location! [98]
- Tracts
- The End of the World is Well-nigh Here! Holy God Volition Bring Judgment on May 21, 2011 (2009)[99]
- God Gives Another Infallible Proof That Assures the Rapture Volition Occur May 21, 2011 (2009)[100]
- No Man Knows the Twenty-four hours or the Hr? (2009)[101]
Other ministries or organizations that taught the 2011 finish times prediction [edit]
eBible Fellowship [edit]
Owned and operated by Chris McCann.[102] Publications include:
- The Stop of the World October 21, 2011 [103]
- The Bible Reveals WE Tin KNOW May 21, 2011 is Judgment Day! [104]
McCann connected to teach that October 21, 2011 would be the finish of the earth, fifty-fifty after the failed May 21, 2011 prediction. And after October 21, 2011, he taught that the cease of the world would occur in March 2012.[105] [106]
At the end of 2012, McCann began educational activity the possibility that the last twenty-four hour period would be Oct 7, 2015.[107] He said that in that location was "a potent likelihood that this volition happen" and "an unlikely possibility that information technology will not".[108]
This date was arrived at past adding 1,600 days (taken from Revelation 14:20) to May 21, 2011, which McCann however teaches is the get-go of the mean solar day of judgment. He noted that Oct seven, 2015 is last day of the Feast of Tabernacles, and exactly 10,000 days from May 21, 1988, which he claims is the date the Church building Age came to an end.[109]
Come across too [edit]
- 2012 miracle
- Terminate time
- Peachy Disappointment
- Terminal Judgment
- List of dates predicted for apocalyptic events
- David Meade, another end-times theorist
- Millennialism
- Truthful-laic syndrome
- Unfulfilled Christian religious predictions
References [edit]
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{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ "May 21, 2011 Judgment Day and Rapture Billboards". Ebiblefellowship.com. Archived from the original on October 31, 2010. Retrieved November 29, 2010.
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- ^ McKinley, Jesse (May 2011). "Despite Careful Calculations, the Globe Does Not End". The New York Times . Retrieved May 22, 2011.
- ^ Exclusive: Harold Camping ground to Speak Monday on Failed Prediction Archived May 26, 2011, at the Wayback Machine – International Business organisation Times. May 22, 2011. Retrieved May 23, 2011.
- ^ Kane, Will (May 22, 2011). "Harold Camping 'flabbergasted' globe didn't end". San Francisco Chronicle. Archived from the original on June thirty, 2011. Retrieved May 22, 2011. .
- ^ a b Harold Camping Concludes Silence, Predicts October 21 Rapture The Christian Post, May 23, 2011. Retrieved May 24, 2011
- ^ a b Radio host picks new appointment for world'south end Archived May 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine Associated Printing, in Colorado Springs Gazette, May 24, 2011. Retrieved May 25, 2011
- ^ Rapture Predictor Harold Camping: Apocalypse Rescheduled for October 21 Archived May 25, 2011, at the Wayback Machine Gawker, May 23, 2011. Retrieved May 26, 2011.
- ^ McKinley, Jesse (May 23, 2011). "An Fall Date for the Apocalypse". The New York Times.
- ^ abcnews.go.com/blogs/headlines/2011/10/harold-camping-predicts-end-of-the-world-again/
- ^ Burnett, Thane (May 12, 2011). "Suicide pacts feared on May 21 'cease'". London Costless Press . Retrieved July 30, 2012.
- ^ Garcia, Elena (May 26, 2011). "Fearful Teen Commits Suicide Due To Harold Camping's Judgment Day Prediction". Christian Post . Retrieved July 30, 2012.
- ^ Facebook group page: "Post rapture looting."
- ^ Breen, Tom (May 18, 2011). "Terminate of the globe? How about a political party instead?". NBC News . Retrieved May 30, 2011.
- ^ "Atheists Offering Mail service-Rapture Services". Christianpost.com. May 7, 2011. Retrieved May 19, 2011.
- ^ "Seattle Atheists collect for "Rapture Relief Fund"". Seattle Mail service-Intelligencer. May 13, 2011. Retrieved May nineteen, 2011.
- ^ "The End of the World equally We Know It? Prediction of Saturday 'Rapture' is Fuel for Faithful, Doubters". Fox News. March 25, 2015.
- ^ "Doonesbury" strips from May 16 to May 21, 2020
- ^ "Video: Protesters mock 'cease of world' church". The Daily Telegraph. London. May 22, 2011. Archived from the original on May 24, 2011. Retrieved May 23, 2011.
- ^ Los Angeles Times article: "In the terminate, rapture believers weren't going anywhere."
- ^ "'Rapture' apocalypse prediction sparks atheist reaction". BBC News. May 20, 2011. Archived from the original on May twenty, 2011. Retrieved May 20, 2011.
- ^ Goffard, Christopher (May 21, 2011). "Harold Camping is at the middle of a mediapocalypse". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on May 23, 2011. Retrieved May 30, 2011.
- ^ http://www.lamblion.us/2011/03/harold-camping-end-time-scenario.html [ dead link ]
- ^ Berton, Justin (October 20, 2011). "Harold Camping, rapture prophet, hedges new bet". San Francisco Chronicle . Retrieved October 21, 2011.
- ^ "Harold Camping avoids press despite end-of-days prediction". The Christian Science Monitor. October twenty, 2011. Retrieved October 21, 2011.
- ^ Freedom from Religion Foundation website
- ^ "Harold Camping ground: Doomsday Prophet Wrong Over again". ABC News. October 22, 2011. Retrieved October 22, 2011.
- ^ "Harold Camping ground Doomsday Wrong Once again; Now on to December 2012?". Christian Mail service. October 22, 2011. Archived from the original on October 24, 2011. Retrieved October 22, 2011.
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- ^ "Pinnacle x Failed Predictions". Time. October 21, 2011. Archived from the original on October 21, 2011. Retrieved November iv, 2011.
- ^ "Open Forum Download Annal". Archived from the original on July 28, 2011. Retrieved July 25, 2011.
- ^ "Harold Camping Hospitalized past Stroke; Speech Affected". The Christian Post. June 12, 2011. Retrieved August 22, 2011.
- ^ "Doomsday herald Harold Camping's show goes off the air at the end of the month". Oakland Tribune. June 23, 2011. Archived from the original on July 10, 2011. Retrieved August 22, 2011.
- ^ "Doomsday Minister Harold Camping Dead at 92". ABC News. Associated Press. Dec 17, 2013.
- ^ T. Rees Shapiro (December 13, 2013). "Harold Camping, radio evangelist who predicted 2011 doomsday, dies at 92". The Washington Postal service . Retrieved Dec eighteen, 2013.
- ^ Gryboski, Michael (September 27, 2018). "Harold Camping Programs Canceled past Family Radio, Says Teachings 'Not Scriptural'". Christian Mail service . Retrieved December xxx, 2018.
- ^ Camping, Harold (March 25, 2005). Fourth dimension Has An Terminate: A Biblical History of the World eleven,013 B.C. - 2011 A.D. (PDF). Vantage Press. 502pp. ISBN978-0533151691.
- ^ The Stop of the Church Age...and After. Family Stations Inc. Archived from the original on April 14, 2013.
- ^ We Are Almost There. Family Stations, Inc. Archived from the original on April 14, 2013.
- ^ To God Be The Glory!. Family Stations Inc. 2008.
- ^ "The End of the World is Almost Hither! Holy God Will Bring Judgment on May 21, 2011". Family Stations Inc. Archived from the original on December 24, 2011. Retrieved July 22, 2012.
- ^ God Gives Another Infallible Proof That Assures the Rapture Will Occur May 21, 2011|url=https://kimberlist.com/rapture.pdf
- ^ "No Man Knows the Twenty-four hours or the Hour?". Family Stations Inc. Archived from the original on Apr xiv, 2013. Retrieved July 22, 2012.
- ^ "eBible Fellowship".
- ^ The End of the World Oct 21, 2011. eBible Fellowship.
- ^ The Bible Reveals We CAN KNOW May 21, 2011 is Judgment Day!. eBible Fellowship.
- ^ "The Link Betwixt May 21, 2011 and the Feast of Purim in March 2012". eBible Fellowship.
- ^ "Video: The Link Between May 21, 2011 and the Feast of Purim in March 2012". eBible Fellowship. .
- ^ "Apocalypse Shortly?". Philadelphia Weekly. May 29, 2013. Retrieved Feb 1, 2014.
- ^ The Guardian newspaper:Christian grouping predicts the world will be 'annihilated' on Wednesday, six Oct 2015
- ^ "Can 1600 Furlongs Stand for 1600 Days?". eBible Fellowship.
External links [edit]
| External video | |
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- Family Radio
- EBibleFellowship
- The Latter Pelting
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_end_times_prediction
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