The evangelical Christian broadcaster whose much-ballyhooed Judgment
Day prophecy went conspicuously unfulfilled has a simple explanation
for what went wrong -- he miscalculated.
Instead of the world physically coming to an end on May 21 with a great,
cataclysmic earthquake, as he had predicted, Harold Camping (89) said he now
believes his forecast is playing out "spiritually," with the
actual apocalypse set to occur five months later, on October 21.
Camping, who launched a doomsday countdown in which some followers spent their
life's savings in anticipation of being swept into heaven, issued his
correction during an appearance on his Open Forum radio show from Oakland,
California.
The headquarters of Camping's Family Radio network of 66 US stations had been
shuttered over the weekend with a sign on the door that read, "This
Office is Closed. Sorry we missed you!"
During a sometimes rambling, 90-minute discourse that included a
question-and-answer session with reporters, Camping said he felt bad that
Saturday had come and gone without the Rapture he had felt so certain would
take place.
Reflecting on scripture afterward, Camping said it "dawned" on him
that a "merciful and compassionate God" would spare humanity from "hell
on Earth for five months" by compressing the physical apocalypse into a
shorter time frame.
But he insisted that October 21 has always been the end-point of his own End
Times chronology, or at least, his latest chronology.
The tall, gaunt former civil engineer has been wrong before. More than two
decades ago, he publicly acknowledged a failed 1994 prophecy of Christ's
return to Earth.
To publicise his latest pronouncement, the Family Radio network posted over
2,000 billboards around the country declaring that Judgment Day was at hand,
and believers carried the message on placards in shopping malls and street
corners.