Harold Camping's theory that May 21, 2011 is the Judgment Day is based more on calculations rather than divine revelation.
Doomsday prophet Harold Camping who is confidently propagating May 21 as the judgment day or end of the world cites the success of Gay Pride and Same Sex Marriage Movement as one of the primary reasons for the apocalypse.
California-based Harold Camping, who heads the Family Radio Christian network, has predicted May 21, 2011 to be the Doomsday, or the Judgment Day, when around 200 million righteous will Rapture into heaven and the sinners will be left behind.
Harold Camping, the head of a Christian broadcast group called Family Radio, has been predicting for years that the end of the world is on Saturday, May 21, 2011.
Using a region in upheaval as the impetus behind his “Arab spring” speech, President Barack Obama saw to it that the world knew just what it is that America values.
Doomsday prophet Harold Camping is claiming that the Second Coming of Jesus is destined to take place on May 21 which will be coupled with a destructive earthquake followed by the rapture of true Christians.
Doomsday soothsayer Harold Camping insists that the world will end in a few hours from now, with a destructive earthquake pulverizing each region of the world at 6 P.M. local time. The vast majority see the end of the world prediction as farcical and hallucinatory talk of someone who thinks so highly about himself that he can't imagine a world that outlives him. However there is a minority who get jitters as the appointed time of the apocalypse nears.
Protesters in Madrid have camped out in the central square for the fourth consecutive night.
While theU.S. based Christian group, Family Radio, broadcast Harold Camping's prediction around the world, we bring here some of the photos from the scenes of the apocalypse, including YouTube video showing Camping making the May 21 Doomsday prediction.
Predictions by influential Christian radio host Harold Camping, best known for his failed predictions of the second coming of Christ in 1994, have provoked a media storm globally with his prophecy that the Christian Rapture will take place on May 21, 2011.
One fringe group has received national notoriety with their predictions that the end of the world will be this coming Saturday, May 21.
Harold Camping thinks the end of the world is on Saturday, May 21, 2011. He even pinned down the hour (6 p.m. local time).
Harold Camping has convinced his followers that the end of the world is Saturday, May 21, 2011. Here is how he interpreted the Bible to arrive at that date.
Amy Frykholm, religious scholar and author of Rapture Culture, profiles Harold Camping and explains his prophecy's popularity
Across the U.S. and in places around the world, signs and newspaper ads have been warning that judgment day is coming on May 21, 2011.
Battling all objections from Iraq, the first film adaptation of controversial author Salman Rushdie's “Booker of Bookers novel Midnight's Children has finished shooting in Sri Lanka.
Danish director, Lars von Trier has received the boot, Cannes lowest honor, for jokingly calling himself a Nazi.
With the aid of more than 5,500 billboards around the globe, Harold Camping’s ministry has been spreading the news: the Day of Judgment will begin around 6 p.m. on Saturday, May 21, 2011. But for Dr. Albert Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky, the Bible “explicitly forbid(s) Christians to claim the knowledge of such dates and times.”
If Oakland preacher Harold Camping's doomsday prediction comes true on May 21, 2011, what is left on the terra firma will be a handful of dust and splinters of bones. But the moot question is, how FAR from truth is the musings of the 88-year-old minister?
The Muslim Brotherhood (MB) of Egypt on Wednesday submitted the legal papers to the party affairs committee for approval of a new political party Freedom and Justice.
Robert Fitzpatrick, Harold Camping disciple and firm believer in a May 21, 2011 Doomsday, is fairly confident he will be lifted up in the Rapture
One fringe group has gained national notoriety with their predictions that the end of the world will be this May 21, but just how did they arrive at that conclusion?