Popular Posts

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Speaking of all the end-time theories out there, I thought this was interesting.


Speaking of all the end-time theories out there, I thought this was interesting. 
Matthew 24:36-37
36"But of that day and hour no one knows, not even the angels of heaven, nor the Son, but the Father alone. 37"For the coming of the Son of Man will be just like the days of Noah.… Just think...ponder.. this says not even Jesus knew the time....only the Father...but the Father alone. Do you think if the Father would not tell Jesus or the angels... He would not tell me or you or anybody?

Goban’s 8th great-grandfather (My favorite singer) Johann Zimmerman who lived in the 1600’s wrote In his Muthmassliche Zeit-Bestimmung, Zimmermann set out his belief that the apocalypse would occur on the "edge of the wilderness" at the end of the autumn of 1694.
This prediction of the world coming to an end in 1694 reminds me of what St Ephrem who lived from 306 – 373 writes about the end times.. "To prevent his disciples from asking the time of his coming, Christ said: About that hour no one knows, neither the angels nor the Son. It is not for you to know times or moments. He has kept those things hidden so that we may keep watch, each of us thinking that he will come in our own day." Saint Ephrem, Deacon
Did anybody watch last night on TLC the show “Who Do You Think We Are?” A series about discovering your family genealogy.. Last night one of my favorite musicians; “Josh Goban” traveled to German to learn about his 8th great-grandfather Johann Zimmermann whose family came to America from Württemberg, Germany.
Johann Jacob Zimmerman, who was born in 1642 and Josh soon found out his 8th great-grandfather was a deacon of the Lutheran Church, highly educated in theology, music, the arts and astronomy. He had published several books and was mentioned in one of Isaac Newton’s books and Newton knew Johann personally. Johann had seen Haley’s Comet with the new and latest invention of the telescope. He loved to study the stars and the heavens.
Josh’s main quest was to find out why Johann would even want to leave German for Penn. He seemed to have a pretty good life in German. He also learned his wife and children did make it to Penn., and Johann died before he got to America and was buried in Rotterdam.
He soon discovers a brilliant man with eight years of university education, a music and singing teacher as well as an astronomer. His ancestor, Johann Zimmerman, wrote a dozen books on everything from astronomy to theology. After seeing Haley’s Comet, he predicted the destruction of the official state church, and wrote an unauthorized treatise that got him in serious trouble with the Lutheran church, where he was a deacon. Johann wrote in secret under a pseudonym and published this small book, which gave grave predictions about comets and the impending destruction of Europe! That put him in the crosshairs of the church authorities and forced the family to move.
Johann and his family then moved to Frankfurt – losing his job with the church. Zimmerman’s infant then died and Johann, being in debt, looked to move to America. An original letter dated 1693 declares that Johann Zimmermann died at the age of 50 on his journey to Pennsylvania and was buried at Rotterdam. So he never made it – but his family did. What an amazing story.
My web search finds…
Zimmerman was born in Vaihingen, Württemberg (now Germany) in 1644 (November 25, 1643 -- He lived in Nürtingen, and studied Theology at the University of Tübingen, where he was awarded the title Magisterhut in 1664. A famed astronomer and astrologer, Zimmerman produced one of the first Equidistant Conic Projection star charts of the northern hemisphere in 1692. While at University, he also was a singing instructor.
He took his first post as a Lutheran minister at Bietigheim (Baden) in 1671, but already was developing a reputation through his scientific and occult writings, publishing under the name Ambrosius Sehmann. In 1685, Zimmermann was removed from his post by Lutheran church leaders, in part for his Scriptura Sacra Copernizans, which defended the astrological theories of Nicolaus Copernicus. As a testimony to his importance as a scientific writer, the work was reprinted in Hamburg in 1707, this time under Zimmermann's own name.
Traveling to Frankfurt on Main, he became a follower of Jakob Böhme, a Pietist pastor and prominent critic of the established Lutheran church. Zimmermann made a living as a writer and teacher, and gradually developed a following in the city of Hamburg, creating elaborate theories predicting the end of the world. In his Muthmassliche Zeit-Bestimmung, Zimmermann set out his belief that the apocalypse would occur on the "edge of the wilderness" at the end of the autumn of 1694. His work centered on an elaborate textual and numerological interpretation of the biblical Book of Revelation, especially chapter XII. Zimmerman planned to lead his followers to North America to build a "Society of the Woman in the Wilderness" to greet the dawn of this new world. His group, termed Rosicrucians, were to number 40, and were to lead a largely solitary life practicing Astrology, Astronomy, Geomancy and a variety of arcane mathematical and magical forms of divination. Zimmermann began negotiations with Pennsylvania Governor William Penn to obtain land for his settlement.
Zimmerman died as the group of eleven families were preparing to travel from Rotterdam. His disciple Johannes Kelpius was elected to take Zimmermann's title of magister, leading "the Hamburg Group" (including Zimmermann's widow) to an area near Wissahickon Creek, Pennsylvania. Here they established a religious community which, while still famed in local legend, dissolved shortly after Kelpius' death in the early eighteenth century.
Zimmerman is mentioned (as Dr. Zimmerman) in Book 3 of Isaac Newton's Principia (on p. 505) as having observed the great comet of 1680 Haley's Comet. 
 Fall 1694 Drawing from theology and astrology, German prophet Johann Jacob Zimmerman determined that the world would end in the fall of 1694. Zimmerman gathered a group of pilgrims and made plans to go to America to welcome Jesus back to Earth. However, he died in February of that year, on the very day of departure. Johannes Kelpius took over leadership of the cult, which was known as Woman in the Wilderness, and they completed their journey to the New World. Fall came and went and, needless to say, the cultists were profoundly disappointed at having traveled all the way across the Atlantic just to be stood up by Jesus. (Cohen p.19-20)
From a commentary on the Diatessaron by Saint Ephrem, deacon
Keep watch; he is to come again
To prevent his disciples from asking the time of his coming, Christ said: About that hour no one knows, neither the angels nor the Son. It is not for you to know times or moments. He has kept those things hidden so that we may keep watch, each of us thinking that he will come in our own day. If he had revealed the time of his coming, his coming would have lost its savor: it would no longer be an object of yearning for the nations and the age in which it will be revealed. He promised that he would come but did not say when he would come, and so all generations and ages await him eagerly.
Though the Lord has established the signs of his coming, the time of their fulfillment has not been plainly revealed. These signs have come and gone with a multiplicity of change; more than that, they are still present. His final coming is like his first. As holy men and prophets waited for him, thinking that he would reveal himself in their own day, so today each of the faithful longs to welcome him in his own day, because Christ has not made plain the day of his coming.
He has not made it plain for this reason especially, that no one may think that he whose power and dominion rule all numbers and times is ruled by fate and time. He described the signs of his coming; how could what he has himself decided be hidden from him? Therefore, he used these words to increase respect for the signs of his coming, so that from that day forward all generations and ages might think that he would come again in their own day.
Keep watch; when the body is asleep nature takes control of us, and what is done is not done by our will but by force, by the impulse of nature. When deep listlessness takes possession of the soul, for example, faint-heartedness or melancholy, the enemy overpowers it and makes it do what it does not will. The force of nature, the enemy of the soul, is in control.
When the Lord commanded us to be vigilant, he meant vigilance in both parts of man: in the body, against the tendency to sleep; in the soul, against lethargy and timidity. As Scripture says: Wake up, you just, and I have risen, and am still with you; and again, Do not lose heart. Therefore, having this ministry, we do not lose heart.

Josh's story inspired me to search the web for how many folks through out history have announced and predicted the world was about to end. This is not a complete list, but very interesting. 

The ones that stood out to me I will list first: 
1656 Christopher Columbus In his Book of Prophecies (1501), Columbus predicted that the world would end during 1656. 
1658 Christopher Columbus claimed that the world was created in 5343 BCE, and would last 7000 years. Assuming no year zero, that means the end would come in 1658. 
1600 Martin Luther Predicted the end of the world would occur no later than 1600. 
William M. Branham This Christian minister predicted the Rapture would occur no later than 1977. 
Chuck Smith The founder of Calvary Chapel predicted the generation of 1948 would be the last generation, and that the world would end by 1981. Smith identified that he "could be wrong" but continued to say in the same sentence that his prediction was "a deep conviction in my heart, and all my plans are predicated upon that belief."
1982 Pat Robertson In late 1976 Robertson predicted that the end of the world would come in 1982.
1985 Lester Sumrall This minister predicted the end in this year, even writing a book about it entitled I Predict 1985. 
Jerry Falwell Falwell foresaw God pouring out his judgement on the world on Jan 1, 2001.
Tim LaHaye, Jerry B. Jenkins : These Christian authors stated the Y2K bug would trigger global economic chaos, which the Antichrist would use to rise to power. As the date approached however they changed their minds.
Isaac Newton: Newton predicted that Christ's Millennium would begin in the year 2000 in his book Observations upon the Prophecies of Daniel, and the Apocalypse of St. John.
Pat Robertson: In his 1990 book The New Millennium, Robertson suggests this date as the day of Earth's destruction, April 29, 2009... 
Mark Biltz in 2008 and John Hagee claim that four "blood moons" in April 2014 and Sept. 2015 may represent prophecies allegedly given in the Bible relating to the second coming of Jesus Christ. Well it did not happen in April 2014.... Will see what Sept brings.
And Will Christians be snookered by Shemitah?
Now, a new wave of end-times predictions for 2014 and 2015 involving blood moons on Jewish holy days and prophetically significant events on the Shemitah – the ancient biblical year of the Sabbath – are igniting even more interest in humanity’s ultimate fate.
All I can say is stay tune.. Only time will reveal the truths..


66–70 CE Simon bar Giora, Essenes The Essene sect of Jewish ascetics saw the Jewish revolt against the Romans in 66–70 as the final end-time battle. By the authority of Simon, coins were minted declaring the redemption of Zion. 
365 CE Hilary of Poitiers Announced that the end would happen that year. 
375–400 CE Martin of Tours Stated that the world would end before 400, writing, "There is no doubt that the Antichrist has already been born. Firmly established already in his early years, he will, after reaching maturity, achieve supreme power." 

500 CE Hippolytus of Rome, Sextus Julius Africanus, Irenaeus All three predicted Jesus would return in the year 500. One prediction was based on the dimensions of Noah's ark. 

793 Apr 6 Beatus of Liébana The Spanish monk prophesied the second coming of Christ and the end of the world on that day to a crowd of people. 
800 Sextus Julius Africanus Sextus Julius Africanus revised the date of Doomsday to 800. 

799–806 Gregory of Tours Calculated the End occurring between 799 and 806. 
848 Thiota Declared that the world would end during that year. 
992–995 Various Christians Good Friday coincided with the Feast of the Annunciation; this had long been believed to be the event that would bring forth the Antichrist, and thus the end-times, within 3 years. 

1033 Various Christians Following the failure of the January 1, 1000 prediction, some theorists proposed that the end would occur 1000 years after Jesus' death, instead of his birth. 

1186 John of Toledo Predicted the end of the world during 1186, based on the alignment of many planets. 

1260 Joachim of Fiore The Italian mystic determined that the Millennium would begin between 1200 and 1260. 
 

1335 Joachimites The followers of Joachim of Fiore rescheduled the End to 1290 and then 1335 when his 1260 prophecy failed. 

1346–1351 Various Europeans The black plague spreading across Europe was interpreted by many as the sign of the end of times. 

1370 Jean de Roquetaillade The Antichrist was to come in 1366 and the Millennium would begin either in 1368 or 1370. 

1378 Arnaldus de Villa Nova This Joachite wrote that the Antichrist was to come in this year. 

1504 Sandro Botticelli Believed he was living during the Tribulation, and that the Millennium would begin in three and a half years from 1500. 
1524 Feb 1 London astrologers A group of astrologers in London predicted the world would end by a flood starting in London based on calculations made the previous June. 20,000 Londoners left their homes and headed for higher ground in anticipation. 

1524 Feb 20 Johannes Stöffler A planetary alignment in Pisces was seen by this astrologer as a sign of the Millennium. 

1524–1526 Thomas Müntzer 1525 would mark the beginning of the Millennium, according to this Anabaptist. His followers were killed by cannon fire in an uneven battle with government troops. He died under torture and was beheaded. 
1528 May 27 Hans Hut Predicted the end would occur on this day. 
1528 Johannes Stöffler Revised date from Stöffler after his 1524 prediction failed to come true. 

1533 Oct 19 Michael Stifel This mathematician calculated that the Judgement Day would begin at 8:00am on this day. 

1533 Melchior Hoffman This Anabaptist prophet predicted Christ's Second Coming to take place this year in Strasbourg. He claimed that 144,000 people would be saved, while the rest of the world would be consumed by fire. 
1534 Apr 5 Jan Matthys Predicted that the Apocalypse would take place on this day and only the city of Münster would be spared. 

1555 Pierre d'Ailly Around the year 1400, this French theologian wrote that 6845 years of human history had already passed, and the end of the world would be in the 7000th year. 

1585 Michael Servetus In his book The Restoration of Christianity, the Spanish born reformer claimed that the Devil's reign in this world began in 325 AD, at the Council of Nicea, and will last for 1260 years, thus ending in 1585. 
1588 Regiomontanus Predicted the end of the world during this year. 
1600 Martin Luther Predicted the end of the world would occur no later than 

1624 Feb 1 London astrologers The same astrologers who predicted the deluge of February 1, 1524 recalculated the date to February 1, 1624 after their first prophecy failed. 

1648 Sabbatai Zevi Using the kabbalah this rabbi from Smyrna, Turkey, figured that the Messiah would come in this year. 

1654 Helisaeus Roeslin This physician made a prediction that the world would end this year based on a nova that occurred in 1572. 

1656 Christopher Columbus In his Book of Prophecies (1501), Columbus predicted that the world would end during 1656. 

1657 Fifth Monarchists This group of radical Christians predicted the final apocalyptic battle and the destruction of the Antichrist were to take place between 1655 and 1657. 

1658 Christopher Columbus claimed that the world was created in 5343 BCE, and would last 7000 years. Assuming no year zero, that means the end would come in 1658. 

1660 Joseph Mede Mede claimed that the Antichrist appeared in 456, and the end would come in 1660. 

1666 Sabbatai Zevi Following his failed prediction of 1648, Zevi recalculated the end of the earth in 1666. 

Fifth Monarchists The presence of 666 in the date, the death of 100,000 Londoners to bubonic plague, and the Great Fire of London led to superstitious fears of the end of the world from some Christians. 

1673 William Aspinwall This Fifth Monarchist claimed the Millennium would begin by this year. 

1688 John Napier This mathematician calculated the end of the world would be this year based on calculations from the Book of Revelation. 
1689 Pierre Jurieu This prophet predicted that Judgement Day would occur this year. 

1694 John Mason This Anglican priest predicted the Millennium would begin by this year. 
Johann Heinrich Alsted Predicted the Millennium would begin by this year. 
Johann Jacob Zimmermann Believed that Jesus would return and the world would end this year. 

1697 Cotton Mather This Puritan minister predicted the world would end this year. After the prediction failed, he revised the date of the End two more times. 
1700 John Napier After his 1688 prediction failed to come true, Napier revised his end of the world prediction to this year. 

Henry Archer In his 1642 work, The Personall Reigne of Christ Upon Earth, Archer predicted the second coming of Jesus would occur in approximately this year.
1708 Camisards Camisard prophets predicted the end of the world would occur in either 1705, 1706 or 1708. 

1716 Cotton Mather Revised prediction from Mather after his 1697 prediction failed to come true. 

1719 Apr 5 Jacob Bernoulli This mathematician predicted a comet would destroy the earth on this day. 

1700–1734 Nicholas of Cusa This Cardinal predicted the end would occur between 1700 and 1734. 

1736 Oct 16 William Whiston Whiston predicted a comet colliding with the earth this year. 

1736 Cotton Mather Mather's third and final prediction for the end of the world. 

1757 Emanuel Swedenborg Swedenborg claimed that the Last Judgement occurred in the spiritual world this year. 

1780 May 19 Connecticut General Assembly members, New Englanders The sky turning dark during the day was interpreted as a sign of the end times. The primary cause of the event is believed to have been a combination of smoke from forest fires, a thick fog, and cloud cover. 

1789 Pierre d'Ailly 1789 would bring the coming of the Antichrist, according to this 14th-century Cardinal. 

1794 Shakers Predicted the world would end in both 1792 and 1794. 
1795 Nov 19 Nathaniel Brassey Halhed While campaigning for Richard Brothers' release, Halhead proclaimed that the world would end on this day. 
1793–1795 Richard Brothers This retired sailor stated the Millennium would begin between 1793 and 1795. He was eventually committed to an insane asylum. 
1805 Christopher Love This presbyterian minister predicted the destruction of the world by earthquake in 1805, followed by an age of everlasting peace when God will be known by all. 

1806 Mary Bateman In Leeds, England in 1806 a hen began laying eggs on which the phrase "Christ is coming" was written. Eventually it was discovered to be a hoax. The owner, Mary Bateman, had written on the eggs in a corrosive ink so as to etch the eggs, and reinserted the eggs back into the hen's oviduct. 
1814 Dec 25 Joanna Southcott This 64-year-old self-described prophet claimed she was pregnant with the Christ child, and that he would be born on Christmas Day, 1814. She died on the day of her prediction, and an autopsy proved she was not pregnant. 

1836 John Wesley Wesley, the founder of the Methodist Church, foresaw the Millennium beginning this year. He wrote that Revelation 12:14 referred to the years 1058–1836, "when Christ should come". 
1843 Apr 28

1843 Dec 31 Millerites Although it was not officially endorsed by their leadership, many Millerites expected the Second Coming to occur on April 28 or at the end of 

1843 Harriet Livermore The first of two years this preacher predicted the world would end. 

1844 Mar 21 William Miller Miller predicted Christ would return on this day. 
1844 Oct 22 Millerites After Christ did not return on March 21, 1844, the Millerites then revised William Miller's prediction to October 22, 1844, claiming to have miscalculated Scripture. The realization that the predictions were incorrect resulted in the Great Disappointment. 

1847 Aug 7 George Rapp Rapp, the founder of the Harmony Society, preached that Jesus would return in his lifetime, even as he lay dying on August 7, 1847. 
1847 Harriet Livermore The second prediction of the end of the world from this preacher. 

1853–1856 Various Many people[who?] thought the Crimean War was the Battle of Armageddon. 

1862 John Cumming This Scottish clergyman stated it was 6000 years since Creation in 1862, and that the world would end. 

1863 John Wroe The founder of the Christian Israelite Church calculated that the Millennium would begin this year. 

1873 Jonas Wendell In 1870, Wendell published his views in the booklet entitled The Present Truth, or Meat in Due Season concluding that the Second Advent was sure to occur in 1873. 

1874 Charles Taze Russell Predicted the return of Jesus to occur in 1874, and after this date reinterpreted the prediction to say that Jesus had indeed returned in invisible form. 

1881 Mother Shipton (attrib.) This 15th-century prophet was quoted as saying "The world to an end shall come, In eighteen hundred and eighty one" in a book published in 1862. In 1873 it was revealed to be a forgery; however, this did not stop some people from expecting the end. 

1890 Wovoka The founder of the Ghost Dance movement predicted in 1889 that the Millennium would occur in 1890. 
1901 Catholic Apostolic Church This church, founded in 1831, claimed that Jesus would return by the time the last of its 12 founding members died. The last member died in 1901. 

1910 Camille Flammarion He predicted that the 1910 appearance of Halley's Comet "would impregnate that atmosphere and possibly snuff out all life on the planet", but not the planet itself. "Comet pills" were sold to protect against toxic gases. The comet indicated the Second Coming to many. 
1892–1911 Charles Piazzi Smyth This pyramidologist concluded from his research on the dimensions of the Great Pyramid of Giza that the Second Coming would occur between 1892 and 1911. 

1914 Charles Taze Russell "...the battle of the great day of God Almighty The date of the close of that "battle" is definitely marked in Scripture as October 1914. It is already in progress, its beginning dating from October, 1874." 
1915 John Chilembwe This Baptist educator and leader of a rebellion in Nyasaland predicted the Millennium would begin this year. 
1918 International Bible Students Association Christendom shall be cut off and glorification of the Little Flock (The Church) in the Spring of 1918 A. D. 
1920 International Bible Students Association In 1918, Christendom would go down as a system to oblivion and be succeeded by revolutionary governments. God would "destroy the churches wholesale and the church members by the millions." Church members would "perish by the sword of war, revolution and anarchy." The dead would lie unburied. In 1920 all earthly governments would disappear, with worldwide anarchy prevailing.
1925 Feb 13 Margaret Rowen According to this Seventh-day Adventist the angel Gabriel appeared before her in a vision and told her that the world would end at midnight on this date. 

1935 Sep Wilbur Glenn Voliva This evangelist announced that 
"the world is going to go 'puff' and disappear" in September 1935. 

1936 Herbert W. Armstrong The founder of the Worldwide Church of God told members of his church that the Rapture was to take place in 1936, and that only they would saved. After the prophecy failed, he changed the date three more times.

1941 Jehovah's Witnesses A prediction of the end from the Jehovah's Witnesses, a group which branched from the Bible Student movement. 
1943 Herbert W. Armstrong The first of three revised dates from Armstrong after his 1936 prediction failed to come true. 

1947 John Ballou Newbrough The author of Oahspe: A New Bible foresaw the destruction of all nations and the beginning of post-apocalyptic anarchy in this year. 

1954 Dec 21 Dorothy Martin The world was to be destroyed by terrible flooding on this date, claimed this leader of a UFO cult called Brotherhood of the Seven Rays. The fallout of the group after the prediction failed was the basis for the 1956 book When Prophecy Fails. 

1959 Apr 22 Florence Houteff The 2nd Prophet of the Branch Davidians predicted the apocalypse foretold in the Book of Revelation would proceed on this date. The failure of the prophecy led to the split of the sect into several subsects, the most prominent led by Benjamin and Lois Roden. 

1962 Feb 4 Jeane Dixon, various Indian astrologers Jeane Dixon predicted a planetary alignment on this day was to bring destruction to the world. Mass prayer meetings were reported from India. 

1967 Aug 20 George Van Tassel This day would mark the beginning of the third woe of the Apocalypse, during which the southeastern US would be destroyed by a Soviet nuclear attack, according to this UFO prophet, who claimed to have channeled an alien named Ashtar. 

1967 Jim Jones The founder of the Peoples Temple stated he had visions that a nuclear holocaust was to take place in 1967. 

1969 Aug 9 George Williams The founder of the Church of the Firstborn predicted the Second Coming of Christ would occur on this day. 

1969 Charles Manson Manson predicted that an apocalyptic race war would occur in 1969 and ordered the Tate-LaBianca murders in an attempt to bring it about. Manson based his prediction on his interpretation of The Beatles self-titled album. 

1972 Herbert W. Armstrong The second of three revised dates from Armstrong after his 1936 and 1943 predictions failed to come true. 
1973 Jan 11–21 David Berg Berg, the leader of Children of God, predicted that there would be a colossal doomsday event heralded by Comet Kohoutek. 
1975 Herbert W. Armstrong Armstrong's fourth and final false prediction. 
Jehovah's Witnesses From 1966 on, Jehovah's Witnesses published articles which stated that the fall of 1975 would be 6000 years since man's creation, and suggest than Armageddon could be finished by then. More details. 
1977 John Wroe The founder of the Christian Israelite Church predicted this year for Armageddon to occur. 

William M. Branham This Christian minister predicted the Rapture would occur no later than 1977. 

1980 Leland Jensen In 1978 Jensen predicted that there would be a nuclear disaster in 1980, followed by two decades of conflict, culminating in God's Kingdom being established on earth. 

1981 Chuck Smith The founder of Calvary Chapel predicted the generation of 1948 would be the last generation, and that the world would end by 1981. Smith identified that he "could be wrong" but continued to say in the same sentence that his prediction was "a deep conviction in my heart, and all my plans are predicated upon that belief." 

1982 Apr–Jun Tara Centers Full-page ads in many newspapers April 24–25, 1982, stated that "The Christ is Now Here!" and that he would make himself known "within the next two months". 

1982 Mar 10 John Gribbin, Stephen Plagemann Stated in their 1974 book The Jupiter Effect that combined gravitational forces of aligned planets would create a number of catastrophes, including a great earthquake on the San Andreas Fault. 
1982 Jun 21 Benjamin Creme Creme took out an ad in the Los Angeles stating the Second Coming would occur in June 1982 with the Maitreya announcing it on worldwide television. 

1982 Pat Robertson In late 1976 Robertson predicted that the end of the world would come in 1982. 

1985 Lester Sumrall This minister predicted the end in this year, even writing a book about it entitled I Predict 1985. 

1987 Apr 29 Leland Jensen Jensen predicted that Halley's Comet would be pulled into Earth's orbit on April 29, 1987, causing widespread destruction. 
1987 Aug 17 José Argüelles Argüelles claimed that Armageddon would take place unless 144,000 people gathered in certain places in the world in order to "resonate in harmony" on this day. 1988 Sep 13

1988 Oct 3 Edgar C. Whisenant Whisenant predicted in his book 88 Reasons Why the Rapture Could Be in 1988 that the Rapture of the Christian Church would occur between 11 and 13 September 1988. After his September predictions failed to come true, Whisenant revised his prediction date to October 3. 
1989 Sep 30 Edgar C. Whisenant After all his 1988 predictions failed to come true, Whisenant revised his prediction date to this day. 

1990 Apr 23 Elizabeth Clare Prophet Prophet predicted a nuclear war would start on this day, with the world ending 12 years later, leading her followers to stockpile a shelter with supplies and weapons. Later, after Prophet's prediction did not come to pass, she was diagnosed with epilepsy and Alzheimer's disease.

 1991 Louis Farrakhan The leader of the Nation of Islam declared that the Gulf War would be the "War of Armageddon which is the final war." 
1992 Sep 28 Rollen Stewart This born-again Christian predicted the Rapture would take place on this d
ay. 

1992 Oct 28 Lee Jang Rim
Lee, the leader of the Dami Mission church, predicted the Rapture would occur on this day. 

1993 David Berg Berg predicted the tribulation would start in 1989 and that the Second Coming would take place in 1993. 

1994 May 2 Neal Chase This Bahá'í sect leader predicted that New York would be destroyed by a nuclear bomb on March 23, 1994, and the Battle of Armageddon would take place 40 days later. 
1994 Sep 6
1994 Sep 29

1994 Oct 2 Harold Camping Camping predicted the Rapture would occur on September 6, 1994. When it failed to occur he revised the date to September 29 and then to October 2. 

1995 Mar 31 Harold Camping Camping's fourth predicted date for the end. This would be Camping's last prediction until 2011. 

1996 Dec 17 Sheldan Nidle California psychic Sheldan Nidle predicted that the world would end on this date, with the arrival of 16 million space ships and a host of angels. 

1997 Mar 26 Marshall Applewhite Applewhite, leader of the Heaven's Gate cult, claimed that a spacecraft was trailing the Comet Hale-Bopp and argued that suicide was "the only way to evacuate this Earth" so that the cult members' souls could board the supposed craft and be taken to another "level of existence above human". Applewhite and 38 of his followers committed mass suicide.

1997 Oct 23 James Ussher This 17th-century Irish Archbishop predicted this date to be 6000 years since Creation, and therefore the end of the world.

1998 Mar 31 Chen Tao
Hon-Ming Chen, leader of the Taiwanese cult God's Salvation Church, or Chen Tao – "The True Way" – claimed that God would come to Earth in a flying saucer at 10:00 am on this date. Moreover, God would have the same physical appearance as Chen himself. Chen chose to base his cult in Garland, Texas, because he thought it sounded like "God's Land." On March 25, God was to appear on Channel 18 on every TV set in the US. 

1999 Jul Nostradamus A prediction attributed to Nostradamus stating the "King of Terror" would come from the sky in "1999 and seven months" led to fears of the end. 

1999 Aug 18 The Amazing Criswell The predicted date of the end of the world, according to this psychic well known for false predictions. 
1999 Sep 11 Philip Berg Berg, dean of the worldwide Kabbalah Centre, stated that on this date "a ball of fire will descend, destroying almost all of mankind, all vegetation, all forms of life." 

1999 Charles Berlitz This linguist predicted the end would occur in this year. He did not predict how it would occur, stating it may involve nuclear devastation, asteroid impact, pole shift or other earth changes. 

Hon-Ming Chen's cult God's Salvation Church, now relocated to upstate New York, preached that a nuclear holocaust would destroy Europe and Asia sometime between October 1 and December 31, 1999. 

James Gordon Lindsay This preacher predicted the tribulation would begin before the year 2000. 

Timothy Dwight IV This President of Yale University foresaw Christ's Millennium starting by 2000. 

Nazim Al-Haqqani Predicted that the Last Judgment would occur before the year 2000. 

2000 Jan 1 Various Predictions of a Y2K computer bug were to crash many computers and would malfunction causing major catastrophes worldwide and that society would cease to function. Year 2000 problem
Credonia Mwerinde, Joseph Kibweteere An estimated 778 followers of this Ugandan religious movement perished in a devastating fire and a series of poisonings and killings that were either a group suicide or an orchestrated mass murder by group leaders after their predictions of the apocalypse failed to come about. 

Jerry Falwell Falwell foresaw God pouring out his judgement on the world on this day. 

Tim LaHaye, Jerry B. Jenkins These Christian authors stated the Y2K bug would trigger global economic chaos, which the Antichrist would use to rise to power. As the date approached however they changed their minds. 
2000, April 6 James Harmston The leader of the True and Living Church of Jesus Christ of Saints of the Last Days predicted the Second Coming of Christ would occur on this day. 

2000 May 5 Nuwaubian Nation This movement claimed that the planetary lineup would cause a "star holocaust," pulling the planets toward the sun on this day. 

2000 Peter Olivi This 13th-century theologian wrote that the Antichrist would come to power between 1300 and 1340, and the Last Judgement would take place around 2000. 

Isaac Newton Newton predicted that Christ's Millennium would begin in the year 2000 in his book Observations upon the Prophecies of Daniel, and the Apocalypse of St. John. 

Ruth Montgomery This self-described Christian psychic predicted the Earth's axis would shift and the Antichrist would reveal himself in this year. 
Edgar Cayce This psychic predicted the Second Coming would occur this year.

Sun Myung Moon The founder of the Unification Church predicted the Kingdom of Heaven would be established in this year. 
Ed Dobson This pastor predicted the end would occur in his book The End: Why Jesus Could Return by A.D. 2000. 
Lester Sumrall This minister predicted the end in his book I Predict 2000. 
Jonathan Edwards This 18th-century preacher predicted that Christ's thousand-year reign would begin in this year. 
2001 Tynnetta Muhammad This columnist for the Nation of Islam predicted the end would occur in this year. 
2002 Various Yoruba Yoruba priests predicted dramatic tragedy and crisis in 2002, including coups, war, disease, and flooding. 
2003 May Nancy Lieder Lieder originally predicted the date for the Nibiru collision as May 2003. According to her website, aliens in the Zeta Reticuli star system told her through messages via a brain implant of a planet which would enter our solar system and cause a pole shift on earth that would destroy most of humanity. 
2003 Nov 29 Aum Shinrikyo This Japanese cult predicted the world would be destroyed by a nuclear war between October 30 and November 29, 2003.
2006 Sep 12 House of Yahweh Yisrayl Hawkins, Pastor and Overseer, The House of Yahwah, Abilene, Texas in the Feb. 2006 newsletter predicted the start of nuclear war on September 12, 2006. 

2007 Apr 29 Pat Robertson In his 1990 book The New Mill
ennium, Robertson suggests this date as the day of Earth's destruction. 

2010 Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn This order predicted the world would end in this year. 

2011 May 21 Harold Camping Camping predicted that the Rapture and devastating earthquakes would occur on May 21, 2011 with God taking approximately 3% of the world's population into Heaven, and that the end of the world would occur five months later on October 21. 2011 end times prediction

2011 Sep 29 Ronald Weinland Ronald Weinland stated Jesus Christ would return on this day. He prophesied nuclear explosions in U.S. port cities by July 2008 as the blowing of the Second Trumpet of Revelation. After his prophecy failed to come true he changed the date for the return of Jesus Christ to May 27, 2012. 
2011 Oct 21 Harold Camping When his original date failed to come about, Camping revised his prediction and said that on May 21, a "Spiritual Judgment" took place, and that both the physical Rapture and the end of the world would occur on October 21, 2011. 2011 end times prediction

2011 Aug–Oct Various There were fears amongst the public that Comet Elenin travelling almost directly between Earth and the Sun would cause disturbances to the Earth's crust, causing massive earthquakes and tidal waves. Others predicted that Elenin would collide with Earth on October 16. Scientists tried to calm fears by stating that none of these events were possible. 

2012 May 27 Ronald Weinland Ronald Weinland stated Jesus Christ would return and the world would end on this day. 

2012 Jun 30 José Luis de Jesús José Luis de Jesús predicted that the world's governments and economies would fail on this day, and that he and his followers would undergo a transformation that would allow them to fly and walk through walls. 

2012 Dec 21 Various The so-called Mayan apocalypse at the end of the 13th b'ak'tun. The Earth would be destroyed by an asteroid, Nibiru, or some other interplanetary object; an alien invasion; or a supernova. Mayanist scholars stated that no extant classic Maya accounts forecast impending doom, and that the idea that the Long Count calendar ends in 2012 misrepresented Maya history and culture.[86][87][88] Scientists from NASA, along with expert archeologists, stated that none of those events were possible. 2012 phenomenon

2013 Aug 23 Grigori Rasputin Rasputin prophesied a storm where fire would eat all life on land and Jesus Christ would come back to Earth to comfort those in distress.

The following list is the future... We will have to wait and see if they are correct.
2014 Apr - 2015 Sep John Hagee and Mark Biltz Mark Biltz in 2008 and John Hagee claim that four "blood moons" in 2014 and 2015 may represent prophecies allegedly given in the Bible relating to the second coming of Jesus Christ. 

2020 Jeane Dixon Dixon claimed that Armageddon would take place in 2020 and Jesus would return to defeat the unholy Trinity of the Antichrist, Satan and the False prophet between 2020 and 2037. Dixon previously predicted the world would end on February 4, 1962. 

2021 F. Kenton Beshore Beshore bases his prediction on the prior suggestion that Jesus would return in 1988, i.e., within one Biblical generation (40 years) of the founding of Israel in 1948. Beshore argues that the prediction was correct, but that the definition of a Biblical generation was incorrect and was actually 70–80 years, placing the Second Coming of Jesus between 2018 and 2028 and the Rapture by 2021 at the latest. 

2026 Messiah Foundation International Members propagate that the world is to end in 2026, when a comet would collide with Earth in accordance with Riaz Ahmed Gohar Shahi's predictions in The Religion of God. 
2120 Adnan Oktar According to abjad interpretation of a hadith, this Sunni Muslim creationist claims that the Last Day will come about the year 2120. 
2129 Said Nursî According to abjad interpretation of a hadith, this Sunni Muslim theologian who wrote the Risale-i Nur Collection, which expected the end in 2129.
2239 Talmud, Orthodox Judaism According to an opinion on the Talmud in mainstream Orthodox Judaism, the Messiah should come within 6000 years from the creation of Adam, and the world could possibly be destroyed 1000 years later. This would put the beginning of the period of desolation in the year 2239 CE and the end of the period of desolation in the year 3239 CE Year 6000

2280 Rashad Khalifa According to Rashad Khalifa's research on the Quran Code, the world will end in this year. 

500,000,000 James Kasting According to this scientist the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will drop dramatically, making the Earth uninhabitable. 
5,000,000,000 Various scientists The end of our Sun's current phase of development, after which it will swell into a red giant, either swallowing the Earth or at least completely scorching it. It is widely accepted by the scientific community that the earth will be destroyed around this time. However, as the Sun grows gradually hotter (over millions of years), the Earth may become too hot for life in only a billion years from now. [

10100 Various scientists The heat death of the universe is a suggested ultimate fate of the universe, in which the universe has diminished to a state of no thermodynamic free energy and therefore can no longer sustain motion or life.

Don't get me wrong in posting this.... I believe the Lord is coming back for the last chapter....and I would  for Him to come soon.. But, our generation is no different than every generation for 2,000 years... Every generation has thought our Lord's coming was near.. And the reality is, it is near for each one of us.. We're all just one breath away... If your blessed enough to live to be a 100.. that's really not that long compared to eternity. We're all closer than we think...  Are you ready?