Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Members of the skeptic group IIG counter-protesting Harold Camping's end-of-the-world prediction on Hollywood Boulevard on May 21, 2011. Camping gained notoriety owing to his incorrect prediction that the Rapture would take place on May 21, 2011, [ 53 ] [ 54 ] [ 55 ] and that the end of the world would subsequently take place five months later ...
On May 19, 2011, the search term "end of the world 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 10 positions. [57]
Harold Camping Camping's fourth predicted date for the end. This would be Camping's last prediction until 2011. [144] 17 Dec 1996 Sheldan Nidle: Nidle, a Californian psychic, predicted that the world would end on this date, with the arrival of 16 million space ships and a host of angels. [146] 26 Mar 1997 Marshall Applewhite
Should the prophesy of Harold Camping, a self-taught biblical scholar who has determined that May 21, 2011 is Judgment Day, be correct, the world will end exactly 7,000 years after Noah's flood.
In Camping's words, "the Bible is an earthly story with a Heavenly meaning." In Camping's publication, "We are Almost There!", [45] he stated that certain Biblical passages pointed unquestionably to May 21, 2011, as the date of "Rapture", and pointed to October 21, 2011, as the end of the world. This event did not occur on May 21 or October 21 ...
Scribes from Jonathan Edwards to Robert Frost have ruminated about the end of the world, but few have been willing to suggest a precise date on which it will occur. Perhaps this is part of the ...
Harold Camping: See: 2011 end times prediction. Camping claimed that the rapture would be on 21 May 2011 followed by the end of the world on 21 October of the same year. Camping wrote "Adam when?" and claimed the biblical calendar meshes with the secular and is accurate from 11,013 BC–AD 2011. [41] 29 September 2011 27 May 2012 18 May 2013
American Christian radio host Harold Camping stated that the Rapture and Judgment Day would take place on May 21, 2011, [106] [107] and that the end of the world would take place five months later on October 21, 2011, based on adding the 153 fish of John 20 to May 21.