The Long History of Failed End-of-the-World Predictions

Prophets keep rescheduling the apocalypse. Maybe the real joke is on us.

In the End of Time • Darem Placer

If you look back, the world should’ve ended many times already. And yet here we are—still sipping coffee, still scrolling, still arguing online.

1000 ADMillennium Doom
The year hit 1000 and people freaked out. Pilgrimages, fasting, selling possessions. The sun still rose.

1666Number of the Beast
Plague + Great Fire of London + 666. People thought it was the final curtain. Turns out it was just a massive urban rebuild.

1844The Great Disappointment
William Miller promised Christ’s return on October 22. Thousands sold everything and waited. Nothing happened. Hence the “Great Disappointment.”

1910Halley’s Comet Panic
Rumors spread that poisonous gas from the comet would kill us all. People bought “anti-comet pills.” The comet simply passed by.

1976 / 1988Rapture Date Hype
From TV preachers to that famous book 88 Reasons Why the Rapture Will Be in 1988. When it failed, they just moved the goalposts: maybe 1989… maybe 1992.

2000Y2K Bug
Computers crashing, nukes launching, society collapsing. Midnight hit and… nothing major. Just some awkward IT over-time.

2011Harold Camping
He swore May 21 was the rapture. Then moved it to October. Both passed quietly. Camping faded into silence.

2012The Mayan Calendar Reset
Probably the most viral modern one. December 21 came and went—no apocalypse. It was simply the end of a cycle, like flipping from December to January on our calendar.

2023–2025TikTok Prophets
Same script, new stage. Asteroids, Bible codes, climate twists. Predictions now trend faster because of Reels and shorts.

Why the obsession with the exact date?

The Bible literally says no one will ever know the day or the hour. Yet people keep guessing. Why?

Illusion of control – Dates give fake order in chaos.

Drama fix – Apocalypse stories thrill the human mind.

Power trip – If you own the “date,” you own the crowd.

Human weakness – Some just want to enjoy the “pleasures” today and repent ten minutes before doomsday. Spiritual procrastination at its finest.

The End Line

The world didn’t end in 1000, 1666, 1844, 1910, 1988, 2000, 2011, or 2012. Why should tomorrow be different?

Instead of chasing dates, maybe live ready every day. Not from fear, but from choice. Because if the end really comes—there’s no last-minute repentance window. Just keep praying until the end of time.

ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ

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