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The world ends May 21st 2011 - for real this time!

Movement says End of Days begins in May

By TOM BREEN Associated Press The Associated Press
Monday, January 3, 2011 3:28 AM EST



RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — If there had been time, Marie Exley would have liked to start a family. Instead, the 32-year-old Army veteran has less than six months left, which she'll spend spreading a stark warning: Judgment Day is almost here.


Exley is part of a movement of Christians loosely organized by radio broadcasts and websites, independent of churches and convinced by their reading of the Bible that the end of the world will begin on May 21, 2011.


To get the word out, they're using billboards and bus stop benches, traveling caravans of RVs and volunteers passing out pamphlets on street corners. Cities from Bridgeport, Conn., to Little Rock, Ark., now have billboards with the ominous message, and mission groups are traveling in countries from Latin America to Africa to spread the news outside the U.S.


"A lot of people might think, 'The end's coming, let's go party,'" said Exley, a veteran of two deployments in Iraq. "But we're commanded by God to warn people. I wish I could just be like everybody else, but it's so much better to know that when the end comes, you'll be safe."


In August, Exley left her home in Colorado Springs, Colo., to work with Oakland, Calif.-based Family Radio Worldwide, the independent Christian ministry whose leader, Harold Camping, has calculated the May 21 date based on his reading of the Bible.


She is organizing traveling columns of RVs carrying the message from city to city, a logistics challenge that her military experience has helped solve. The vehicles are scheduled to be in five North Carolina cities between now and the second week of January, but Exley will shortly be gone: overseas, where she hopes to eventually make it back to Iraq.


"I don't really have plans to come back," she said. "Time is short."


Not everyone who's heard Camping's message is taking such a dramatic step. They're remaining in their day-to-day lives, but helping publicize the prophecy in other ways. Allison Warden, of Raleigh, has been helping organize a campaign using billboards, post cards and other media in cities across the U.S. through a website, We Can Know.


The 29-year-old payroll clerk laughs when asked about reactions to the message, which is plastered all over her car.


"It's definitely against the grain, I know that," she said. "We're hoping people won't take our word for it, or Harold Camping's word for it. We're hoping that people will search the scriptures for themselves."


Camping, 89, believes the Bible essentially functions as a cosmic calendar explaining exactly when various prophecies will be fulfilled.


The retired civil engineer said all his calculations come from close readings of the Bible, but that external events like the foundation of the state of Israel in 1948 are signs confirming the date.
"Beyond the shadow of a doubt, May 21 will be the date of the Rapture and the day of judgment," he said.


The doctrine known as the Rapture teaches that believers will be taken up to heaven, while everyone else will remain on earth for a period of torment, concluding with the end of time. Camping believes that will happen in October.


"If May 21 passes and I'm still here, that means I wasn't saved. Does that mean God's word is inaccurate or untrue? Not at all," Warden said.


The belief that Christ will return to earth and bring an end to history has been a basic element of Christian belief since the first century. The Book of Revelation, which comes last in the New Testament, describes this conclusion in vivid language that has inspired Christians for centuries.
But few churches are willing to set a date for the end of the world, heeding Jesus' words in the gospels of Mark and Matthew that no one can know the day or hour it will happen. Predictions like Camping's, though, aren't new. One of the most famous in history was by the Baptist leader William Miller, who predicted the end for Oct. 22, 1844, which came to be known as the Great Disappointment among his followers, some of who subsequently founded the Seventh Day Adventist church.


"In the U.S., there is still a significant population, mostly Protestant, who look at the Bible as kind of a puzzle, and the puzzle is God's word and it's predicting when the end times will come," said Catherine Wessinger, a professor at Loyola University in New Orleans who studies millennialism, the belief in pending apocalypse.


"A lot of times these prophecies gain traction when difficulties are happening in society," she said. "Right now, there's a lot of insecurity, and this is a promise that says it's not all random, it's part of God's plan."


Past predictions that failed to come true don't have any bearing on the current calculation, believers maintain.


"It would be like telling the Wright Brothers that every other attempt to fly has failed, so you shouldn't even try," said Chris McCann, who works with eBible Fellowship, one of the groups spreading the message.


For believers like McCann, theirs is actually a message of hope and compassion: God's compassion for people, and the hope that there's still time to be saved.


That, ultimately, is what spurs on Exley, who said her beliefs have alienated her from most of her friends and family. Her hope is that not everyone who hears her message will mock it, and that even people who dismiss her now might still come to believe.


"If you still want to say we're crazy, go ahead," she said. "But it doesn't hurt to look into it."




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Yeah, No
Crazy people and there end of the world stuff.
 
:-))

I hope one of their friends has a camera next to them when they wake up on May 22nd.
 
The only time the "end of the world" doesn't annoy me is when I predict the end of the world, and even then I'm probably just annoying everyone else...

And how come everyone that calculates the end of the world, based on The Bible, they get completely different dates for the apocalypse? I know that there's a lot of different bibles out there, but shouldn't they all point to the same date for the end of days?
 
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Christians ought not be setting dates. They / we ought to be aware of the "season" and setting an appropriate example.
 
What if on that day everyone remains on the earth? Would that mean no one was worthy? Or maybe just another miscalculated date?

Ugh, we have enough to worry about with 2012!
 
Zero is right... crazies everywhere. Well, since the end of the world is happening, who wants my plants :)
 
"It would be like telling the Wright Brothers that every other attempt to fly has failed, so you shouldn't even try," said Chris McCann, who works with eBible Fellowship, one of the groups spreading the message.
Except that such a statement would be wrong, because birds.
~Joe
 
  • #10
These people must not have read the whole bible because they clearly forgot the passage...

Matthew 24:36
But of that day and hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels of heaven, but my Father only.

I had to go to church from birth to about 18 years old. My mother was a Sunday school teacher. :)

So, if you believe in the bible, you can pretty much scratch thier date off of the list of possible days when the rapture will occur.
 
  • #11
Yep that is exzactly what i was going to say DASHMAN RIGHT ON! and yes scratch that date really any date that anyone predicts and even if they do predict the right date GOD WILL CHANGE THE DATE WHICH WILL PROBABLY NOT HAPPEN BEACAUE NOONE KNOW EXCEPT THE FATHER!
 
  • #12
Ugh.
 
  • #15
Friggin' A, that smiley gets me every time.
 
  • #16
:awesome:
What you don't realize, is how much like me that really is ;P
 
  • #17
Both my parents were in different churches that eventually started to proclaim the "end times". My dad's church said it was gonna be sometime in the 1970s and he and the family were supposed to go over to the ruins of Petra (in Jordan I think) to sit in some caves and wait for the world to end. My mom's church had printed up all these booklets of signs to watch for in the news and so on, outlining recent events that were indicators (bad weather, earthquakes, wars and so on) the end for them was supposed to be in 1988 or 1989. Thankfully neither of them followed their churches after they started getting goofy with this stuff.

As for the 100,000+ fish dying and the birds falling out of the sky in Arkansas (AT NIGHT) is messed up. Black birds don't fly at night, so to me it's not so much supernatural as simply an indicator the army was going something covert in Arkansas on New Years Eve. I don't think we'll ever get the real story from that. But that's my own private conspiracy - you're all free to come up with your own! LOL
 
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  • #18
It's been suggested that it was an airline, or the fireworks.
 
  • #20
Sure an army plane or helicopter gassing the countryside with some new chemical agent! :D

I like to think up conspiracies but I never believe them. I think it's funny how one can find evidence to support some conspiracy theory no matter how bizarre if you look hard enough and make enough far flung connections.
 
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