is a serial predictor of the end of days. He previously announced that the Rapture would take place on 21 May 1988, then again on 7 September 1994, and now that his most recent prediction, 21 May 2011, has has come and gone, he has "reinterpreted" his prophecy and Judgment Day is now scheduled for 21 October 2011. Apparently an "invisible judgment day" took place last Saturday, so invisible that it took Pastor Camping two days to realise it has happened.
The word "Rapture" was trending on Twitter on Saturday, as was "Harold Camping", mostly because the Twittersphere was enjoying the pastor's apocalytic embarrassment. The Bishop of Bradford, the Rt Rev Nick Baines, was one of thousands who tweeted on the rapture hashtag. His comment: "Thought the Rapture hadn't happened. Then heard Henry Kissinger on R4 and realised it had... and we've been left behind. Awkward... #rapture"
The story has now moved on, like time itself, to those vulnerable people who gave their life-savings to Harold Camping's ministry because they believed his prediction. Camping's Family Radio ministry used the money to buy advertising space and air-time to announce the end of the world. One American athiest, in a moment of entrepreneurial genius, started up a company offering to take care of the pets of any believers raptured on May 21. More than two hundred clients came forward and paid a few hundred dollars each for the peace of mind.
There is, of course, nothing new about Rapture predicting. I recently interviewed a historian who has studied this kind of end-time prediction. I asked him how common it is in the history of religion. Not a day has passed, he said, since the death of Christ when someone, somewhere wasn't predicting his imminent return. In the ancient world, only a few people might have learned about a particular prediction in a particular region, but in the internet age millions can be reached in seconds.
There are moral and theological questions here for responsible church leaders. Many churches continue to teach detailed prophecies about the end of the world; some have even put a date on it. James McConnell, senior pastor of Whitewell Metropolitan Tabernacle in Belfast, told me, in an interview on Sunday Sequence, he is convinced that Christ ill return during his own lifetime. Churches sometimes offer their members worked-out eschatological schemes -- from "" and "" to "" -- and encourage them to see their own lives in the context of the imminent return of Christ.
And it's not only an issue for church leaders. We also know that some advisors to the former US president George W. Bush introduced end-times considerations in White House discussions about the Middle East. I've interviewed Professor Thomas Römer, an Old Testament expert at the university of Lausanne, who was contacted in 2003 by the office of the French President. They wanted to know more about the bibical prophecies of "Gog and Magog", because President Bush kept refering to them in his last conversation with President Jacques Chirac. The American president had claimed that .