Tuesday, February 15, 2011

The End of the World

Here is some big news: Namely that the "the end of the world" will occur on May 21, 2011. This sobering fact has been declared by Harold Camping recently and needs some sort of comment, wouldn't you think? Now, it will not be the intent of this site to disprove Mr. Camping, although I firmly believe him to be wrong. Rather, it will be my intent to plead for a little more sobriety before making such claims by various members of the body of Christ and further to demand a little more discipline when "exegeting" various texts from the Bible.

Mr. Camping uses the utterance of Gen. 7:4 to be symbolic of 7000 years as a prediction of the final judgement of mankind when the end of the age is upon us. The LORD speaks thus unto Noah: For after seven more days, I will send rain on the earth forty days and forty nights; and I will blot out from the face of the land every thing that I have made. The reasoning goes thus: Seven days of grace was given to Noah before the flood; one day is as a thousand years to God (Ps. 90; 2 Peter 3); the flood occurred in the year 4990 BC (? - Campings number), thus 7000 years after 4990 BC, God will again destroy the earth - May 21, 2011 is upon us!

Now, I have no problem believing that,at times, in Scripture one could speculate that one day might prophetically equal one year, or even one millennium; but to emphatically predict the end of the age and even to word it such, namely that it will be "the end of the World", is not justified. How much harm will be done to some Christians with fragile faith when hopes arise, or serious acts of response are exercised and the event does not take place? It is lazy exegesis, or even non exegesis, to use the passage in the Psalm, or the one in 2 Peter to use the day-equals- millennium as a formula to predict the very end of the age. Peter is screaming to his readers "stop mocking believers who think that the end of the age is here; God is patient - one day is as a thousand years and a thousand years is as one day. Don't mock; He will return and will deal with all rebellion. Be sobered and don't mock." The Psalmist would agree. This is not a formula.

Noah Hutchings has an excellent and succinct article in the Prophetic Observer (Jan. 2011). He concludes that Camping is as much as 2552 years off. He words it this way:

HOWEVER...the most recognized biblical chronologist, Ussher, states that Noah entered the Ark on Sunday, December 7, 2438 B.C. Scofield and a vast majority of other biblical chronologists agree within ten years of Bishop Ussher's date. IN OTHER WORDS, CAMPING IS 2,552 YEARS OFF. (His bold)

BTW, if Camping is correct, believe me, I will be with him when it happens. Let's just be a little more careful. Eschatology is not to be handled as a toy to extol the "brilliance" of Christian commentators.

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