An Autumn Date for the Apocalypse
Harold Camping, whose Family Radio network paid millions of dollars to promote his prediction, said that Saturday had been “an invisible judgment day” of the spiritual variety, rather than his original vision of earthquakes and other apocalyptic disasters.
In a 90-minute speech, broadcast online and on his stations, Mr. Camping, 89, said his company, a nonprofit, would not return money donated by followers to publicize the May 21 prediction.
“We’re not at the end,” he said. “Why would we return it?”
Mr. Camping said he had no plans to fold his company before his new doomsday date: Oct. 21. “If it’s the end of the world, God will dissolve it,” he said.
Source: nytimes.com













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