While the focus has clearly been on 'Doomsday' preacher Harold Camping and his predictions of a rapture and the end of the world, reports have also given a tangential glimpse at his wife.
In less than 90 days, the debt crisis in Europe drove gold up more than 17.5% in 2010. If gold were to repeat the same pattern we saw last year, we could tack on 17%+ from today’s prices, putting the metal at over $1780 per ounce.
Harold Camping effectively pushed back the Rapture and End of the World to October 21, 2011 on Monday, saying a May 21 Doomsday prediction took place spiritually on Saturday.
NASA's satellites are at work again, getting images of the Grímsvötn volcano in Iceland from space.
Harold Camping apologized for being wrong about the type of judgment God would bring on the earth on May 21, and set a new date of October 21 as the time when the rapture would take place together with the end of the world.
Harold Camping admitted one mistake on his Family Radio program: he got the nature of the judgment wrong.
The Doomsday prophet Harold Camping, who is the head of the Oakland, Calif. Based Family Radio, is not quite ready to admit his mistake or apologize to the people whose lives have been affected by his prediction, although his prediction on Rapture and earthquakes was proven to be a complete fraud on May 21, 2011.
Harold Camping, who predicted that Judgment Day would take place on May 21st, will speak about his failed Rapture prediction on Monday on his Open Forum program, which airs at 5:30 p.m. PST.
Followers of Harold Camping, who predicted May 21, 2011 as the Doomsday, quit their jobs, sold their houses and donated all their money for spreading Doomsday news around the world. But why didn't Camping do the same?
Here are some reactions from celebrities responding to Doomsday.
Harold Camping, Family Radio president and Doomsday prophet, will make a public announcement today on his failed May 21, 2011 prediction.
Harold Camping who predicted that on May 21, 2011, about 200 million people will Rapture and those left behind will die when the world gets completely destroyed on October 21, 2011, has told International Business Times (IBTimes) that “(He has) got to live with it (the fact that his prediction has failed)”.
Thousands of crestfallen followers are waiting for the first public statement by failed Doomsday prophet Harold Camping, who wrongly predicted that the world will come to an end on May 21, 2011.
Family Radio president Harold Camping, whose May 21, 2011 Doomsday prediction failed, has told International Business Times (IBTimes) on Sunday , May 22, 2011 that he is as shocked as anybody else that his prediction has failed and needed some time to think and recover before giving a public statement.
False Doomsday prophet Harold Camping has told the International Business Times (IBTimes) that he would be making a public statement on or by tomorrow night in a “public forum” explaining why he had predicted May 21, 2011 as the Judgment Day and why it had failed.
Members of churches near Oakland, Calif. based Family Radio, are pouring out in droves, offering comfort and spiritual support to the dejected followers of false Doomsday prophet Harold Camping, who has predicted that the World will end on May 21, 2011.
With every second ticking by, the chances of Family Radio President Harold Camping being denounced as a false prophet are becoming stronger and his followers are visibly devastated and their faith shaken.
In a few hours May 21, 2011 6 p.m., the appointed time for Doomsday, will have passed, irrespective of whichever time zone we are in, thereby proving that the prediction made by Harold Camping is false. No wonder Camping has gone into hiding and it is improbable that he will be showing himself to the public anytime soon without a good excuse.
Self-proclaimed Doomsday prophet Harold Camping is nothing less than a charlatan, a fraud who has given a bad name to Christianity, according to Christian leaders.
The president of Family Radio Harold Camping's Doomsday predication failed and didn't happen. Many people are openly mocking it now.
Family Radio president Harold Camping’s May 21, 2011 Doomsday prediction is on track to fail but his followers should not panic or do anything drastic, anti-cult organization Cultwatch has advised.
Self-proclaimed Doomsday prophet Harold Camping who heads the Family Radio in Oakland, CA, claims that about 200 million people will Rapture on May 21, 2011 at 6 p.m. (PST), and those who remain behind will witness the complete destruction of the world by October 21, 2011.