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Of That Day And Hour Knoweth No Man
I was reading in World News Daily the other day; finding an article by Joe Kovacs concerning Harold Camping; our current “Doomsday” minister of darkness. The world did not end on 21 May 2011.
No apocalypse means no reason to seek forgiveness
Rats. I thought I could get out of writing a column this week. I had marked May 21 as the end of the world because a preacher named Harold Camping in California (that should have been my first clue something was amiss) said on that day the Earth would be obliterated.
End Of The World Issues. America’s Harold Camping, another false prophet.
Definitely, America’s Harold Camping, a famous evangelist who predicted that the world would come to an end last week, May 21, 2011 must now be a bundle of shame, massive, colossal, gargantuan shame over his false prophecy which shook several Biblically ignorant sections of the whole world. And the world did not end last Saturday, something that provided comical relief, a laughable fun to those of us who knew that Camping was only using the Bible to deceive the world.
Harold Camping Quits Evangelism, Focuses Only on the ‘Saved’
Harold Camping is tossing the witnessing tracts and no longer focusing on bringing people to Jesus Christ. His main task now, he said, is to nurture those already saved. For others, he suggested, it’s already too late.
Harold Camping, Not Again!
A Family Radio spokesman had “guaranteed” that the May 21st rapture date was “the day”! May 21 was the date Harold Camping had predicted would bring the judgment of God upon the world. That day was to be marked by an immense, global earthquake, but the day came and went without worldwide incident—and without the occurrence of the rapture of the Church.
You promised me the apocalypse, Mr Camping, but you let me down
It’s been the better part of a week now, and I think I’ve finally processed my disappointment enough to move on. Even so, I know I’ll never completely get over the feeling of being ripped off. We were promised the end of the world – and we got nothin’!
Oops! Preacher Admits ‘Apocalypse’ Date Wrong
The American preacher whose “end of the world” prophecy went conspicuously unfulfilled has a simple explanation for what went wrong – he miscalculated. Harold Camping had said he believed “beyond the shadow of a doubt” that Judgement Day was upon us on Saturday when rolling earthquakes would strike at 6pm.
New Billboard Calls Harold Camping’s Rapture Dud ‘Awkward’
A new billboard making fun of Harold Camping’s wrong prediction of the May 21 rapture went up Sunday in Greensboro, N.C., calling the situation “awkward.” Camping, president of Family Radio, said the rapture and Judgment Day would take place on May 21, 2011 at 6 p.m.
Harold Camping delays Doomsday till October 21, 2011
Family Radio President Harold Camping delayed his Doomsday prediction till October 21, 2011, in an Open Forum at Family Radio headquarters at Oakland, California. The radio evangelist, whose messages are broadcast over 66 radio stations worldwide, ranging from US toKenya, China and Taiwan, told the media, Monday, that the world will survive for another 5 more months.
Preacher says world will actually end in Oct
As crestfallen followers of a California preacher who foresaw the world’s end strained to find meaning in their lives, Harold Camping revised his apocalyptic prophecy, saying he was off by five months and the Earth actually will be obliterated on Oct. 21.



