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Brandon G. Withrow

Brandon G. Withrow

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'The End of the World Is Coming!' My Experience With Harold Camping

Posted: 01/ 8/11 09:36 AM ET

My teenaged years were spent in my father's small Reformed Baptist church in Ohio. We never had thoughts of becoming a mega-church, but we never turned away a new family or two. A sight I remember seeing repeatedly, however, was the tendency for us to suddenly have a caravan of visitors.

There would be nothing for months. Just the regulars would show up. They'd worship on Sunday, fix the roof or cut the grass on Monday, worship on Wednesday, show up for Bible study on Thursday, clean the church on Saturday and repeat.

Then visitors often showed up in groups of three to five families, and there was often a story involved -- a story of being removed from another church. At times, these stories were one of injustice, and in some situations, my father would try to help them heal the rift with their previous churches.

Often, however, it was a case of what I see as a messianic complex. The new arrivals believed they had some truth, the ultimate truth, which would range from a hyper-Calvinistic determinism to a secret knowledge of when the end of the world would come.

We were Reformed, so having some extreme Calvinism enter our doors made sense, but on more than one occasion we had several end-of-the-world prophets. In 1988, the book 88 Reasons Why the Rapture will be in 1988 was in circulation. I remember a very large man with white hair and a trademark white suit leading that call. My father welcomed them to the church, but with a warning -- ultimately unheeded -- not to use their views to divide the community.

Spoiler alert: Christ did not return in 1988. That, however, did not stop new predictions for just about every year after. In the early 90s, another group came to our church, followers of a man named Harold Camping, founder of Family Radio and the author of the book, 1994. (Clever titles are rarely the thing of end of the world prophets.)

They were on the move, looking for a receptive church for Camping's end of the world predictions. Things came to a boiling point. Leadership was being interrupted with absurd interpretations of the Bible during morning services. They emptied their bank accounts to pay for large black billboards across the city. They printed pamphlets and bought 1994 by the cart-load.

Spoiler alert: Christ did not return in 1994. That fact, however, has not stopped Camping from starting a new set of predictions. Christ will return, according to his latest calculations, on May 21 of 2011. A part of me cannot help but laugh at yet another prediction. I am reminded of an epic Simpsons episode, "Thank God, It's Doomsday," where Homer discovers that his end of the world predictions were off because he miscalculated the number of people at the Last Supper.

[Video from The Last Year on Earth, the blog of Justin Berton at the San Francisco Chronicle, which monitors Harold Camping's movement.]

The new generation of Camping followers is resorting to high-tech ways to spread the word of May 21, like phone apps. But billboards are still involved. Some of the fans on his Facebook page can hardly be old enough to remember what happened (or didn't) in 1994.

It is not that I begrudge anyone the belief in Christ's return. Today I'm Episcopalian, and we, like many Christians across the globe, affirm the ancient creeds that talk of Christ's return. I admit that not all of us interpret it the same way -- Episcopalians are not necessarily known for their apocalyptic flair -- but it seems to me that Camping's followers have turned this ancient affirmation into a form of the lottery.

These end-of-the-world prophets are often well-meaning, decent people. The world they live in is less than enjoyable -- either because there is little to hold them or because it does not fit the ideals they have been raised to embrace -- and so they are looking for a first-class seat out of here.

This is much like the office lottery. Lean on whatever you need to hope that this time around your office pool will pick the big one and everyone gets to retire. Who knows if the astrologer in human resources and the Christian in accounts payable have divined enough answers to finally set you free from the misery of a dead-end job. Perhaps enough prayers and wishful thinking can make it happen on your appointed day.

Unfortunately, like the lottery, these hopes are built on the hard earned money of the desperate. When the dust settles on May 22, will they buy another ticket and repeat?

 
 
 

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Larry Motuz
Lawless markets lead ill-gotten gains.
06:07 PM on 01/16/2011
"... they are looking for a first-class seat out of here."

But, first, a first class seat here.
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Christopher Koulouris
01:13 PM on 01/11/2011
Strangely enough, faith is exactly what you need to sometimes make it in this world, because so often things are all so beyond us. Faith in Mr Camping’s case is also what you need too if you believe the imminent demise of the world is here too. The wonderful thing about faith is that it rests on your own personal rationale or lack of to be succinct. In short it’s a kind of delicious illusion that we can or can not choose to believe in.

http://scallywagandvagabond.com/2011/01/will-the-world-end-on-may-21st-2011/2/
11:07 AM on 01/11/2011
True believers are followers of Jesus Christ and followers of Christ’s Words, which are God’s Words. And true believers understand that no human being is perfect, and everyone makes mistakes, and the person who makes mistakes should not be rejected. True believers don’t just blindly follow any teacher. True believers check out the Scriptures for themselves to verify interpretations, and if there are things in the Bible that they don’t understand, it doesn’t mean they are in danger of losing their salvation. Just because Mr. Camping has misunderstood some scriptures, it doesn’t mean he is a false teacher who is causing true believers to go astray. That’s not possible. True believers can never lose their salvation. In my opinion, Mr. Camping is the best Bible teacher ever.
11:04 AM on 01/11/2011
The role of Bible teachers is to teach what they have learned; and teachers and students learn and grow as each day passes. Each human being today possesses knowledge that each did not possess 10 years ago, or 5 years ago, or 1 year ago, etc. We are all learning and growing every day. If a Bible teacher teaches something and it turns out that he was mistaken, this does not mean that he is a “false teacher”. Suppose Mr. Camping had decided not to share what he had learned about 1994 during that time because he was not 100% sure; and suppose Christ had returned in 1994? The people left behind would have wished that someone would have warned them. Just because Christ didn’t return in 1994 as Mr. Camping believed during that time doesn’t mean he’s a false teacher. It only means he didn’t understand all the pieces of the Bible puzzle during that time. He’s still a very good teacher. And ever since 1994, there has been more opportunity to spread the gospel to more people all over the world, which is the most important aspect of this whole thing. If some people “lost their faith” because Christ did not return in 1994, then it reveals that they were not true believers of Jesus Christ. True believers continued to follow Jesus Christ and forgave Mr. Camping’s biblical misunderstandings of that point in time. Mr. Camping is ...
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Wes Isley
Writer and interfaith minister
09:40 AM on 01/11/2011
It's unfortunate that so many people are so miserable here on Earth which, as far as we can truly know, is our one and only home. No one knows if there is a Heaven or an afterlife of any kind. But even if we choose to put our hope in another world to come, the least we can do is try and make this life here as good as possible. Then we might be kinder to one another and less susceptible to making life miserable for others in our misguided, desperate attempt to escape.
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Daleri Rileda
Jungle Jargon
05:27 AM on 01/11/2011
There is nothing well meaning or decent about making a prediction about something no one can know.

It is just unreal how people will believe anything other than what is true.
02:34 PM on 01/10/2011
yes, they will. you cant fix stupid.
11:36 AM on 01/10/2011
I worked at a parachurch ministry in Orlando for several years. For a little over a year of that time, I answered phones on our 1-800 line. When you have a 1-800 line, you get sad, strange, and funny calls. Who do you think is the top name who kept coming up who had burned out, ruined, and left insane with guilt and grief and debt? Just guess. Right! Harold Camping! He has a mix of truth and error, earnestness and apocalypse, that seemed to destroy more people, more completely, than any other, at least during that time (1994/96).

On the other hand, I certainly hope he's right. I wouldn't mind Jesus showing up this year. Come quickly, Lord Jesus.
11:21 AM on 01/10/2011
The Profits of Doom.
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Larry Motuz
Lawless markets lead ill-gotten gains.
06:11 PM on 01/16/2011
Profit$.
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The Doctor Donna
I walk in eternity
10:30 PM on 01/09/2011
What a laugh I'll have on May 22nd.
And for all of 2013.
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french queen13
my beloved is mine and I am his
07:52 PM on 01/09/2011
"Spoiler alert: Christ did not return in 1988."

LOL!

I'm reading Samuel Pepys's diary at present, and there's an entry (from 1662, I think) where someone's predicting the world would end "next Tuesday". Guess they missed out, too!
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mommadona
I paint. I blog. Therefore, I am.
05:54 PM on 01/09/2011
I think if we get past this 2012 end-timer wet dream, we'll have a smoother road. Their bank accounts will be lighter, but overall, a 'purge' would do U.S. ALL well.
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Larry Motuz
Lawless markets lead ill-gotten gains.
06:12 PM on 01/16/2011
Pray for the Rapture. When they go, maybe we can all get along together.
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Grada3784
God is a Parent, not an abuser.
07:14 AM on 01/29/2011
hate to rain on your parade, but 1000 years ago, it didn't peter out until 1033.

With the elastic biblical generation (40 years when I was growing up, 100 now, we're stuck inthe barrel until 2048
03:29 PM on 01/09/2011
If such an event ever does take place in our lifetimes, the 'Apocalypse' that the religious promise will rain down on the rest of us is much more likely to land on their own heads first, hard and heavy!

Christian history is all theological. A human intellectual construct, attempting to know the mind of God without that mind being revealed by God and has been in perpetual disagreement for most of its' history. Thus unlikely to have anything to do with God. No more than the intellectual pretensions, vain imagination, the folly of empty hopes. But I suppose it's good to have an occasional example of what is really false, just in case something true actually even happens!

The bottom line is that if a second coming should take place in any form, what must be among the first priorities for such personage is to expose those theological claims which are no better than chasing after wind. And to do so, such a person would have to 'reveal' a message at odds with all existing orthodoxy? Rapture could quickly turn to nightmare! And blow two thousand years of religious status quo right out of the water. From Rome to Mr. Camping and everything in between. That long over due revolution may already be getting started? Check out http://www.energon.org.uk or

http://www.opednews.com/Diary/May-21-2011-----what-i-by-R-A-Landbeck-110105-188.html
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ninetailedfox
banning people.....so childish
02:52 PM on 01/09/2011
To borrow a quote from an aquaintance "Never trust a religion whose ultimant goal is the end of the world"
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11:24 AM on 01/14/2011
What? Not even the Mormons?
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Enock Zamora
KARMA
01:23 PM on 01/09/2011
It would be Demonstrative to say that one could reach either side of this specturm by 'Being Born Again'. On the lineal realm, God was born again, in the form of Jesus. The same holds true with Elijah, whom was born again as John the Baptist etc. When Jesus took dirt, and mixed it with his saliva, he rub it on men that were blind from birth, and then told them their sins were forgiven. When some asked, how this man could of sinned before he was born, one should get the picture on Being Born again's meaning in the lineal sense. The same holds true in the physical realm.
'The End of the World' is nonsense. Like Jesus and John etc., our body is just a shell that our soul lives in, and returns back to heaven, and then is reborn again to repay our debt, or receive a blessing, according to our past life. In keeping with the symmetry of life, it takes takes about 26000 years to go around the Zodiac, and one can divide that by twelve to see how long a millennium last, wheather it is in the ascention or decention cycle. Each millennium brings in a new messiah, or brings back the old soul like Melchizedec, Jesus etc. For those that think the world is coming to an end, must be under the influence of a Dentist's ether.
11:45 AM on 01/10/2011
The end of the world is crazy talk, but past lives are not.

Got it.