The Doomsday clock is ticking away! If Harold Camping's prediction turns true, the rumblings of a gigantic earthquake will be felt in New Zealand in less than two hours from now! And then, the Armageddon will roll over to the other regions of the world and engulf them in the biggest catastrophe ever!
The good ones will be raptured, to be joined in celestial beatific bliss with Christ while the sinners of the world will be left to face extinction a few months from now. This is how the promised Christian rapture will unfold, according to Camping.
The media has treated the doomsday soothsayer with a mix of ridicule and scorn and dissected the end of the world prediction to shreds, showing how whimsical and fallacious a theory it is -- far from being the infallible theory which is guaranteed by Bible as Camping puts it.
However, the truth is that so many people across the world believe the doomsday is real! So many people are fretting about the arrival of the catastrophic quake. Millions of people are putting ear to the ground, to catch the first rumblings of the all-consuming quake.
The media has treated the doomsday soothsayer with a mix of ridicule and scorn and dissected the end of the world prediction to shreds, showing how whimsical and fallacious a theory it is -- far from being the infallible theory which is guaranteed by Bible as Camping puts it.
However, the truth is that so many people across the world believe the doomsday is real! So many people are fretting about the arrival of the catastrophic quake. Millions of people are putting ear to the ground, to catch the first rumblings of the all-consuming quake.
And then so many others are also counting what will be the last hours of their life, imagining up the rapture that will take to heaven.
The social network is abuzz with the end of the world debate. It reflects a microcosm of belief, disbelief, utter denial, scorn and mirth.
Here is a peek into how people react to the doomsday talk in the social sphere:
"It's Doomsday, Doomsday, all gonna die on Doomsday. Everybody's gettin' ready for the Judgment," tweeted TheTweetOfGod.
#iftheworldendsonsaturday am gonna keep my self busy, with the #Bible below my pillow asking #God for forgivness,.1hr 15 mins..till doomsday," tops87 Abayomi said.
Look at another one, from VanDerCubem Erick White: "It's time we saw a miracle come on it's time for something biblical and this is the end, THIS IS THE END OF THE WORLD!!!!! que rolota!!!"
And, how many people really believe their world is ending just minutes from now? If you go by a multitude of polls on the Internet, it's roughly three percent. And boy doesn’t three percent make for a big mass of people!
A live poll on the IB Times website shows 3.36 percent of voters are convinced that the world will end on May 21, 2011.
And another 9.8 percent say 'Maybe' when asked if the world will end. However, a whopping 78 percent say it will not.
A poll on Slashdot shows 3 percent of the people subscribe to Harold Camping's theory that the world will end on October 21, 2011.
The social network is abuzz with the end of the world debate. It reflects a microcosm of belief, disbelief, utter denial, scorn and mirth.
Here is a peek into how people react to the doomsday talk in the social sphere:
"It's Doomsday, Doomsday, all gonna die on Doomsday. Everybody's gettin' ready for the Judgment," tweeted TheTweetOfGod.
#iftheworldendsonsaturday am gonna keep my self busy, with the #Bible below my pillow asking #God for forgivness,.1hr 15 mins..till doomsday," tops87 Abayomi said.
Look at another one, from VanDerCubem Erick White: "It's time we saw a miracle come on it's time for something biblical and this is the end, THIS IS THE END OF THE WORLD!!!!! que rolota!!!"
And, how many people really believe their world is ending just minutes from now? If you go by a multitude of polls on the Internet, it's roughly three percent. And boy doesn’t three percent make for a big mass of people!
A live poll on the IB Times website shows 3.36 percent of voters are convinced that the world will end on May 21, 2011.
And another 9.8 percent say 'Maybe' when asked if the world will end. However, a whopping 78 percent say it will not.
A poll on Slashdot shows 3 percent of the people subscribe to Harold Camping's theory that the world will end on October 21, 2011.
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