5
‘Fly and Walk Through Walls’
By far, the best apocalypse on this list. You get to watch capitalism implode in one big, catastrophic collapse, and you get ghost powers? Sign me up!
Cult leader José Luis de Jesús Miranda rose through the ranks of Miami’s Baptist church scene: from volunteer, to minister, all the way up to Jesus. At certain points, Paul the Apostle and the Antichrist also kind of John Malkovich’d themselves into Miranda’s head. The man contained multitudes.
He predicted that on or around June 30, 2012, the world’s economies and major governments would collapse, and the followers of his cult, Growing in Grace, would gain the ability to fly, walk through walls and walk through fire. All without having to defeat a single Mega Man boss. That never came to pass, and he died the next year, of cirrhosis of the liver.
Except no he didn’t! He reappeared one month later, in perfect health!
But then a month later, he died for real.
Except no he didn’t! His church claims he’s immortal.
Sure, every apocalypse prediction to date has been a failed one, but the word “fail” on this list often implies the plucky young cult leader dusted off their Nike Decades and tried again. Declaring that the world is going to end during your lifetime is a rookie mistake, but it’s not insurmountable.
Take Herbert W. Armstrong, founder of the Worldwide Church of God, who had to revise his due date for Armageddon four separate times between 1936 and 1975. Or apocalypse visionary Joachim of Fiore, who predicted the world would end in 1260. He died in 1202, but his followers, the Joachimites, got an extension to 1290, then again to 1335.
You don’t even have to go too far down the rabbit hole of obscure cults — lots of early Christians thought the world would end in the year 1,000. You can’t really blame them; it’s a nice round number, and frankly, a pretty long reign for one guy. But when that prediction fell flat, they figured: Wait, it’s gotta be 1,000 years after his death. False alarm, everyone, see you again in 1033.
On the other hand, there were a few guys who were logistically unable to reschedule the end of the world. In 1534, Jan Matthys led an attack on the Holy Roman Empire on the day the world was to end, but only succeeded in getting himself decapitated. Edgar C. Whisenant painted himself into a corner when he published the book 88 Reasons Why the Rapture Could Be in 1988. When that didn’t pan out, he published a hilarious rebuttal to his haters, On Borrowed Time. When Harold Camping’s 2011 rapture didn’t go as planned, he said there had been an invisible “Spiritual Judgment.”
But the apocalypse isn’t just for religious freaks anymore. In recent centuries, we’ve got…
If you’re reading this, congratulations: You’ve survived the 13th b’ak’tun! That’s a big part of the whole gumbo of conspiracy theories that congealed around the 2012 finale to the Mayan calendar. The Mayans almost definitely did not think the world was going to end, but one “scholar” published some word salad in 1966 — “our present universe (would) be annihilated ... when the Great Cycle of the Long Count reaches completion” — giving the bored and the paranoid several decades to slow cook those theories.