Bible Expert Refutes Camping's "End of the World" Folly
NEWPORT, Wash., May 10, 2011 /
Christian Newswire/ -- Believe it or not, Family Radio Worldwide founder
Harold Camping's predictions have struck fear into the hearts of millions around the globe. He predicted the end of the world in 1994, and now he has authoritatively prophesied that "the Rapture" will strike May 21, 2011. Amazingly, Camping's message is not only being trumpeted on websites, postcards, T-shirts, bus stops, RVs and billboards from coast-to-coast, but millions sincerely believe his latest prophesy, and are terrified. "Beyond the shadow of a doubt,"
Camping told the AP, "May 21 will be the date of the Rapture and the Day of Judgment."
"To be blunt, Harold Camping is a false teacher," reports Bible expert and author of 25 books Steve Wohlberg. Speaker/Director of White Horse Media, Wohlberg has appeared on three History Channel documentaries about "the end of days" (Strange Rituals; Secrets of the Seven Seals; The Armageddon Battle Plan) and spoken inside the Pentagon and U.S. Senate. "On May 22, both the old man and his devout followers will still be on earth," predicts Wohlberg. "Camping's ideas reflect poorly on Christianity itself. His views are pure nonsense."
For over 20 years Steve Wohlberg has held prophecy seminars in Russia, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and throughout the United States clarifying what the Bible says – and doesn't say – about the dreaded Apocalypse. His eye-opening book, "The Rapture Delusions" (Destiny Image, 2010), refutes Camping fully. A much-in-demand apocalyptic expert, Wohlberg was recently quoted in The NY Daily News and has been a guest on over 500 radio and TV shows.