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To the surprise of only a few, the so-called “Rapture” scheduled to happen yesterday, didn’t.
May 21, 2011, according to loyal listeners of Family Radio, a Christian broadcasting network based in Oakland, California, will mark the Day of Rapture and the start of Judgment Day (which, they say, will last five months). Those who are saved will be taken up to heaven, and those who aren’t will endure unspeakable suffering. Dead bodies will be strewn about as earthquakes ravage the Earth, they say. And come October 21, they’ll tell you, the entire world will be kaput.
This marks the second time Harold Camping was wrong about this. (The first time he predicted the (contra-scriptural, heretical) Rapture was for September, 1994.)
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