The End of the World is Nigh! The Dangers of Apocalyptism and End-Times Beliefs

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By Vexen Crabtree 2011 Jun 02

There have been thousands of end-of-the-world predictions. They have been the products of many great minds, many devoted believers in various religions and many predictions from cults, all with a lot of time and effort put in to each and every theory, building up supporting evidence from religious texts, historical trends and numerology. What do all these predictions have in common about the end of the world? They have all been wrong.

  1. Types of Apocalyptism and Common Features
  2. The Year 2000
    1. The World Will Definitely End on a Nice Round Number
    2. Mass Media: The Millennium Bug
  3. 2012 and the Mayan Calendar
  4. Destructive Suicide Cults
    1. Jim Jones' Peoples Temple: 276 Child Murders and Over 600 Adult Suicides
    2. The Sarin Gas Attacks in Japan, by Aum
    3. The Branch Davidians - 80 Died in the Waco Siege
    4. The Order of the Solar Temple and Heaven's Gate
  5. Christian Prophets of Doom
    1. Concerned Christians, Pilgrim House Community, House of Prayer and Solomon's Temple (all in Israel)
    2. Hookers for Jesus / The Family
    3. Harold Camping (The world ends on 1994 Sep 06, 2011 May 21, Oct 21)
    4. Jehovah's Witnesses
  6. Other Cults
    1. Chen Tao (Taiwan -> USA)
    2. The Christian Apostolic Church in Zion, Illinois, USA
  7. Why are there so many Christian end-of-the-world cults?
    1. The Imminent End of the World in the Christian Bible
    2. The Epistle of Enoch
  8. A Real End-of-World Scenario: A Meteorite Strike
  9. Thousands of Failed Predictions (Links)

1. Types of Apocalyptism and Common Features

Ironic though it seems, end-of-the-world cults have fostered a kind of common set of beliefs and writings and it is easy to imagine new prophets of doom being inspired by their (wrong) predecessors' writings.

End-of-the-world-mania is dependent upon certain properties of human ego. We want to witness important historical times, and we want to be at the fore and center of tumultuous and attention-grabbing events. See:

2. The Year 2000

2.1. The World Will Definitely End on a Nice Round Number

Aside from jokingly guessing that masses of people genuinely think that the end of the world was going to occur on a nice round number like "year 2000", it is hard to work out what the genuine cause was for the massive increase in doomsday prophecies centered on that year during the 1990s. Clearly, most people over-estimate the importance of humankind's invented Gregorian calendar.

Rather than disappear when such dates pass without any sign of lava flowing around New York, many of the same people simply move their focus to whatever else looms large on the near horizon.

spacer The cult movements if the 1990s that too often wound themselves up into the hysteria of mass suicide and other tragedies have lost much of their impetus and allure. Some have refocused on global warming, excessive materialism, and indeed the growing conflict with more radical Islam as evidence that the end of the world is still nigh.

"Cults: Secret Sects and Radical Religions"
Robert Schroder (2007)4

2.2. Mass Media: The Millennium Bug

Techno-phobia is a predictable element in end-of-the-world predictions. The news scare of the "millennium bug" led to predictions that, not only would some computers and the like stop working, but that it would result in an accidental nuclear war destroying humanity. Eager Christians shouted loudly about a 2,000-year reign of Satan, after which Judgement Day would come, as predicted by the New Testament.

Full article:

"Modern Mass Media: The Bane of Human Cultural Evolution: 1.6. The Millennium Bug" by Vexen Crabtree (2009)

A concerned researcher, Peter de Jager, attempted to warn industry experts that come year 2000, there might be an issue with the system clocks on Windows computers. This was particularly important for servers and networks. As these underlie much business, as well as national infrastructures in general, the problem certainly needed looking into. Jager received little attention, so, he hyped it up a bit. Then, the world's media took note of his warning, and propelled it into a massive story of worldwide doom and gloom way beyond the scale of the 'possible' risk initially pondered by the computer expert.

The press didn't examine the claim and investigate it. It is a simple procedure to set your system clock forward a few years to see what would happen. They didn't ask Microsoft or Intel about it. If the press had engaged with this kind of journalism - the kind that created the press in the first place - they would have discovered that not much happens when a computer's clock reaches the year 2000 and beyond. They could have then reported that some computer software firms are making outlandish claims in order to sell expensive yet pointless bug-finding software. But that's not what happened and even if they did know the truth, the papers wouldn't have ran it.

By the late 1990s, a final wave of sources joined in as all kinds of maniacs and religious groups cranked up the anxiety to the point of apocalypse. They were led by Gary North of Christian Reconstruction who declared that 'We need times so hard that men will turn to God.' Mr North had got in early, explaining in 1997 [...] 'Month by month, fear will spread. Doom and gloom will sell, as it has never sold before. I have positioned my name, my site, and Christian Reconstruction in the center of this fear. All I have to do now is to report bad news.

"Flat Earth News" by Nick Davies (2008)5

Gary North of Christian Reconstruction sounds rather like a modern newspaper editor! If the news services checked their facts, his claims would not have made the news.

When the Millennium Bug's big day came, nothing happened.

I continue the story on Modern Mass Media: The Bane of Human Cultural Evolution: 1.6. The Millennium Bug, pointing out that some countries and large companies spent billions on anti-millennium-bug software; whilst some entire countries completely ignored the issue and done nothing about it. No matter: in both cases, absolutely nothing newsworthy happened. The entire scare was hollow. Yet everyone wanted to believe it!

3. 2012 and the Mayan Calendar

The present hype about the end of the world centres on 2012, although in 2011 Harold Camping has also proclaimed new dates after the failure of his May 21st prediction). The end of the world in 2012 will occur on Dec 21st, although, the main impetus for this mild mania appears to be public-relations promotional material for a film and a suite of books published in 2007, some of which are pure fiction.

So, what's it all about? Mayan star-gazers noticed a cycle in the movement of stars in the sky. It is caused, we now know, by a slow wobbling of the Earth as it spins and orbits the sun: in this observation, the Mayans were correct: however, any symbolic and mythical conclusions borne from that long cycle are religious fantasy. Of all the various wobbles, tilts, irregularities and oddities of the Earth's orbit, none of them have caused any trouble for life on Earth. Not only that, but as all these things change incredibly slowly there are no moments when the Earth suddenly finds itself in a new condition. Changes are very small as they are spread out over periods of years, or thousands of years.

The Mayans were finalizing their calendars 2300 years ago in an era before we truly understood calendar events and cosmology. I am completely sure that the Mayans simply did not have detailed scientific information about the solar system, the Milky Way, and about cosmology, so could not make any sensible predictions about the end of the world. For example, their calculation of the length of a year was wrong, meaning that by today their calendar would have been 7 months wrong. In addition, historians well-versed in Mayan texts note that the Mayans themselves do not speak of an end of the world in 2012, or at any other points in the Earth's cycles.

NASA has been asked so many questions about 2012 that they have published an FAQ on the subject. They point out that the significance of the cycle period in the Mayan calendar is very mundane:

Just as the calendar you have on your kitchen wall does not cease to exist after December 31, the Mayan calendar does not cease to exist on December 21, 2012. This date is the end of the Mayan long-count period but then -- just as your calendar begins again on January 1 -- another long-count period begins for the Mayan calendar.

NASA Website

The Mayans thought that the world was created in 3114BCE. They definitely could not predict the end of the world on a specific date thousands of years in the future given such a flawed starting-point. Nor could such a prediction be correctly made when it would have been based on some mystical religious-cultural reasons that stemmed from amateur stargazing. In the ancient world, the masters of star gazing were the Babylonians, whose charts were used by multiple cultures for a thousand years because of their accuracy and scope - the Babylonians predicted no end of the world. The Mayans could not even predict their own demise.

Links:

4. Destructive Suicide Cults

4.1. Jim Jones' Peoples Temple: 276 Child Murders and Over 600 Adult Suicides

In 1978 over 900 people died when the People's Temple (frequently known as Jonestown) murdered their (276)6 own children with poison. The rest of the community then followed suit, 200 of them killing themselves and shooting the others. The dead included 383 Americans7. They had previously practised the suicide routine. Their leader shot himself. He was American Rev. James (Jim) Warren Jones, an ordained priest in the mainstream Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). He had previously left the Methodist Church because they did not allow African-Americans to be members. Jones preached "an apocalyptic end of the world through race war, genocide and nuclear war. He maintained that he was the manifestation of the Christ principle and that he had the power to heal"8. The sectarianism and religious extremism of the Christian community brought about its own isolation. Its religious ideals were not compatible with the demands of the practicalities of real life, and the group was fixated by a Bible-based fear of the end of civilisation. Conflicts led Jones to move the community to a remote part of Guyana in 1977, but a Congressman soon followed with two investigators, worried by the concerns of relatives of members of the cult, and the stories of defectors. The community murdered them in 1978, and the same night put their suicide plan into action.

4.2. The Sarin Gas Attacks in Japan, by Aum

The Aum cult were responsible for two sarin gas attacks in Japan. The cult believed that humanity was doomed from an imminent eruption of Mount Fuji, and that only their leader could save us all. Oh, and a UFO would save the members of the cult and take them to a different planet.

Shoko Asahara based his teachings on a mixture of Buddhism, Hinduism, Egyptian mysticism and New Age philosophies. [...] In 1989, he moved the main commune of cult members to Kamikuishiki in a remote country district near Mount Fuji. The following year he [...] issued a warning that Mount Fuji was about to erupt. He alone, he asserted, was in a position to save at least some of humanity and he prophesied that Aum members would be delivered by spaceship to a new civilization in some far-off galaxy before the day of Armageddon came in 1997. [...]

In June 1994, seven people died in the coastal city of Matsumoto after Sarin gas was released in the vicinity of an apartment building where three judges lived. These same judges were poised to rule on a lawsuit brought against Aum. From that moment it seems clear that Shoko Asahara intended to launch a full-scale guerrilla war on the Japanese civilian population. There was another Sarin gas attack, this time again the Tokyo subway system, on 20 March 1995. [...] In February 2004, Shoko Asahara was finally convicted and sentenced to death.

"Cults: Secret Sects and Radical Religions" by Robert Schroder (2007)9

4.3. The Branch Davidians - 80 Died in the Waco Siege

Another American group, the Branch Davidians, also took on an increasingly them-and-us attitude. They started out with Biblical ideas about the cataclysms of judgement day, and ended up stockpiling weapons. It culminated with the Waco siege where over 80 of the religionists died during a shoot-out with authorities10 in 1993. In 1935 they relocated to Waco, near Texas, under their leader Houteff's instructions.

Florence Houteff then predicted that the beginning of the end was scheduled to commence in the spring of 1959. [...] When the apocalypse did not descend, many members became disillusioned and left. [...] In 1986, David Koresh - as Howell [a convert] came to be known - gained control of the commune and ruled it until the disastrous conflagration of April 1993. He introduced ideas of [...] violent resistance to outside authorities. [...] By 1993, the federal authorities were looking for justification to get inside the heavily armed camp of Mount Carmel after tip-offs that the cult possessed illegal firearms. On 28 February, 76 armed agents of the Federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms tried to storm the complex. [...] The assault was repelled and a stand-off ensued that lasted for 51 days and provided abundant and often lurid media fodder. During that time, the inhabitants of the commune appear to have remained steadfast in the belief that 150 years of Adventist history could not let them down - they truly believed they were God's chosen people.

[The siege was ended by two M60 tanks who allowed CS gas to be deployed by punching holes into the compound's walls.]

The remnant of the cult concluded that Koresh would return to earth on 13 December 1996 in some sort of apocalyptic event. [...] They relied on interpretation of a somewhat obscure prophecy contained in Daniel 8:14 [KJV]" JQPU_Content="About: Daniel
14 And he said unto me, Unto two thousand and three hundred days; then shall the sanctuary be cleansed." class="www.holybooks.info/daniel.html#Chapter8">Daniel 8:14 that speaks of 2,300 days after which 'the sanctuary shall be cleansed'. When no cleansing actually took place, they re-calculated the dates and decided that matters would to a climax on 6 August 1999. Again, their world did not undergo a shattering transfiguration but undaunted they continue to meet in the expectation that on a date yet to be determined Koresh will reincarnate and lead them to some new Branch Davidian utopia.

"Cults: Secret Sects and Radical Religions" by Robert Schroder (2007)11

The most confusing thing about these cults, and about religious leaders who continually predict the end of the world, is the way that their followers continue to have faith in them. It seems that the human spirit becomes almost infinitely malleable once a leader claims to have divinity on his side!

4.4. The Order of the Solar Temple and Heaven's Gate

This section is taken from "Religion, Violence, Crime and Mass Suicide: 4.3. Rejection of the World and Mass Suicides: Order of the Solar Temple and Heaven's Gate" by Vexen Crabtree (2009)

Mass suicide frequently punctuates the progression of self-isolating religious communities. They are nearly always associated with belief in another world that they can travel to after death - be it heaven or a paradise on Earth. They often do not see themselves as belonging to this world, and consider the whole world evil, and often think that there is about to be a great war, worldwide cataclysm, or, judgement day. These beliefs were strongly apparent in Jonestown, where Jim Jones led the Peoples Temple to murder their own children before mostly committing suicide themselves. They believed in an imminent apocalypse and Jim Jones had previously predicted when it would happen (it didn't). The Branch Davidians had similar, urgent beliefs, which is why they stockpiled weapons. The sources of strong life-denying beliefs have varied sources: one French New Age group, the Solar Temple, was steeped in new age beliefs and practices, complete with Rosicrucian, Knights Templar and other esoteric interests. 74 of them died, mostly by suicide in Switzerland and France, then Quebec, in 1994, 1995 and 199712. They believed that the Second Coming of Jesus was imminent, and that they had to prepare for this. As with all such groups, they had issues with the real world, and in their farewell letters, they spoke of the "hypocrisies and oppression of this world"13.

Heaven's Gate committed their final act of self-destruction when all 39 members killed themselves in San Diego, USA, in 1997. The leaders, Herff Applewhite and Bonnie Lu Nettles, believed that "they were the two witnesses mentioned in Revelation 11"14, and combined weird New Age beliefs with UFO theories and were committed to detaching themselves from this world through physical training and suppressing all emotions. Over time, they became more and more isolated, and in keeping with other religious groups discussed on this page, also embraced the idea of a final departure from this world. In the case of Heaven's Gate, when the Hale-Bopp comet approached, they decided it hid a spacecraft that they could enter by committing suicide. They would be reborn, according to New Testament lore, into physically perfect bodies14. Clearly the group had little grasp of cosmology or physics, as their spiritualist beliefs about travelling souls and an idealistic life overrode their common sense.

5. Christian Prophets of Doom

5.1. Concerned Christians, Pilgrim House Community, House of Prayer and Solomon's Temple (all in Israel)

Concerned Christians was a group active in the USA, Israel and Greece, and was instrumental in warning the USA of an incoming nuclear attack 'much more than Japan'.

Among those fringe religious organizations that achieved a degree of notoriety linked with the apocalyptic scenario is the Denver-based cult known as the 'Concerned Christians'. Founded in Colorado by Monte Kim Miller in the early 1980s, it was established as an activist group with the mandate of fighting a perceived threat to Christianity in North America posed by the New Age movement. It then adapted an increasingly apocalyptic view linked with the belief that the Second Coming was imminent and developed a paranoia towards authority or jurisdiction emanating from any other quarter than its own. [... In 1997] Miller predicted, on behalf of Concerned Christians, that the onset of the millennium apocalypse would take the form of a massive earthquake which was to strike the city of Denver on 10 October 1998. [...] Towards the end of October 1998, the FBI authorities in the USA passed a precautionary warning to counterparts in Israel since concern was mounting that cult members were planning to provoke a violent incident on the streets of Jerusalem in order to facilitate Miller's self-proclaimed fate.

"Cults: Secret Sects and Radical Religions"
Robert Schroder (2007)15

In January 1999, 14 members were deported from Israel as authorities believed them to be planning an intentional triggering of a religious conflict in order to bring about the end of the world (OCRT16). From the same source, other groups of Israel-bound Christians appear to have had the same ideas:

5.2. Hookers for Jesus / The Family

The Hookers for Jesus, established by Berg, were an unwholesome and sexually promiscuous group who fell foul of police suspicion. As is often the case, increasing pressure from outside resulted in the group retreating even further into insanity, and they became The Family, predicting the end of the world for all (not just the end of free life, for themselves).

Berg also established 'Hookers for Jesus'. These were attractive women, both married and single, who were commanded to go 'Flirty Fishing', or 'FFing', around clubs, bars and any other venues where they could find men who were willing to be lured first to bed and from there into the fold. [...] Dozens of women gave birth to children whose fathers were infrequently identified. The cult was supposed to look after these victims of religious promiscuity but rarely carried out fostering duties in any proper manner. Cult members who tried to escape did so with the warning of eternal damnation ringing in their ears and faced the prospect of life in poverty for themselves and their illegitimate dependents, while the outside world viewed them with wariness and distaste.

Toward the end of the 1970s, police in various countries around the world became alerted to claims that the cult's activities included child abuse. [...] Police enquiries continued, however, and it was established that in the south of England alone as many as 1,000 children had been recruited over a ten-year period, during which at least 116 had died from a variety of causes.

[...] Rebranding themselves as The Family, the organization allegedly forecast the end of the world in 2006 or 2007. Presumably with this in mind, its international headquarters is believed to have relocated from Zurich to India towards the end of the 1990s, while its British-based leaders, Gideon and Rachel Scott, left Britain in 1998, heading for South Africa, where the main part of the membership may also have moved. [...] The Family's Endtime News pages on the Internet have now dropped a recent forecast of the end of the world in 2006 or 2007 in favour of something imminent but less specific [... and] this labels everything from the flu bug to global warming as evidence that the apocalypse will shortly be upon us.

"Cults: Secret Sects and Radical Religions"
Robert Schroder (2007)17

5.3. Harold Camping (The world ends on 1994 Sep 06, 2011 May 21, Oct 21)

At the time of writing there is a Christian preacher making headlines with yet another prediction of the end of the world. Harold Camping, a popular preacher from Oakland, California, is preaching to his tens-of-thousands of listeners that time is short. His campaign includes 2000 billboards, radio sermons and newspaper articles. On the 21st of May 2011, at 6pm, the world will end, he preached. His calculations are based on bible-based numerology where important and recurring numbers are multiplied, added, etc, and the result interpreted in terms of days, or dates, that may signify the end. The approach is familiar in many conspiracy and nutcase theories and is thoroughly discredited by mathematicians and rationalists. It seems that not many maths-aware or science-aware people converse with this preacher, because, this isn't his first shot. He gathered hundreds of followers on Alameda in 1994 Sep 06 to await an end which never came. They still believe him this time around; the Independent news report quotes Adam Larsen, 32, from Kansas, who is among those who have quit their jobs and have devoted themselves to warning of the impending doom - although thankfully he does assert that 2% of us will actually be taken to heaven rather than get sent to the 'other place'. Lunacy.18

So, Harold Camping had to face reporters and his followers on 2011 May 22 after his failed prediction.

Camping told Will Kane of the San Francisco Chronicle that he was "flabbergasted" that the Rapture did not arrive as predicted and that "it has been a really tough weekend." [...] Retired MTA worker Robert Fitzpatrick, who spent his life savings spreading the message, said to Reuters after the promised event failed to manifest:

"I do not understand why...," as his speech broke off and he looked at his watch. "I do not understand why nothing has happened."

Adrienne Martinez, 27 and pregnant, gave up medical school and her familys life savings to spread the message of May 21. Her baby is due next month.

Washington Post (2011 May 23)

So after seeming completely surprised at yet another doomsday prediction failure, what did Camping do next? On top of his crazy techniques of numerology and his complete confidence in his ability had been shown to be wrong, he of course made another altered prediction:

Harold Camping said it had "dawned" on him that God would spare humanity "hell on Earth for five months", and the apocalypse would happen on 21 October.

BBC News (2011 May 24) (includes video interview)

It is perhaps understandable if one old man's religious convictions turn out to be fantasy (although he was less old in 1994 when his first one failed). What is more confusing are the numbers of followers he still has, that his radio station doesn't rebel and drop him, and, that generations of new Christians have somehow, against all the odds, not learned anything from the last few hundred Christian leaders who predicted the end. They were all wrong, the believers all gullible, and all displaying a very strange set of beliefs about the world and how it works.

5.4. Jehovah's Witnesses

Martin Gardner has authored a perfectly good introduction to the Jehovah's Witnesses, which I will quote at length. The JWs initial predictions of the end of the world were based on pyramidology and numerology. This is the use of measurements and dates surrounding the great pyramid in Egypt to predict days. Because the number of potential numbers to use are as plentiful as the imagination, almost any date can be made meaningful. Pyramidology and numerology is thoroughly discredited by mathematicians, and prophecies based on them have untold quantities of failures.

spacer An American preacher enormously impressed by Smyth's researches [on pyramid numerology] was Charles Taze Russell, of Allgheny, Pa., founder of the sect now known as Jehovah's Witnesses. In 1891, Pastor Russell published the third volume of his famous series Studies in the Scripture. It is a book of Biblical prophecy, supplemented by evidence from the Great Pyramid. A letter from Smyth is reproduced in which the Scottish astronomer praises Russell highly for his new and original contributions.

According to Russell, the Bible and Pyramid reveal clearly that the Second Coming of Christ took place invisibly in 1874. This ushered in forty years of 'Harvest' during which the true members of the Church are to be called together under Russell's leadership. Before the close of 1914, the Millennium will begin. The dead will rise and be given a 'second chance' to accept Christ. Those who refuse are to be annihilated, leaving the world completely cleansed of evil. Members of the church alive at the beginning of the Millennium will simply live on forever. This is the meaning of the well known slogan of the Witnesses - 'Millions now living will never die.' [...]

To the great disappointment of the Russellites, 1914 ushered in nothing more dramatic than the World War, and the sect lost thousands of members. New editions of Russell's Pyramid study were issues with the wording altered at crucial spots to make the errors less obvious. Thus, a 1910 edition had read, '... The deliverance of the saints must take place some time before 1914....' (p. 228) But in 1923, this sentence read, '... the deliverance of the saints must take place very soon after 1914....'

Judge J. F. Rutherford, who succeeded Russell after the pastor died in 1916, eventually discarded Pyramidology entirely. Writing in the November 15 and December 1, 1928, issues of The Watch Tower and Herald, Rutherford releases a double-barrelled blast against it [...] The Judge did not remind his readers in these articles that he, too, had been guilty of a prophetic error. For many years he had taught that 1925 would mark the beginning of the great jubilee year. Alas, it also had passed, without perceptible upheavals. The sect now discourages the sale and reading of Russell's writing, and although members still believe the Millennium is about to dawn, no definite dates are set.

"Fads & Fallacies in the Name of Science" by Martin Gardner (1957)19

6. Other Cults

6.1. Chen Tao (Taiwan -> USA)

Schroder says "The Chen Tao doctrine argues that earth has suffered a series of apocalyptic upheavals each of which has culminated in nuclear war. In each case limited numbers of the faithful have been airlifted to safety in flying saucers before being deposited back on Earth":

Chen Tao, meaning 'True Way', is considered by observers in the USA to be particularly dangerous with its leadership once suspected of contemplating a mass suicide bid. The cult was founded in 1996 by a 42-year-old Taiwanese national, Hon Ming Chen. [...] The cult moved into the USA in 1997. [...] Chen Tao philosophy appears to constitute a confusing mix of Christianity, Buddhism, local Taiwanese folk religion and belief in heaven-sent UFOs. [...]

The next in line end-of-world scenario was scheduled for 1999 [involving nuclear holocaust] and, in order to avoid the final chapter, Chen Tao was primed for a mass suicide on 31 March 1999. Nothing untoward took place and the next date of doomsday was set a little later in the same year, sometime between 1 October and 31 December 1999. The world kept turning and, in the years up to 2006, Chen Tao has not made any further public pronouncements about an impending apocalypse, although it still functions as a cult, largely in North America.

"Cults: Secret Sects and Radical Religions"
Robert Schroder (2007)20

6.2. The Christian Apostolic Church in Zion, Illinois, USA

See: "Christianity v. Astronomy: The Earth Orbits the Sun!: 5.2. Christian Flat-Earth and Geocentric Societies" by Vexen Crabtree (2006) for more on this church.

Since its creation in 1895, The Christian Apostolic Church in Zion has thoroughly embraced ignorance and willfully rejected notions of science and astronomy. A community of 6,000 followers remained in the little town of Zion, besides Lake Michigan in Illinois, USA under the leadership of Voliva. Aside from believing that the world is flat amongst many other crazy things, Voliva predicted the end of the world. I don't think I need to tell you that his 1923, then 1927, 1930 and 1935 predictions were all somewhat wrong. Thankfully little bastions of the dark ages such as this tend to wield to the realities of the world sooner or later, and by 1957 then town was returning to normal there - motorists could again stop by without getting arrested for smoking, wearing the wrong clothes, or whistling on a Sunday.21

7. Why are there so many Christian end-of-the-world cults?

7.1. The Imminent End of the World in the Christian Bible

Jesus in the Christian Bible proclaimed many times that the world was about to end: judgement was about to come and he specifically said that this would happen in the same generation that he first appeared in. Obviously, there has been a delay. St Paul taught the same message, preaching the urgent admission of sins, because of the imminent end. The rest of the New Testament, especially the Book of Revelations, provides many more cryptic clues about when this will occur. This is what has spurred the endless stream of historical proclamations by studious Christians that the end is near. Matthew 24:27-44 [KJV]" JQPU_Content="About: Matthew
27 For as the lightning cometh out of the east, and shineth even unto the west; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.
28 For wheresoever the carcase is, there will the eagles be gathered together.
29 Immediately after the tribulation of those days shall the sun be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and the stars shall fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens shall be shaken:
30 And then shall appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven: and then shall all the tribes of the earth mourn, and they shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory.
31 And he shall send his angels with a great sound of a trumpet, and they shall gather together his elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other.
32 Now learn a parable of the fig tree; When his branch is yet tender, and putteth forth leaves, ye know that summer is nigh:
33 So likewise ye, when ye shall see all these things, know that it is near, even at the doors.
34 Verily I say unto you, This generation shall not pass, till all these things be fulfilled.
35 Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away.
36 But of that day and hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels of heaven, but my Father only.
37 But as the days of Noe were, so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.
38 For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noe entered into the ark,
39 And knew not until the flood came, and took them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.
40 Then shall two be in the field; the one shall be taken, and the other left.
41 Two women shall be grinding at the mill; the one shall be taken, and the other left.
42 Watch therefore: for ye know not what hour your Lord doth come.
43 But know this, that if the goodman of the house had known in what watch the thief would come, he would have watched, and would not have suffered his house to be broken up.
44 Therefore be ye also ready: for in such an hour as ye think not the Son of man cometh." class="www.holybooks.info/matthew.html#Chapter24">Matthew 24:27-44 is a lengthy commentary on when the Son of Man comes to end the world, but various hints and comments are scattered throughout the rest of New Testament.

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