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or there will be a disaster when the Mayan calender ends or something.

2007-07-05 17:20:14 · 25 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

25 answers

Yes. Sell all of your stocks and move to New Zealand.

2007-07-05 17:23:04 · answer #1 · answered by S K 7 · 0 0

I don't know about a disaster at the end of the Mayan calender but I do believe we are living in end times.

2007-07-06 00:23:41 · answer #2 · answered by Green Eyed Girl 2 · 0 0

I do not think that any predicted end of times thing is coming. That doesn't mean that we aren't living in the last part of human history though. For all we know the Earth will be hit by a star gamma burst tomorrow and we will all die or a comet will fly out of no where and impact Earth and kill everyone or a black hole could open up next week and suck the Earth in. I don't really think that any of these things are actually going to happen but I have no way of actually knowing. So for all we know the world may end tomorrow.

2007-07-06 00:25:49 · answer #3 · answered by Kronos 3 · 0 0

I think that we are very close to the end times? The Mayan calender? The Bible says that no man knows God's time. I'm willing to bet that the end of the Mayan calender will come and go and nothing will happen.

2007-07-06 00:23:24 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

The Bible says we are in the end times. We have been for 2000 years. So no big whop.

The Mayan calendar didn't seem to do the Mayans any good. They're pretty much a dead civilization. I wouldn't put a whole lot of stock in it.

2007-07-06 00:23:19 · answer #5 · answered by Craig R 6 · 2 1

nope. I believe we are living in the *beginning* times. just 200 years ago (a short time) humanity started to raise itself above its superstitious, animistic roots and began existing as it ought to be - a confederation of independent, rational beings, inhabiting a small rock floating through space.

let's please ditch the Mayan and the Christian mumbo-jumbo, and get on with being the best species we can be.

2007-07-06 00:25:12 · answer #6 · answered by hot.turkey 5 · 0 0

I do. It scares me to death, but all the signs point to it. I believe this WW3 that we are about to have may be the Battle of Armegedon. Probably didn't spell it right. Sorry. But yeah, I do believe it is ending. Nobody knows exactly when it will though. Scary isn't it??

2007-07-06 00:24:42 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I don't believe we have yet met the criteria set forth in Revelations to be living in "end times".

I am intrigued by the Mayan calendar though, but I am not much of a "doom-sayer."

2007-07-06 00:23:03 · answer #8 · answered by Heather 5 · 1 1

We are living just prior to the second coming of Jesus Christ. He comes back to destroy those who destroy the earth and stops the evil on earth from destroying it. Revelations. It is all in the Bible read it. Zacharia describes a nuclear war.

2007-07-06 00:30:53 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well IDK i mean everything in the Mayan calendar has taken place. But i think i remmber that everything in it is a cycle and if that is the case and the world hasn't eneded alredy, then i ll go with the ani-christ thing since all evidence leads up to it.,

2007-07-06 00:23:50 · answer #10 · answered by addict for dramatic 4 · 0 0

What the People of the Last Days Are Like

Please open your Bible to 2 Timothy 3:1-5 and read it. The apostle Paul writes: “In the last days critical times hard to deal with will be here.” He then goes on to list 20 personality traits that would characterize ungodly people. Have you observed some of these characteristics in those living in your community? Consider what has been said in recent times about the people of today.

“Lovers of themselves.” (2 Timothy 3:2) “[People are] insistent on doing their own thing as never before. [They] are becoming gods, and expect to be treated as such.”—Financial Times, newspaper, England.

“Lovers of money.” (2 Timothy 3:2) “The ego of materialism has in recent times overpowered the spirit of modesty. Unless you are seen as rich in society your life is not worth living.”—Jakarta Post, newspaper, Indonesia.

“Disobedient to parents.” (2 Timothy 3:2) “Parents are puzzled to find their 4-year-old ordering them around like he’s [French King] Louis XIV or their 8-year-old screaming, ‘I hate you!’”—American Educator, magazine, United States.

“Disloyal.” (2 Timothy 3:2) “The vastly increased willingness of men to leave behind partners and children constitutes perhaps the single greatest change in moral values during the [past 40 years].”—Wilson Quarterly, magazine, United States.

“Having no natural affection.” (2 Timothy 3:3) “Family violence is the dominant factor in the everyday life of communities around the world.”—Journal of the American Medical Association, magazine, United States.

“Without self-control.” (2 Timothy 3:3) “Many stories that occur on the newspaper’s front page every morning reflect minds lacking self control, moral fibre and mercy towards their fellow human beings and even themselves. . . . If our society continues to favour aggression the way it is now, our society will soon enter a phase of moral annihilation.”—Bangkok Post, newspaper, Thailand.

“Fierce.” (2 Timothy 3:3) “Irrational anger and uncontrolled rage [are] seen on the road, in abuse within families, . . . and [in] the apparently gratuitous and unnecessary violence which often accompanies crime. Violence is experienced as random and unpredictable and people are left feeling disconnected and vulnerable.”—Business Day, newspaper, South Africa.

“Lovers of pleasures rather than lovers of God.” (2 Timothy 3:4) “Sexual liberation has become a moral crusade, in which Christian morality is the enemy.”—Boundless, an Internet magazine.

“Having a form of godly devotion but proving false to its power.” (2 Timothy 3:5) “[A former prostitute in the Netherlands] acknowledged that opposition to legalization [of prostitution] comes largely from religious groups. She paused, then said with a grin that when she was a prostitute, several [religious] ministers were among her regulars. ‘Prostitutes always say their best clients are from the religious community,’ she laughed.”—National Catholic Reporter, newspaper, United States.ARE THESE THINGS NOT HAPPENING NOW

2007-07-06 00:30:53 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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