mental floss
 
 
_10 Other Doomsday Predictions That Were Not  Correct_ 
(http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/157483)  
by _Stacy  Conradt_ 
(http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/author/internstacy/)  - December 21, 
2012 -




We survived! Add it to the list of times the apocalypse was wrongly  
prophesized. 
1. 1284. When the Pope decrees something, people tend to  listen. And they 
did, in 1213, when Pope Innocent III wrote that “the end of  this beast is 
approaching, whose number, according to the Revelation of Saint  John, will 
end in 666 years, of which already nearly 600 have  passed.”

2. February 20, 1524. German scholar Johannes  Stöffler was better at math 
and astronomy than he was at predicting the  apocalypse. His calculations 
concluded that Noah had the right idea when he  built that ark, because a 
flood of epic proportions was going to engulf Earth on  February 20, 1524. 
People panicked when a light rain did begin to fall  on that day, but it 
amounted 
to nothing but puddles.

3. Between  March 21, 1843, and March 21, 1844. In 1822, Baptist preacher 
William  Miller vaguely stated that he believed the “second coming of Jesus 
Christ is  near, even at the door, even within twenty-one years – on or 
before 1843,” based  on his interpretations of the book of Daniel. As he shared 
his views, he  developed a rather large group of followers, cleverly dubbed “
Millerites.”  Though reluctant, Miller eventually set a more precise set of 
dates at the  urging of his followers: namely, the 365 days between March 
21, 1843, and March  21, 1844. 
When the last date came and went, Miller wrote to a friend, “The time, as I 
 have calculated it, is now filled up; and I expect every moment to see the 
 Savior descend from heaven. I have now nothing to look for but this 
glorious  hope.” That’s when he recalculated. 
4. April 18, 1844. Miller based  this one on a different Jewish calendar, 
saying he had miscalculated a bit.  Guess what? The world didn’t end. Though 
Miller’s followers were becoming a tad  bit skeptical, he sustained them for 
a few more months by stating that the  rapture had started – they were just 
experiencing a period of time  called “tarrying,” which was kind of like 
sitting in the waiting room before you  go in to see the doctor. Finally, 
Miller analyzed his calculations one more  time, coming up with… 
5. October 22, 1844. And that’s when the vast majority of  Miller’s 
followers abandoned him, experiencing “the Great Disappointment.”  People were 
so 
angry and disappointed that Millerite churches were burned to the  ground, 
some followers were tarred and feathered, and one group was attacked by  a 
mob wielding knives and clubs. 
6. 1910, with the appearance of Halley’s Comet. French  astronomer Camille 
Flammarion predicted that a seven-tailed comet was coming to  Earth, and gas 
from the comet’s tail would “impregnate” the Earth’s atmosphere,  setting 
it and all of its inhabitants ablaze in a fiery explosion. 
7. 1981 (-ish). Back in 1978, pastor Chuck Smith determined  that “the 
generation of 1948 is the last generation,” but also admitted that he  “could 
be wrong.” Turns out he was. 
8. March 10, 1982. That was the day the Jupiter Effect was  going to happen 
– when major planets would align on one side of the sun, causing  nature to 
go nuts. A massive earthquake at the San Andreas fault was going to  
totally obliterate L.A. When the date came and went with nothing but high tides 
 
being a teeny bit higher than usual, the man who generated all of the hype, 
Dr.  John Gribbin, published a book called The Jupiter Effect Reconsidered.  
By 1999, Gribbin was renouncing his theory entirely, saying “I’m sorry I 
ever  had anything to do with it.”

9. September 11, 12 or 13,  1988. Edgar Whisenant, a former NASA engineer, 
was so sure about his  calculated date that he wrote a book called 88 
Reasons Why the Rapture Will  be in 1988 and boldly stated, “Only if the Bible 
is 
in error am I wrong.”  When he was, in fact, wrong, he published The final 
shout: Rapture Report  1989, followed by the less-certain 23 reasons why a 
pre-tribulation  rapture looks like it will occur on Rosh-Hashanah 1993 and 
And now the  earth’s destruction by fire, nuclear bomb fire. 
10. October 28, 1992. A Korean group known as Mission for  the Coming Days 
was so adamant in their belief that the world would end just  before 
Halloween in 1992 that they spent money to warn people in the U.S. via  
billboards, 
posters and other advertising. 
This story first appeared last year, when the president of Family Radio  
was touting May 2011 as the end of the  world.

-- 
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