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K74T wrote:I think he may die before the year finishes
San Francisco Earthquakes: Two Earthquakes hit California
By Lindsay Christ on October 21st, 2011
Two earthquakes hit the San Francisco area Thursday October 21st 2011
The first magnitude 4.0 quake struck at 2:31 p.m PDT., along the Hayward Fault six miles beneath the University of California, Berkeley, campus, according to U.S. Geological Survey. Nearly six hours later a 3.8 earthquake struck at 8:16 p.m. PDT along the same fault.
Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:Turkey earthquake kills hundreds today
Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:if it's one thing, the guy is good at predicting earthquakes!San Francisco Earthquakes: Two Earthquakes hit California
By Lindsay Christ on October 21st, 2011
Two earthquakes hit the San Francisco area Thursday October 21st 2011
The first magnitude 4.0 quake struck at 2:31 p.m PDT., along the Hayward Fault six miles beneath the University of California, Berkeley, campus, according to U.S. Geological Survey. Nearly six hours later a 3.8 earthquake struck at 8:16 p.m. PDT along the same fault.
last time on May 21st, he said the world would end there was a notable earthquake in the south pacific
Three proposed Rapture dates have come and gone, and the world has not ended.
Controversial Christian broadcaster Harold Camping has acknowledged his faulty projections, and issued an apology to his followers. The Christian Post reports that the longtime radio evangelist has retired.
Brandon Tauszik, documentarian, told the Post exclusively that he had spoken to Camping, who seemed "disappointed" by his failed predictions and said he "is no longer able to lead Family Radio Stations, Inc., or his ministry."
In an audio message posted on Camping's Family Radio website, the 90-year-old broadcaster told his listeners that the Rapture did not occur October 21 because it was ultimately God's will. "He could have stopped everything if He had wanted to," he said.
In addition, he admits that his calculations were wrong and tells his followers that "we should be very patient about this matter. At least in a minimal way we are learning to walk more and more humble before God."
Camping also apologized for a controversial comment saying that God had stopped saving people who did not believe in his May 21 spiritual judgment day predictions. Camping points out that believers must continue studying the Bible, praying, and remembering that God is in charge.
The evangelist claimed to have cracked a code in the Bible that allowed him to calculate the date of the Rapture. He predicted the world would end in 1994, May 2011, and then in October 2011, the Christian Post reports.
Some devout listeners reportedly sold their belongings and donated money to Camping's cause, the Associated Press reports.
For more on the story, view the video above.
Doomsday preacher Harold Camping dies at 92
OAKLAND, Calif. – Harold Camping, the California preacher who used his evangelical radio ministry and thousands of billboards to broadcast the end of the world and then gave up public prophecy when his date-specific doomsdays did not come to pass, has died at age 92.
Family Radio Network marketing manager Nina Romero said Harold Camping, a retired civil engineer who built a worldwide following for the nonprofit, Oakland-based ministry he founded in 1958, died at his home on Sunday. She said he had been hospitalized after falling.
Camping's most widely spread prediction was that the Rapture would happen on May 21, 2011. His independent Christian media empire spent millions of dollars -- some of it from donations made by followers who quit their jobs and sold all their possessions-- to spread the word on more than 5,000 billboards and 20 RVs plastered with the Judgment Day message.
When the Judgment Day he foresaw did not materialize, the preacher revised his prophecy, saying he had been off by five months. The preacher, who suffered a stroke three weeks after the May prediction failed, said the light dawned on him that instead of the biblical Rapture in which the faithful would be swept up to the heavens, the date had instead been a "spiritual" Judgment Day, which placed the entire world under Christ's judgment.
But after the cataclysmic event did not occur in October either, Camping acknowledged his apocalyptic prophecy had been wrong and posted a letter on his ministry's site telling his followers he had no evidence the world would end anytime soon, and wasn't interested in considering future dates.
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