Breaking News - World
to End in 2012!
By
Thomas Petruzzilli
Much has been written and spoken about the
year 2012 and, as that year approaches, much more
will be. Modern day prophets have predicted the
coming Apocalypse and based their suppositions upon
ruminations regarding the end of the Mayan Calendar,
cryptic passages from the writings of Michel de
Nostredame, better known as Nostradamus, and an
alleged celestial alignment of the galactic and
solar planes in that year. Additionally, NASA
scientists have indicated that a solar storm will
reach Earth in 2012 with potentially devastating
impact upon electrical power grids worldwide, and
other researchers have theorized that a polar shift
could occur at approximately that time. With so many
potential catastrophes on the horizon, is it likely
that 2012 will be the end?
Throughout documented history, seers, prophets, and
ordinary people have concluded that the world was
coming to an end in their lifetimes. Following the
crucifixion of Jesus, his followers believed that
his return and establishment of his Kingdom on earth
was imminent. And, throughout the intervening
centuries, many have perceived signs that led them
to predict the coming end.
Some have calculated a specific date or time period
for that end. In the U.S., one of the most famous
instances of this phenomenon occurred in the 1800's.
In approximately 1823, William Miller, a Baptist
preacher and founder of what would become the
Seventh Day Adventist Church, studied Biblical
prophesy and concluded that Christ's Second Coming
and the end of the world would occur sometime
between March 21, 1843 and March 21, 1844. When the
year between those dates came and went, his
movement, that grew in the years leading up to his
predicted end into a national campaign, modified
their predictions - ultimately settling upon October
22, 1844 as the final day. That day would come to be
known as the Millerites' "Great Disappointment," and
William Miller would continue to await the world's
end until his death in 1849.
Of course, end times prophecy did not end with
William Miller. The approaching new millennium
produced the perfect conditions for the revival of
prognostication regarding the end of the world. With
the 1970 publication of "The Late, Great Planet
Earth," written by Hal Lindsey and Carole Carlson,
predicting the world's end became an industry unto
itself. Hal Lindsey has since written numerous other
books on the same subject and is a fixture in cable
television network produced documentaries about end
times. Televangelists preach the world's end, the
coming or present Tribulation, and Christ's imminent
Return - all the while raking in huge contributions
from their followers.
Setting aside the fact that the predictions of all
end times prognosticators to date have been
erroneous and considering that there are some
reputable scientists who foresee impending disasters
in the not too distant future, might not 2012 be the
end? The real answer is that it doesn't matter. All
of us will experience the end of our own worlds at
the times of our deaths. If 2012 ends the worlds of
everyone at once, there is nothing that anyone will
be able to do about it.
Yet, if there is a growing belief that 2012 may
indeed be the end, perhaps it may cause many to
reevaluate their lives, to consider the things that
are most important, to say the things they have
always wanted to say, and to become the best
expression of the people they have always wanted to
be. Perhaps, people around the world collectively
will come to an epiphany in the realization that our
world is but an infinitesimal part of the universe
and that the survival of any of us in intimately
interconnected with that of all others. And, if
enough of us are transformed in this way, maybe the
Mayans had it right, and 2012 will end the old world
and begin the new. |