Harold Camping's Kingdom Hall

by moshe 26 Replies latest jw friends

  • moshe
    moshe

    The JW/WT doctrinal failures/coverups are already being compared to Harold Camping's failed endtimes predictions! Any news stories that have a Camping-JW-WT tie up please post here! Please try and cut/paste the link and the story, so that in a year or two when the links go dead, we will still have the article for our archives. Thanks!

    http://www.scionofzion.com/hall.htm

    -Harold Camping's Kingdom Hall

    By Jason Wallace
    Christ Orthodox Presbyterian Church
    Salt Lake City, UT

    In 1843, people sold their homes and businesses and went about the country preaching the imminent return of Christ. They were the followers of William Miller, a farmer and self-taught bible scholar from New York. Miller understood the 2300 days of Daniel 8:14 to refer to the number of years until the return of Christ. Though scholars for two millennia had been in nearly universal agreement that the prophecy referred to the time of Antiochus Epiphanes, Miller insisted it was for fulfillment in his day.

    In 168 BC, as Daniel had prophesied, the Seleucid king, Antiochus Epiphanes, entered Jerusalem to punish the Jews. As promised, he put an end to sacrifices at the temple, and he rededicated the temple to Zeus. He then offered Zeus the sacrifice of a pig upon the altar of God. Daniel 8:14 does not literally read "2300 days", but "2300 evenings and mornings." From the time of Antiochus entering Jerusalem until the temple was cleansed and proper sacrifices reinstituted was roughly 2300 days. The actual morning and evening sacrifices prevented totaled roughly 2300. Either reading finds fulfillment in real past history.

    William Miller believed the cleansing of the temple in Daniel 8 was not of a real temple, but rather referred to the purification of the earth by fire at the Second Coming of Christ. Because the "sevens" in Daniel 9 were translated "weeks" in the King James Bible, Miller assumed all prophecies referring to days must mean years. Adding 2300 years to the time of Daniel's prophecy gave Miller a date between March 21, 1843 and March 21, 1844. He began to teach this throughout the Northeast and gained a wide following. Despite the great excitement, March 21, 1844, came and went without the return of Christ. Miller was devastated, but one of his followers went back through the calculations and found what he believed to be the error. Miller's dating was based on the decree of Artaxerxes going out in early 457 BC, but the decree did not immediately go into effect, so the calculations were off. A new date was set of October 22, 1844.

    When even 1844 did not pan out, some of the followers abandoned the movement. Many however tried to find a new explanation. They were too embarrassed to admit their error. They had invested too much to be wrong. Ellen G. White eventually led the Seventh-Day Adventists to the conclusion that Jesus had returned invisibly in 1844, and that He would soon make His presence known. Another group that tried to hold to the 1844 date was led by Jonas Swendahl and was known as the Second Adventists. They believed that 1844 marked not the date of Jesus' return, but of the beginning of the last generation. Swendahl taught that Jesus would therefore return in 1874.

    One of Swendahl's followers was a former Presbyterian named Charles Taze Russell. When 1874 came and went, he concluded 30 years was not long enough for a generation. So he added 70 years to 1844 and concluded that Jesus would return in 1914. This and other differences led him to split from the Second Adventists and launch Zion's Watchtower and Herald of Christ's Presence. His followers became known as the International Bible Students, and they went about the country with the message, "Millions now living will never die!" Followers were to leave their churches and fellowship together. All churches were considered apostate, but God had provided a new channel for their instruction, Zion's Watchtower Tract Society.

    What began as the International Bible Students has become the Jehovah's Witnesses. The date of 1914 was changed to 1925, 1941, and 1975. What began as calling Christians out of their churches to prepare for Christ's return has become an anti-Christian cult. I believe we are seeing something similar attempted today.

    In 1992, Harold Camping published 1994?. Like Miller, he rejected the historic understanding of Daniel 8. The prophecy clearly describes the rise of the kingdom of Greece under Alexander the Great, and the division of his empire among four others. But instead of seeing the prophecy as fulfilled then, Camping transports its fulfillment to our own day. Like the Adventists and the Jehovah's Witnesses, he focuses on the "hidden" meanings of texts, seeing pointers towards 1994 in the number of swine drowned in the Sea of Galilee or in the number of servants in Abraham's house. Camping introduced 1994? with the following statement, "No book ever written is as audacious or bold as one that claims to predict the timing of the end of the world, and that is precisely what this book presumes to do." As audacious as it was, it was wrong.

    September 6, 1994 came and went. Camping seemed to back away from his false prophecy, but he has now decided he was right all along. It was too bitter a pill to swallow to be wrong. Like the Jehovah's Witnesses, he says 1994 wasn't the wrong date. We just have to add 7 years to it. Like Russell he is now telling Christians to leave their churches. All are apostate. You should no longer trust your pastors and elders, but you should abandon them and turn to one of the only true channels of God's Word, Family Radio. Like Jehovah's Witnesses, you should simply fellowship together and await Word from Oakland.

    In these new fellowships, there is to be no discipline, no baptism, no communion, and no authority apart from Family Radio's interpretation of the Bible. Mr. Camping rejects 1 Corinthians 11:26 that says we are to proclaim the Lord's death, till He comes. He rejects the clear teaching that the gates of Hades will not prevail against His church (Matthew 16:18). With even greater certainty than he had in 1994, Mr. Camping now says abandon the elders who provide watch over your soul (Hebrews 13:17), who are to shepherd the flock (1 Peter 5:1-3), and feed them (Acts 20:17-28). Do we no longer need shepherds other than Mr. Camping? Do we no longer need men to watch for our souls? Do we no longer need to be reconciled to brothers (Matthew 18)? If we do, what church is to judge it? Is Mr. Camping our pope who will judge for us?

    Family Radio may not be the Watchtower Tract and Bible Society, but it is built on the same wrong-headed interpretations of Scripture, the same date-setting, the same recalculations, the same accusations of complete apostasy, and the same claim to be the last true channel of God's Word. Despite the differences, both are heresy - - the tearing apart of Christ's church.

    We do live in a day of great apostasy. Churches do more often than not resemble circuses and stage shows, but the church has always had these troubles. The church has also had predators who point out these problems to get you to follow them. The Jehovah's Witnesses point out the pagan origins of Christmas and Easter celebrations, but only to lead you into some greater error. Now is the time for faithfulness, not just another form of apostasy.

    Like the Jehovah's Witnesses, Mr. Camping accuses anyone who differs with him of not really believing the Bible and accuses them of being idolatrous of their church. The true idol here is Mr. Camping. Will Christians read the Bible for themselves and search the Scriptures to know if these things are true, or will they blindly follow Mr. Camping into yet another false prophecy? And what will be the result for them if they do?
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  • losthobbit
    losthobbit

    Very interesting - thanks for sharing. Although I should point out that my understanding of Matthew 24:32-34 is that the world was supposed to end in the first century.

  • cantleave
    cantleave

    Fascinating stuff. Thank for Posting Moshe!

  • carla
    carla

    Thanks Moshe!

  • skeeter1
    skeeter1

    Can you imagine beign a Bible Student, and hearing your study conductor say that '1914 was the invisible date?' Think any bells are going off in anyone's heads?

    Skeeter

  • moshe
    moshe
    Think any bells are going off in anyone's heads?

    It's going to be good week for cancelling JW indoctrination studies! Because the JWs will refuse to honestly answer their student's questions about the old WT dates of failure they have to accept defeat.

  • Kosonen
    Kosonen

    Thanks too for the article! I appreciated especially that you use the right definition for today's many churches, wich is a condition of apostacy.

    I do not understand Babylon the Great to define all false religions. But christian churches since the second, even partially from the first centry have apostacied. It's about apostacy and not Babylon the Great. The mystery of Babylon the Great seems to me be the freemasons. And the main country of freemasons might be USA, with about 5 million freemasons.

  • moshe
    moshe
    The mystery of Babylon the Great seems to me be the freemasons.

    I joined the Freemasons back in 1993 ( for job advancement)- I have never been back to a lodge meeting since I was raised to a Master Mason. It was obvious to me (once inside) that the rituals were invented within the last 250 years or so. The English syntax had the feel of the 1800's and they certainly didn't feel like something from the time of Shakespeare. The Mason's official story was that the rituals went far back in time, but that did not jibe with my powers of deductive reasoning. They accept my yearly dues money, but have never once inquired where I have been for the last 18 years.

  • moshe
    moshe

    It looks like the website, wecanknow.com, that was plastered over all the Camping May21 billboards is still advertising May21 as the big day. I see lots of pictures from all over the world of happy people wearing his false message t-shirts-

  • tenyearsafter
    tenyearsafter

    Good post Moshe...unfortunately, there is already a built in defense by the WTS against it. The author is a member of Babylon the Great, and possibly clergy! Obviously, this is just another attack by Satan to discredit the true organization and just reinforces how close we are to the end!!

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