The world will end tomorrow (Wednesday)
The group says on October 7, “that God will gather into heaven all the precious fruit of all those He has saved and complete the destruction of all those He did not save”.
Remember last week when people thought the world was going to end because of the supermoon lunar eclipse? On its website, it’s claimed October 7 this year would be the end of the world because it was when the world had reached “10,000 overall days of judgment” and also because it is the last day of the “Feast of Tabernacles”. And he says he’ll not do that again, not by water.
McCann added that the Bible says the world will be obliterated “with fire” on Wednesday. Camping used to host a Christian radio show in California. When that turned out to be incorrect, Camping revised his prediction to October 2011. He died in 2013, at age 93.
McCann believes the May, 2011 prediction was not altogether false but was the day God officially ceased selecting worshipers who will survive the impending apocalypse.
That qualified statement comes after his Philadelphia, Pennsylvania-based group spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on billboards and other mass media alerting the world that May 21, 2011 was Judgment Day.
The eBible fellowship thinks God devoted 1,600 days to the task of deciding which non-churchgoers to save, which brings us to October 7, 2015.
“There’s a strong likelihood that this will happen“, McCann told The Guardian, then acknowledged: “Which means there’s an unlikely possibility that it will not.”
The eBible Fellowship, which McCann was at pains to point out is not a church, is a predominantly online organization. The fellowship is not a religion, but an online organization that holds meetings once a month. However, their prediction is that the sun will expand to swallow up the Earth. Once when it was predicted to happen in 2012 according to the Mayan calendar and the second time, during this year’s September “blood moon”.
McCann is right, in a way, that the planet will be annihilated by fire. So, they’re not quite calling the May date a failure but the beginning of the end.