monkeytoe101

So as much as I don't believe this guy is correct the news has been misrepresenting what he said. He said there would be a sign over Jerusalem on the 23 and the end would begin on the 15th of October. This is what he has been saying all along. But of course people need to change it up. He goes on to say October and November will be very interesting. Personally I do not believe him but reporters should at least make an effort to get their facts straight.

Norseman

So to play Devil's advocate, did anything interesting actually happen over Jerusalem on the 23rd?

monkeytoe101

Ha, not that I'm aware of. Like I said I didn't believe the guy I just said the media has been reporting on him incorrectly.

srgmpdns

It's like nobody else remembers this guy:

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_Camping

BlancoCanyon

In fairness to Meade's crazy ass prediction, IIRC, the first story I read a couple days ago, he said he was predicting the beginning of the Tribulation or something, not that the world would end on Saturday.

DefenderOfTruth

From my studies, this was just a literal fulfillment of Revelation 12:1-2. The sign was in the stars and rose over Jerusalem on September 23rd. The question is what it represented, not on whether it happened.

Unsealed.org has some good stuff on the topic. They got a bit too excited on making it MEAN something (the rapture possibly, but their argument that the sign itself literally happened (and it did yesterday) is very good. Revelation is a hard book.

pby1000

Eventually, he will be right.

gosso920

No, he won't. A stopped clock at least is right twice a day.

derram

https://archive.fo/6ClQv | https://files.catbox.moe/fzsdw2.png :

Planet X: David Meade says the world isn't ending on Saturday

"David Meade, who claimed the world will end Saturday, said doomsday isn't this weekend after all.“The world is not ending, but the world as we know it is ending,” he told The Washington Post. “A major part of the world will not be the same the beginning of October.”More: World ending Saturday?"

'NASA has said "Nibiru" or "Planet X" doesn't exist and this is a hoax. '

'Christianity Today calls Meade "a made-up leader in a made-up field."'

'Here are 8 times the world was supposed to end, and didn'tMore: The world is definitely going to end — just probably not SaturdayMeade, Christian and self-published author, laid out his "astronomical, scientific, the Book of Revelation and geopolitics" ideology in his book Planet X — The 2017 Arrival. '

'He claims Sept. 23 "Planet Nibiru" will collide with the Earth. '

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