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Countdown to Armageddon? Really? |
Fundamentalist
evangelical Harold Camping predicted the world's
end back in 1994. When it didn't come about, he said that he had left out some
important calculations from the Book of Jeremiah. The new date was set for some
time in 2011. As you can see, we’re still here.
Since at least the 1840s (and from my research, even as far back
as the 4th and 5th centuries), screamy ‘fire and brimstone’ evangelical types
have been predicting the end of the world by calculating various trails of
clues in both the Old and New Testaments. They have always gotten it wrong and
then made some kind of excuse that they had simply miscalculated, that further
checking revealed a still future date, but this time, it was on target.
And here we remain, intact, and still sinning. But wait, there's
more...
So, get this, people. No god is going to destroy the
world--ever. We might, but no god will. We might bring all life to an end on
old Mother Earth simply by being so greedy and stupid that we ruin the water, the
air, the land, and even the upper atmosphere with our pollution, our denuding
of the forests and grasslands, our killing off species after species, our
over-consumption.
Until one day, we wake up and we have nothing left to destroy.
That's all she wrote. We're history.
It doesn't have to be that way. Each of us has the capacity to
change, right where we are. Eat less, waste less, use less gas, electricity,
paper, plastic. Open the mind and the heart. Become aware of yourself as part
of the problem so that you can become part of the solution.
No god is going to destroy the earth. No god needs to. It seems
we're doing it for him. Stop doing that!
It's your call. Choose wisely. The world is counting on you.
End times be damned!
End times be damned!
P.S. By the way, for those of you who believe that the biblical
books of Daniel and Revelation predict the end of the world, know this: Daniel
had no idea that the world was not the center of everything or how vast the
universe is. His perspective from that little place in the desert was extremely
limited. And John the Revelator was angry at the Romans and even blamed St.
Paul for tossing the Jewish messianic ‘Christ’ movement to the Gentile ‘dogs.’
His diatribe was directed at them, not us. He died a very unhappy and
unsuccessful prophet, locked up on Patmos, hallucinating his way into the
history books.
Comments always welcome!
Comments always welcome!
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