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Eschatology

Eschatology (/ˌɛskəˈtɒləi/ ; from Ancient Greek ἔσχατος (éskhatos) 'last', and -logy) concerns expectations of the end of the present age, human history, or the world itself.[1] The end of the world or end times[2] is predicted by several world religions (both Abrahamic and non-Abrahamic), which teach that negative world events will reach a climax. Belief that the end of the world is imminent is known as apocalypticism, and over time has been held both by members of mainstream religions and by doomsday cults. In the context of mysticism, the term refers metaphorically to the end of ordinary reality and to reunion with the divine. Various religions treat eschatology as a future event prophesied in sacred texts or in folklore.

Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, woodcut print from the Apocalypse of Albrecht Dürer (1497–1498), Staatliche Kunsthalle Karlsruhe

The Abrahamic religions maintain a linear cosmology, with end-time scenarios containing themes of transformation and redemption. In later Judaism, the term "end of days" makes reference to the Messianic Age and includes an in-gathering of the exiled Jewish diaspora, the coming of the Messiah, the resurrection of the righteous, and the world to come. Some forms of Christianity depict the end time as a period of tribulation that precedes the second coming of Christ, who will face the rise of the Antichrist along with his power structure and false prophets, and usher in the Kingdom of God. In Islam, the Day of Judgment is preceded by the appearance of the Masīḥ ad-Dajjāl, and followed by the descending of ʿĪsā (Jesus), which shall triumph over the false Messiah or Antichrist; his defeat will lead to a sequence of events that will end with the sun rising from the west and the beginning of the Qiyāmah (Judgment Day).

Dharmic religions tend to have more cyclical worldviews, with end-time eschatologies characterized by decay, redemption, and rebirth (though some believe transitions between cycles are relatively uneventful). In Hinduism, the end time occurs when Kalki, the final incarnation of Vishnu, descends atop a white horse and brings an end to the current Kali Yuga, completing a cycle that starts again with the regeneration of the world. In Buddhism, the Buddha predicted his teachings would be forgotten after 5,000 years, followed by turmoil. It says a bodhisattva named Maitreya will appear and rediscover the teachings of the Buddha Dharma, and that the ultimate destruction of the world will then come through seven suns.

Since the development of the concept of deep time in the 18th century[citation needed] the calculation of the estimated age of planet Earth, scientific discourse about end times has considered the ultimate fate of the universe. Theories have included the Big Rip, Big Crunch, Big Bounce, and Big Freeze (heat death). Social and scientific commentators also worry about global catastrophic risks and scenarios that could result in human extinction.

Etymology Edit

The word "eschatology" arises from the Ancient Greek term ἔσχατος (éschatos), meaning "last", and -logy, meaning "the study of", and first appeared in English around 1844.[3] The Oxford English Dictionary defines eschatology as "the part of theology concerned with death, judgment, and the final destiny of the soul and of humankind".[4]

Linear cosmology Edit

Judaism Edit

 
Scroll of Book of Isaiah

The main tenets of modern Jewish eschatology, in no particular order, include:[5]

Judaism usually refers to the end times as the "end of days" (aḥarit ha-yamim, אחרית הימים), a phrase that appears several times in the Tanakh. The end times are addressed in the Book of Daniel and in numerous other prophetic passages in the Hebrew scriptures, and also in the Talmud, particularly Tractate Avodah Zarah.

The idea of a Messianic Age, an era of global peace and knowledge of the Creator, has a prominent place in Jewish thought, and is incorporated as part of the end of days. A well-known passage from the Book of Isaiah describes this future condition of the world: "They shall beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks; nation will not lift sword against nation and they will no longer study warfare" (2:4).[5] Maimonides (1135–1204) further describes the Messianic Era in the Mishneh Torah: "And at that time there will be no hunger or war, no jealousy or rivalry. For the good will be plentiful, and all delicacies available as dust. The entire occupation of the world will be only to know God; ... the people Israel will be of great wisdom; they will perceive the esoteric truths and comprehend their Creator's wisdom as is the capacity of man. As it is written (Isaiah 11:9): 'For the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of God, as the waters cover the sea.'"[7]

Kabbalah Edit

In Kabbalah, the Zohar[8] maintains that the seven days of the week, based on the seven days of creation, correspond to the seven millennia of creation. The seventh day of the week, the Shabbat day of rest, corresponds to the seventh millennium, the age of universal rest, or the Messianic Era. The seventh millennium begins with the year 6000 AM, and is the latest time the Messiah can come. A number of early and late Jewish scholars have written in support of this, including the Ramban,[9] Isaac Abarbanel,[10] Abraham Ibn Ezra,[11] Rabbeinu Bachya,[12] the Vilna Gaon,[13] the Lubavitcher Rebbe,[14] the Ramchal,[15] Aryeh Kaplan[16] and Rebbetzin Esther Jungreis.[17]

Zoroastrianism Edit

Frashokereti is the Zoroastrian doctrine of a final renovation of the universe when evil will be destroyed, and everything else will then be in perfect unity with God (Ahura Mazda). The doctrinal premises are:

  1. Good will eventually prevail over evil.
  2. Creation, initially perfectly good, was subsequently corrupted by evil.
  3. The world will ultimately be restored to the perfection it had at the time of creation.
  4. The "salvation for the individual depended on the sum of [that person's] thoughts, words and deeds, and there could be no intervention, whether compassionate or capricious, by any divine being to alter this". Thus each human bears the responsibility for the fate of his own soul, and simultaneously shares in the responsibility for the fate of the world.[18]

Zoroastrian eschatology is considered one of the oldest in recorded history. The birth of its founder, Zoroaster, is unknown, with scholarly dates ranging from 500 BCE to 1,500 BCE. Pliny the Elder even suggests there were two Zoroasters.[19] However, with beliefs paralleling and possibly predating the framework of the major Abrahamic faiths, a fully developed concept of the end of the world was not established in Zoroastrianism until 500 BCE. The Bahman Yasht describes:

At the end of thy tenth hundredth winter, the sun is more unseen and more spotted; the year, month, and day are shorter; and the earth is more barren; and the crop will not yield the seed. And men become more deceitful and more given to vile practices. They will have no gratitude. Honorable wealth will proceed to those of perverted faith. And a dark cloud makes the whole sky night, and it will rain more noxious creatures than water.

A battle between the righteous and wicked will be followed by the Frashokereti. On earth, the Saoshyant will arrive as the final savior of mankind, and bring about the resurrection of the dead. The yazatas Airyaman and Atar will melt the metal in the hills and mountains, which will flow as lava across the earth and all mankind, both the living and resurrected, will be required to wade through it. Ashavan will pass through the molten river as if it were warm milk, but the sinful will burn. It will then flow down to hell, where it will annihilate Angra Mainyu and the last vestiges of wickedness.

The righteous will partake of the parahaoma, which will confer immortality upon them. Humanity will become like the Amesha Spentas, living without food, hunger, thirst, weapons or injury. Bodies will become so light as to cast no shadow. All humanity will speak a single language, and belong to a single nation with no borders. All will share a single purpose and goal, joining with Ahura Mazda for a perpetual and divine exaltation.[20][18]

Gnosticism Edit

The Gnostic codex On the Origin of the World (possibly dating from near the end of the third century AD) states that during what is called the consummation of the age, the Sun and Moon will become dark as the stars change their ordinary course. Kings will make war with each other, and thunder will cause the world to be shaken. The corrupt Archons will mourn. The sea will be troubled by fighting of the kings who became drunk from the flaming sword. Finally, great thunder will come from Sophia, the woman in the firmament above the forces of Chaos. She will cast the corrupt gods into the abyss where they will fight each other until only their chief Yaldabaoth remains and destroys himself. Next the heavens of the Archons will collapse on each other before the Earth sinks into the abyss. Light will cover the darkness and eliminate it then form into something greater than anything that ever existed before. The source of the darkness will dissolve, and the deficiency will be taken from its root. Those who were not perfected in the unconceived one will receive glories in their realms and kingdoms of the immortals, but those who were will enter a kingless realm. All will be judged according to their deeds and gnosis.[21]

Christianity Edit

Christian eschatology is the study concerned with the ultimate destiny of the individual soul and of the entire created order, based primarily upon biblical texts within the Old and New Testaments.

Christian eschatological research looks to study and discuss matters such as the nature of the divine and the divine nature of Jesus Christ, death and the afterlife, Heaven and Hell, the Second Coming of Jesus, the resurrection of the dead, the rapture, the Tribulation, millennialism, the end of the world, the Last Judgment, and the New Heaven and New Earth in the world to come.

Eschatological passages occur in many places in the Bible, in both the Old and the New Testaments. In the Old Testament, apocalyptic eschatology can be found notably in Isaiah 24–27, Isaiah 56–66, Joel, Zechariah 9–14 as well as in the closing chapters of Daniel, and in Ezekiel.[22] In the New Testament, applicable passages include Matthew 24, Mark 13, the parable of "The Sheep and the Goats" and the Book of Revelation—Revelation often occupies a central place in Christian eschatology.

The Second Coming of Christ is the central event in Christian eschatology within the broader context of the fullness of the Kingdom of God. Most Christians believe that death and suffering will continue to exist until Christ's return. There are, however, various views concerning the order and significance of other eschatological events.

The Book of Revelation stands at the core of much of Christian eschatology. The study of Revelation is usually divided into four interpretative methodologies or hermeneutics:

Date Edit

First-century Christians believed Jesus would return during their lifetime. When the converts of Paul in Thessalonica were persecuted by the Roman Empire, they believed the end of days to be imminent.[32] Scholarly consensus would hold that Jesus, and following him the early Christians, understood the endtime as being imminent.[33]

While some who believe in the literal interpretation of the Bible insist the prediction of dates or times is futile, others believe Jesus foretold signs of the end of days. The precise time, however, will come like a "thief in the night" (1 Thess. 5:2). They may also refer to Matthew 24:36 in which Jesus is quoted as saying:

"But concerning that day and hour no one knows, not even the angels of heaven, nor the Son, but the Father only."

Great Tribulation Edit

In the New Testament, Jesus refers to this period preceding the end times as the "Great Tribulation" (Matthew 24:21), "Affliction" (Mark 13:19), and "days of vengeance" (Luke 21:22).

The Book of Matthew describes the devastation:

When ye therefore shall see the abomination of desolation, spoken of by Daniel the prophet, stand in the holy place, (whoso readeth, let him understand). Then let them which be in Judaea flee into the mountains. Let him which is on the housetop not come down. ...Neither let him which is in the field return back to take his clothes, and woe unto them that are with child. ...For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be. And except those days should be shortened, there should no flesh be saved: but for the elect's sake those days shall be shortened.

— Matthew 24:15–22

The resulting chaos will affect pregnancies, newborns, and a scourge will spread throughout the flesh, save for the elect. The vivid imagery of this section is repeated closely in Mark 13:14–20.

The Gospel of Luke describes a complete unraveling of the social fabric, with widespread calamity and war:

Then he said to them, "Nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom. There will be great earthquakes, and in various places famines and pestilences. And there will be terrors and great signs from heaven. But before all this they will lay their hands on you and persecute you, delivering you up to the synagogues and prisons, and you will be brought before kings and governors for my name's sake. This will be your opportunity to bear witness. Settle it therefore in your minds not to meditate beforehand how to answer, for I will give you a mouth and wisdom, which none of your adversaries will be able to withstand or contradict. You will be delivered up even by parents and brothers and relatives and friends, and some of you they will put to death. You will be hated by all for my name's sake. But not a hair of your head will perish. By your endurance you will gain your lives.

"But when you see Jerusalem surrounded by armies, then know that its desolation has come near. Then let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains, and let those who are inside the city depart, and let not those who are out in the country enter it, for these are days of vengeance, to fulfill all that is written. Alas for women who are pregnant and for those who are nursing infants in those days! For there will be great distress upon the earth and wrath against this people. They will fall by the edge of the sword and be led captive among all nations, and Jerusalem will be trampled underfoot by the Gentiles, until the times of the Gentiles are fulfilled.

"And there will be signs in sun and moon and stars, and on the earth distress of nations in perplexity because of the roaring of the sea and the waves, people fainting with fear and with foreboding of what is coming on the world. For the powers of the heavens will be shaken. And then they will see the Son of Man coming in a cloud with power and great glory. Now when these things begin to take place, straighten up and raise your heads, because your redemption is drawing near."

And he told them a parable: "Look at the fig tree, and all the trees. As soon as they come out in leaf, you see for yourselves and know that the summer is already near. So also, when you see these things taking place, you know that the kingdom of God is near. Truly, I say to you, this generation will not pass away until all has taken place. Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away."

— Luke 21:10–33

In the Book of Revelation, the "great tribulation" (Rev. 7:14b) refers to a time of affliction upon God's people.

Catholicism and Orthodoxy Edit

The Profession of Faith addresses Catholic beliefs concerning the last days.[34] Catholicism adheres to the amillennial school of thought, promoted by Augustine of Hippo in his work The City of God.

Protestantism Edit

Contemporary use of the term End Times has evolved from literal belief in Christian millennialism. In this tradition, Biblical apocalypse is believed to be imminent, with various current events as omens of impending Armageddon. These beliefs have been put forward by the Adventist movement (Millerites), Jehovah's Witnesses, and dispensational premillennialists. In 1918 a group of eight, well-known preachers produced the London Manifesto, warning of an imminent second coming of Christ shortly after the 1917 liberation of Jerusalem by the British.

Millennialists and Amillennialists Edit
 
The Antichrist, by Lucas Cranach the Elder (1521). Here the Antichrist is shown wearing the triple crown of the Roman papacy.

Protestants are divided between Millennialists and Amillennialists. Millennialists concentrate on the issue of whether the true believers will see the Great Tribulation or be removed from it by what is referred to as a Pre-Tribulation rapture.

Amillennialists believe the end times encompass the time from Christ's ascension to the last day, and maintain that the mention of the "thousand years" in the Book of Revelation is meant to be taken metaphorically (i.e., not literally), a view which continues to cause divisions within Protestant Christianity.

There is a range of eschatological belief in Protestant Christianity. Christian premillennialists who believe the end times are occurring now, are usually specific about timelines that climax in the end of the world. For some, Israel, the European Union, or the United Nations are seen as major players whose roles were foretold in scripture. Within dispensational premillennialist writing, there is the belief that Christians will be summoned to Heaven by Christ at the rapture, occurring before a Great Tribulation prophesied in Matthew 24–25; Mark 13 and Luke 21. The Tribulation is described in the Book of Revelation.

"End times" may also refer to the passing of an age or long period in the relationship between man and God.[35] Adherents to this view cite the Second Epistle to Timothy and draw analogies to the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.

Post-Exilic Hebrew books of prophecy such as Daniel and Ezekiel are given new interpretations in this Christian tradition, while apocalyptic forecasts appear in the Judeo-Christian Sibylline Oracles which include the Book of Revelation ascribed to John, the apocryphal Apocalypse of Peter, and the Second Book of Esdras.

Fundamentalists Edit

Most fundamentalist Christians anticipate biblical prophecy to be literally fulfilled. They see current wars, natural disaster and famine as the birth pains which Jesus described in Matthew 24:7–8 and Mark 13:8. They believe mankind began in the garden of Eden, and point to the Valley of Megiddo as the place where the current world system will terminate, after which the Messiah will rule for 1,000 years.

Adventists and Millerites Edit
 
Icon of the Second Coming. Greek, ca. 1700 A.D.

Religious movements which expect that the second coming of Christ will be a cataclysmic event are generally called adventism. These have arisen throughout the Christian era, but were particularly common after the Protestant Reformation. Emanuel Swedenborg considered the second coming to be symbolic, and to have occurred in 1757. Along with others, he developed a religious system around the second coming of Christ, disclosed by new prophecy or special revelation not described in the Bible. The Millerites are diverse religious groups which similarly rely upon a special gift of interpretation for predicting the second coming.

The difference between the 19th-century Millerite and adventist movements and contemporary prophecy is that William Miller and his followers, based on biblical interpretation, predicted the time of the Second Coming to have occurred in 1844. Contemporary writing of end time has suggested the timetable will be triggered by future wars and moral catastrophe, and that this time of tribulation is close at hand.

Seventh-day Adventists believe biblical prophecy to foretell an end time scenario in which the United States works in conjunction with the Catholic Church to mandate worship on a day other than the true Sabbath, Saturday, as prescribed in the Ten Commandments (Exodus 20:8–11). This will bring about a situation where one must choose for or against the Bible as the will of God.[36]

Preterists Edit

Another view of the end times is preterism. It distinguishes the time of the end from the end of time. Preterists believe the term last days (or Time of the End) refers to, neither the last days of the Earth, nor the last days of humankind, but the end of the Old Covenant between God and Israel; which, according to preterism, took place when the Temple in Jerusalem was destroyed in 70 CE.

Preterists believe that prophecies—such as the Second Coming, the desecration of the Jewish Temple, the destruction of Jerusalem, the rise of the Antichrist, the Great Tribulation, the advent of The Day of the Lord, and a Final Judgment—had been fulfilled when the Romans sacked Jerusalem and completely destroyed its Temple.

Proponents of full preterism do not believe in a coming resurrection of the dead. They place this event (as well as the Second Coming) in the year 70. Advocates of partial preterism do believe in a coming resurrection. Full preterists contend that partial preterists are merely futurists, since they believe the Second Coming, the Resurrection, the Rapture, and the Judgment are yet to come.

Many preterists believe first-century Christians experienced the Rapture to rejoin the Christ.

According with Preterism's interpretation of end times, many "time passages" in the New Testament foretell a Second Coming of Christ, with last days to take place within the lifetimes of his disciples: Matt. 10:23, Matt. 16:28, Matt. 24:34, Matt. 26:64, Rom. 13:11–12, 1 Cor. 7:29–31, 1 Cor. 10:11, Phil. 4:5, James 5:8–9, 1 Pet. 4:7, 1 Jn. 2:18.

Dispensationalists Edit

Dispensationalism is an evangelical futurist Biblical interpretation that foresees a series of dispensations, or periods, in which God relates to human beings under different Biblical covenants. The belief system is primarily rooted in the writings of John Nelson Darby and is premillennial in content. The reestablishment of Israel in 1948 provided a major impetus to the dispensationalist belief system. The wars of Israel after 1948 with its Arab neighbors provided further support, according to John F. Walvoord.[37] After the Six-Day War in 1967, and the Yom Kippur War in 1973, it seemed plausible to many Fundamentalist Christians in the 1970s that Middle East turmoil may well be leading up to the fulfillment of various Bible prophecies and to the Battle of Armageddon.

Members of the dispensationalist movement such as Hal Lindsey, J. Dwight Pentecost, John Walvoord, all of whom have Dallas Theological Seminary backgrounds, and some other writers, claimed further that the European Economic Community, which preceded the European Union, would become a United States of Europe, which would in turn become a Revived Roman Empire ruled by the Antichrist. The Revived Roman Empire also figured into the New Testament writers' vision of the future. The fact that in the early 1970s, there were (erroneously thought to be) seven nations in the European Economic Community was held to be significant; this aligned the Community with a seven-headed beast mentioned in Revelation. This specific prophecy has required revision, but the idea of a Revived Roman Empire remains.

Dispensationalism, in contrast to the Millerite Adventist movement, had its beginning in the 19th century, when John Nelson Darby, founder of the Plymouth Brethren religious denomination, incorporated into his system of Biblical interpretation a system of organizing Biblical time into a number of discrete dispensations, each of which marks a separate covenant with God. Darby's beliefs were widely publicized in Cyrus I. Scofield's Scofield Reference Bible, an annotated Bible that became popular in the United States.

Since the majority of the Biblical prophets were writing at a time when the Temple in Jerusalem was still functioning, they wrote as if it would still be standing during the prophesied events. According to preterism, this was a fulfillment of the prophecies. However, according to Futurists, their destruction in AD 70 put the prophetic timetable on hold. Many such believers therefore anticipated the return of Jews to Israel and the reconstruction of the Temple before the Second Coming could occur.[38][39]

Post-tribulation pre-millennialism Edit

A view of the Second Coming of Christ as held by post-tribulational pre-millennialists holds that the Church of Christ will have to undergo great persecution by being present during the great tribulation.

Specific prophetic movements Edit

 
William Miller predicted the end of the world in 1843, known as the Great Disappointment.

In 1843, William Miller made the first of several predictions that the world would end in only a few months. As his predictions did not come true (referred to as the Great Disappointment), followers of Miller went on to found separate groups, the most successful of which is the Seventh-day Adventist Church.

Members of the Baháʼí Faith believe Miller's interpretation of signs and dates of the coming of Jesus were, for the most part, correct.[40] They believe the fulfillment of biblical prophecies of the coming of Christ came through a forerunner of their own religion, the Báb. According to the Báb's words, 4 April 1844 was "the first day that the Spirit descended" into his heart.[41] His subsequent declaration to Mullá Husayn-i Bushru'i that he was the "Promised One"—an event now commemorated by Baháʼís as a major holy day—took place on 23 May 1844. It was in October of that year that the Báb embarked on a pilgrimage to Mecca, where he openly declared his claims to the Sharif of Mecca.[42][43] The first news coverage of these events in the West was in 1845 by The Times,[44] followed by others in 1850 in the United States.[45] The first Baháʼí to come to America was in 1892.[42] Several Baháʼí books and pamphlets make mention of the Millerites, the prophecies used by Miller and the Great Disappointment, most notably William Sears's Thief in the Night.[46][47][48]

Restorationism (Christian primitivism) Edit

End times theology is also significant to restorationist Christian religions, which consider themselves distinct from both Catholicism and Protestantism.

Jehovah's Witnesses Edit
 
Former Watchtower headquarters in Brooklyn. The society made a number of emphatic claims of impending last days and ensuing chaos between 1879 and 1924.

The eschatology of Jehovah's Witnesses is central to their religious beliefs. They believe Jesus Christ has been ruling in heaven as king since 1914 (a date they believe was prophesied in the Bible) and that after that time a period of cleansing occurred, resulting in God's selection of the Bible Students associated with Charles Taze Russell as his people in 1919. They also believe that the destruction of those who reject the Bible's message[49] and thus willfully refuse to obey God[50][51] will shortly take place at Armageddon, ensuring that the beginning of the new earthly society will be composed of willing subjects of that kingdom.

The religion's doctrines surrounding 1914 are the legacy of a series of emphatic claims regarding the years 1799,[52] 1874,[52] 1878,[53] 1914,[54] 1918[55] and 1925[56] made in the Watch Tower Society's publications between 1879 and 1924. Claims about the significance of those years, including the presence of Jesus Christ, the beginning of the "last days", the destruction of worldly governments and the earthly resurrection of Jewish patriarchs, were successively abandoned.[57] In 1922 the society's principal magazine, The Watchtower, described its chronology as "no stronger than its weakest link", but also claimed the chronological relationships to be "of divine origin and divinely corroborated ... in a class by itself, absolutely and unqualifiedly correct"[58] and "indisputable facts",[52] and repudiation of Russell's teachings was described as "equivalent to a repudiation of the Lord".[59]

The Watch Tower Society has acknowledged its early leaders promoted "incomplete, even inaccurate concepts".[60] The Governing Body of Jehovah's Witnesses says that, unlike Old Testament prophets, its interpretations of the Bible are not inspired or infallible.[61][62][63] It says that Bible prophecies can be fully understood only after their fulfillment, citing examples of biblical figures who did not understand the meaning of prophecies they received. Watch Tower Society literature often cites Proverbs 4:18, "The path of the righteous ones is like the bright light that is getting lighter and lighter until the day is firmly established" (NWT) to support their view that there would be an increase in knowledge during "the time of the end", and that this increase in knowledge needs adjustments. Watch Tower Society publications also say that unfulfilled expectations are partly due to eagerness for God's Kingdom and that they do not call their core beliefs into question.[64][65][66]

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Edit

Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) believe there will be a Second Coming of Jesus to the earth at some time in the future. The LDS Church and its leaders do not make any predictions of the date of the Second Coming.

According to church doctrine, the true gospel will be taught in all parts of the world prior to the Second Coming.[67] They also believe there will be increasing war, earthquakes, hurricanes, and man-made disasters prior to the Second Coming.[68] Disasters of all kind will happen before Christ comes.[69] Upon the return of Jesus Christ, all people will be resurrected, the righteous in a first resurrection and the unrighteous in a second, later resurrection. Christ shall reign for a period of 1000 years, after which the Final Judgement will occur.

Realized eschatology Edit

Realized eschatology is a Christian eschatological theory that holds that the eschatological passages in the New Testament do not refer to the future, but instead refer to the ministry of Jesus and his lasting legacy.[70][71]

Islam Edit

 
Diagram of "Plain of Assembly" (Ard al-Hashr) on the Day of Judgment, from an autograph manuscript of Futuhat al-Makkiyya by Sufi mystic and Muslim philosopher Ibn Arabi, ca. 1238. Shown are the 'Arsh (Throne of God), pulpits for the righteous (al-Aminun), seven rows of angels, Gabriel (al-Ruh), A'raf (the Barrier), the Pond of Abundance, al-Maqam al-Mahmud (the Praiseworthy Station; where the Prophet Muhammad will stand to intercede for the faithful), Mizan (the Scale), As-Sirāt (the Bridge), Jahannam (Hell), and Marj al-Jannat (Meadow of Paradise).[72]

Muslims believe there are three periods before the Day of Judgment with some debate as to whether the periods could overlap.[73][74][75]

Sunni Edit

Sunnis believe the dead will then stand in a grand assembly, awaiting a scroll detailing their righteous deeds, sinful acts and ultimate judgment.[note 1][76] Prophet Muhammad will be the first to be resurrected.[77] Punishments will include adhab, or severe pain and embarrassment, and khizy or shame.[78] There will also be a punishment of the grave between death and the resurrection.[79] Several Sunni scholars explain some of the signs metaphorically.

The signs of the coming end time are divided into major and minor signs: Following the second period, the third is said to be marked by the ten major signs known as alamatu's-sa'ah al- kubra (The major signs of the end).[note 2] They are as follows:

  1. A huge black cloud of smoke (dukhan) will cover the earth.[note 3]
  2. Three sinkings of the earth, one in the East.[note 3]
  3. One sinking of the earth in the West.[note 3]
  4. One sinking of the earth in Arabia.[note 3]
  5. The false messiah—anti-Christ, Masih ad-Dajjal—shall appear with great powers as a one-eyed man with his right eye blind and deformed like a grape. Although believers will not be deceived, he will claim to be God, to hold the keys to heaven and hell, and will lead many astray.[80] In reality, his heaven is hell, and his hell is heaven. The Dajjal will be followed by seventy thousand Jews of Isfahan wearing Persian shawls.[note 4]
  6. The return of Isa (Jesus), from the fourth sky, to kill Dajjal.[81]
  7. Ya'jooj and Ma'jooj (Gog and Magog), a Japhetic tribe of vicious beings who had been imprisoned by Dhul-Qarnayn, will break out. They will ravage the earth, drink all the water of Lake Tiberias, and kill all believers in their way. Isa, Imam Al-Mahdi, and the believers with them will go to the top of a mountain and pray for the destruction of Gog and Magog. God eventually will send disease and worms to wipe them out.[note 5][82]
  8. The sun will rise from the West.[83][84][85]
  9. The Dabbat al-ard, or Beast of the Earth, will come out of the ground to talk to people.[note 6]
  10. The second blow of the trumpet will be sounded, the dead will return to life, and a fire will come out of Yemen that shall gather all to Mahshar Al Qiy'amah (The Gathering for Judgment).[86]

Shia Edit

Many of the signs shown above are shared by both Sunni and Shia beliefs, with some exceptions, e.g. Imam Al-Mahdi defeating Al-Masih ad-Dajjal.

Concepts and terminology in Shia eschatology include Mi'ad, the Occultation, Al-Yamani, and Sufyani. In Twelver Shia narrations about the last days, the literature largely revolves around Muhammad al-Mahdi, who is considered by many beliefs to be the true twelfth appointed successor to Prophet Muhammad. Muhammad al-Mahdi will help mankind against the deception by the Dajjal who will try to get people in to a new world religion which is called "the great deception".[87][need quotation to verify]

Ahmadiyya Edit

Ahmadiyya is considered distinct from mainstream Islam. In its writing, the present age has been witness to the evil of man and wrath of God, with war and natural disaster.[88] Ghulam Ahmad is seen as the promised Messiah and the Mahdi, fulfilling Islamic and Biblical prophecies, as well as scriptures of other religions such as Hinduism. His teaching will establish spiritual reform and establish an age of peace. This will continue for a thousand years, and will unify mankind under one faith.[89]

Ahmadis believe that despite harsh and strong opposition and discrimination they will eventually be triumphant and their message vindicated both by Muslims and non-Muslims alike. Ahmadis also incorporate the eschatological views from other religions into their doctrine and believe Mirza Ghulam Ahmed falls into this sequence.[90]

Baháʼí Faith Edit

 
Bahá'í House of Worship, Delhi, India

In the Baháʼí Faith, creation has neither a beginning nor an end;[91] Baháʼís regard the eschatologies of other religions as symbolic. In Baháʼí belief, human time is marked by a series of progressive revelations in which successive messengers or prophets come from God.[92] The coming of each of these messengers is seen as the day of judgment to the adherents of the previous religion, who may choose to accept the new messenger and enter the "heaven" of belief, or denounce the new messenger and enter the "hell" of denial. In this view, the terms "heaven" and "hell" become symbolic terms for a person's spiritual progress and their nearness to or distance from God.[92] In Baháʼí belief, Bahá'u'lláh (1817-1892), the founder of the Baháʼí Faith, was the Second Coming of Christ and also the fulfilment of previous eschatological expectations of Islam and other major religions.[93]

The inception of the Baháʼí Faith coincides with Great Disappointment of the Millerite prophesy in 1844.

ʻAbdu'l-Bahá taught that Armageddon would begin in 1914,[94] but without a clear indication of its end date.[95] Baháʼís believe that the mass martyrdom anticipated during the End Times had already passed within the historical context of the Baháʼí Faith.[96][97] Baháʼís expect their faith to be eventually embraced by the masses of the world, ushering in a golden age.

Rastafari Edit

 
Haile Selassie I is viewed as god incarnate in Rastafari.

Rastafari have a unique interpretation of end times, based on the Old Testament and the Book of Revelation. They believe Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie I to be God incarnate, the King of kings and Lord of lords mentioned in Revelation 5:5. They saw the crowning of Selassie as the second coming, and the Second Italo-Ethiopian War as fulfillment of Revelation. There is also the expectation that Selassie will return for a day of judgment and bring home the "lost children of Israel", which in Rastafari refers to those taken from Africa through the slave trade. There will then be an era of peace and harmony at Mount Zion in Africa.[98]

Cyclic cosmology Edit

Hinduism Edit

The Vaishnavite tradition links contemporary Hindu eschatology to the figure of Kalki, the tenth and last avatar of Vishnu. Many Hindus believe that before the age draws to a close, Kalki will reincarnate as Shiva and simultaneously dissolve and regenerate the universe. In contrast, Shaivites hold the view that Shiva is incessantly destroying and creating the world.[99]

In Hindu eschatology, time is cyclic and consists of kalpas. Each lasts 4.1–8.2 billion years, which is a period of one full day and night for Brahma, who will be alive for 311 trillion, 40 billion years. Within a kalpa there are periods of creation, preservation and decline. After this larger cycle, all of creation will contract to a singularity[citation needed] and then again will expand from that single point, as the ages continue in a religious fractal pattern.[75][need quotation to verify]

Within the current kalpa, there are four epochs that encompass the cycle. They progress from a beginning of complete purity to a descent into total corruption. The last of the four ages is Kali Yuga (which most Hindus believe is the current time), characterized by quarrel, hypocrisy, impiety, violence and decay. The four pillars of dharma will be reduced to one, with truth being all that remains.[100] As written in the Gita:

Yadā yadā hi dharmasya glānirbhavati Bhārata
Abhyutthānam adharmasya tadātmānam sṛjāmyaham

Whenever there is decay of righteousness in Bharata (Aryavarta)
And a rise of unrighteousness then I manifest Myself![101]

At this time of chaos, the final avatar, Kalki, endowed with eight superhuman faculties will appear on a white horse. Kalki will amass an army to "establish righteousness upon the earth" and leave "the minds of the people as pure as crystal."

At the completion of Kali Yuga, the next Yuga Cycle will begin with a new Satya Yuga, in which all will once again be righteous with the reestablishment of dharma. This, in turn, will be followed by epochs of Treta Yuga, Dvapara Yuga and again another Kali Yuga. This cycle will then repeat until the larger cycle of existence under Brahma returns to the singularity,[citation needed] and a new universe is born.[98] The cycle of birth, growth, decay, and renewal at the individual level finds its echo in the cosmic order, yet is affected by vagueries of divine intervention in Vaishnavite belief.

Buddhism Edit

There is no classic account of beginning or end[102] in Buddhism; Masao Abe attributes this to the absence of God.[103]

History is embedded in the continuing process of samsara or the "beginningless and endless cycles of birth-death-rebirth".[104] Buddhists believe there is an end to things[105] but it is not final because they are bound to be born again. However, the writers of Mahayana Buddhist scriptures establish a specific end-time account in Buddhist tradition: this describes the return of Maitreya Buddha, who would bring about an end to the world.[106] This constitutes one of the two major branches of Buddhist eschatology, with the other being the Sermon of the Seven Suns. End time in Buddhism could also involve a cultural eschatology covering "final things", which include the idea that Sakyamuni Buddha's dharma will also come to an end.[107]

Maitreya Edit

The Buddha described his teachings disappearing five thousand years from when he preached them,[108] corresponding approximately to the year 4300 since he was born in 623 BCE.[109] At this time, knowledge of dharma will be lost as well. The last of his relics will be gathered in Bodh Gaya and cremated.[citation needed] There will be a new era in which the next Buddha Maitreya will appear, but it will be preceded by the degeneration of human society. This will be a period of greed, lust, poverty, ill will, violence, murder, impiety, physical weakness, sexual depravity and societal collapse, and even the Buddha himself will be forgotten.[75]

This will be followed by the coming of Maitreya when the teachings of dharma are forgotten. Maitreya was the first Bodhisattva around whom a cult developed, in approximately the third century CE.[110]

The earliest known mention of Maitreya occurs in the Cakavatti, or Sihanada Sutta in Digha Nikaya 26 of the Pali Canon. In it, Gautama Buddha predicted his teachings of dharma would be forgotten after 5,000 years.

At that period, brethren, there will arise in the world an Exalted One named Maitreya, Fully Awakened, abounding in wisdom and goodness, happy, with knowledge of the worlds, unsurpassed as a guide to mortals willing to be led, a teacher for gods and men, an Exalted One, a Buddha, even as I am now. He, by himself, will thoroughly know and see, as it were face to face, this universe, with Its worlds of the spirits, Its Brahmas and Its Maras, and Its world of recluses and Brahmins, of princes and peoples, even as I now, by myself, thoroughly know and see them.

— Digha Nikaya, 26

The text then foretells the birth of Maitreya Buddha in the city of Ketumatī in present-day Benares, whose king will be the Cakkavattī Sankha. Sankha will live in the former palace of King Mahāpanadā, and will become a renunciate who follows Maitreya.[111][112]

In Mahayana Buddhism, Maitreya will attain bodhi in seven days, the minimum period, by virtue of his many lifetimes of preparation. Once Buddha, he will rule over the Ketumati Pure Land, an earthly paradise sometimes associated with the Indian city of Varanasi or Benares in present-day Uttar Pradesh. In Mahayana Buddhism, the Buddha presides over a land of purity. For example, Amitabha presides over Sukhavati, more popularly known as the "Western Paradise".[113]

 
Bodhisattva Maitreya from the second-century Gandharan art period

A notable teaching he will rediscover is that of the ten non-virtuous deeds—killing, stealing, sexual misconduct, lying, divisive speech, abusive speech, idle speech, covetousness, harmful intent and wrong views. The ten virtuous deeds will replace them with the abandonment of each of these practices. Edward Conze in his Buddhist Scriptures (1959) gives an account of Maitreya:

The Lord replied, 'Maitreya, the best of men, will then leave the Tuṣita heavens and go for his last rebirth. As soon as he is born he will walk seven steps forward, and where he puts down his feet a jewel or a lotus will spring up. He will raise his eyes to the ten directions and will speak these words: "This is my last birth. There will be no rebirth after this one. Never will I come back here, but, all pure, I shall win Nirvana."'

— Buddhist Scriptures[114]

Maitreya currently resides in Tushita, but will come to Jambudvipa when needed most as successor to the historic Śākyamuni Buddha. Maitreya will achieve complete enlightenment during his lifetime, and following this reawakening he will bring back the timeless teaching of dharma to this plane and rediscover enlightenment.[115] The Arya Maitreya Mandala, founded in 1933 by Lama Anagarika Govinda, is based on the idea of Maitreya.

Maitreya eschatology forms the central canon of the White Lotus Society, a religious and political movement which emerged in Yuan China.[116] It later branched into the Chinese underground criminal organization known as the Triads, which exist today as an international underground criminal network.[citation needed]

Note that no description of Maitreya occurs in any other sutta in the canon, casting doubt as to the authenticity of the scripture. In addition, sermons of the Buddha normally are in response to a question, or in a specific context, but this sutta has a beginning and an ending, and its content is quite different from the others. This has led some to conclude that the whole sutta is apocryphal, or tampered with.[115]

Sermon of the Seven Suns Edit

In his "Sermon of the Seven Suns" in the Pali Canon, the Buddha describes the ultimate fate of the Earth in an apocalypse characterized by the consequent appearance of seven suns in the sky, each causing progressive ruin until the planet is destroyed:

All things are impermanent, all aspects of existence are unstable and non-eternal. Beings will become so weary and disgusted with the constituent things that they will seek emancipation from them more quickly. There will come a season, O monks when, after hundreds of thousands of years, rains will cease. All seedlings, all vegetation, all plants, grasses and trees will dry up and cease to be. ...There comes another season after a great lapse of time when a second sun will appear. Now all brooks and ponds will dry up, vanish, cease to be.

— Aňguttara-Nikăya, VII, 6.2 Pali Canon[75]

The canon goes on to describe the progressive destruction of each sun. The third sun will dry the Ganges River and other rivers, whilst the fourth will cause the lakes to evaporate; the fifth will dry the oceans. Later:

Again after a vast period of time a sixth sun will appear, and it will bake the Earth even as a pot is baked by a potter. All the mountains will reek and send up clouds of smoke. After another great interval a seventh sun will appear and the Earth will blaze with fire until it becomes one mass of flame. The mountains will be consumed, a spark will be carried on the wind and go to the worlds of God. ...Thus, monks, all things will burn, perish and exist no more except those who have seen the path.

— Aňguttara-Nikăya, VII, 6.2 Pali Canon[75]

The sermon completes with the Earth immersed into an extensive holocaust. The Pali Canon does not indicate when this will happen relative to Maitreya.[75]

Norse mythology Edit

1905 Paintings by Emil Doepler
 
Odin fighting his old nemesis Fenrir
 
Ragnarök after Surtr has engulfed the world with fire

Norse mythology depicts the end of days as Ragnarök, an Old Norse term translatable as "twilight of the gods". It will be heralded by a devastation known as Fimbulvetr which will seize Midgard in cold and darkness. The sun and moon will disappear from the sky, and poison will fill the air. The dead will rise from the ground and there will be widespread despair.

There follows a battle between—on the one hand—the Gods with the Æsir, Vanir[117] and Einherjar, led by Odin, and—on the other hand—forces of Chaos, including the fire giants and jötunn, led by Loki. In the fighting Odin will be swallowed whole by his old nemesis Fenrir.[118] The god Freyr fights Surtr but loses. Víðarr, son of Odin, will then avenge his father by ripping Fenrir's jaws apart and stabbing the wolf in the heart with his spear. The serpent Jörmungandr will open its gaping maw and be met in combat by Thor. Thor, also a son of Odin, will defeat the serpent, only to take nine steps afterwards before collapsing in his own death.[119]

After this people will flee their homes as the sun blackens and the earth sinks into the sea. The stars will vanish, steam will rise, and flames will touch the heavens. This conflict will result in the deaths of most of the major Gods and forces of Chaos. Finally, Surtr will fling fire across the nine worlds. The ocean will then completely submerge Midgard.[120]

After the cataclysm, the world will resurface new and fertile, and the surviving Gods will meet. Baldr, another son of Odin, will be reborn in the new world, according to Völuspá. The two human survivors, Líf and Lífþrasir, will then repopulate this new earth.[121]

No end times Edit

Taoism Edit

The Taoist faith is not concerned with what came before or after life, knowing only their own being in the Tao. The philosophy is that people come and go, just like mountains, trees and stars, but Tao will go on for time immemorial.[citation needed]

Analogies in science and philosophy Edit

 
A diagram showing the life cycle of the Sun

Researchers in futures studies and transhumanists investigate how the accelerating rate of scientific progress may lead to a "technological singularity" in the future that would profoundly and unpredictably change the course of human history, and result in Homo sapiens no longer being the dominant life form on Earth.[122][123][improper synthesis?]

Occasionally the term "physical eschatology" is applied to the long-term predictions of astrophysics about the future of Earth and ultimate fate of the universe.[124][125] The Sun will turn into a red giant in approximately 6 billion years. Life on Earth will become impossible due to a rise in temperature long before the planet is actually swallowed up by the Sun.[126] Even later, the Sun will become a white dwarf.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Quran 74:38
  2. ^ Sahih Muslim, Book 41, Hadith 6931
  3. ^ a b c d Sahih Muslim
  4. ^ Muslim, Book 41, Hadith 7034
  5. ^ Quran 21:96
  6. ^ Quran 27:82

References Edit

  1. ^ Carroll 2000, p. 420.
  2. ^ "BBC – Religions – Christianity: End Times". BBC Online. 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2017-11-10.
  3. ^ Dictionary – Definition of Eschatology. Webster's Online Dictionary.
  4. ^ "Eschatology, n.", def. a, Oxford English Dictionary. Retrieved 2016-05-18.
  5. ^ a b "Jewish Eschatology". Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  6. ^ Ginzburg, Yitsḥaḳ (2007). Kabbalah and Meditation for the Nations. GalEinai Publication Society. ISBN 978-965-7146-12-5.
  7. ^ Mishneh Torah, Laws of Kings 12:5
  8. ^ Zohar, Vayera 119a
  9. ^ Ramban on Genesis (2:3)
  10. ^ Abarbanel on Genesis 2
  11. ^ Ramban quoting Ibn Ezra at Leviticus (25:2)
  12. ^ Bachya on Genesis 2:3
  13. ^ Safra D'Tzniusa, Ch. 5
  14. ^ Sefer HaSichos 5750:254
  15. ^ Derech Hashem 4:7:2
  16. ^ Page 318, The Real Messiah Kaplan, Aryeh (1 August 1991). The Aryeh Kaplan Anthology: Illuminating Expositions on Jewish Thought and Practice by a Revered Teacher. Mesorah Publications. ISBN 9780899068664. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  17. ^ Fleisher, Malkah (27 October 2008). "'It's Erev Shabbos of the World' – Jewish World – News". Israel National News.
  18. ^ a b Boyce, Mary (1979). Zoroastrians: Their Religious Beliefs and Practices. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. pp. 27–29. ISBN 978-0-415-23902-8..
  19. ^ West, Martin Litchfield (2013). Hellenica: Volume III: Philosophy, Music and Metre, Literary Byways, Varia. OUP Oxford. pp. 89–109. ISBN 978-0-19-960503-3.
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  32. ^ See 2 Thessalonians chapter 2 and Son of perdition.
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  34. ^ An explanation of these beliefs appears on the Holy See's website
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  43. ^ Shoghi Effendi Rabbani. God Passes By. p. 9.
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  50. ^ You Can Live Forever in Paradise on Earth, Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society, 1989, p. 155.
  51. ^ Revelation—Its Grand Climax at Hand!, Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society, 1988, p. 6.
  52. ^ a b c The Watchtower, 1 March 1922, page 73, "The indisputable facts, therefore, show that the 'time of the end' began in 1799; that the Lord's second presence began in 1874."
  53. ^ (PDF). The Herald of the Morning. September 1875. p. 52. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-05-12.
  54. ^ The Watchtower, July 15, 1894, p. 1677 April 1, 2019, at the Wayback Machine: "We see no reason for changing the figures—nor could we change them if we would. They are, we believe, God's dates, not ours. But bear in mind that the end of 1914 is not the date for the beginning, but for the end of the time of trouble."
  55. ^ 1 September 1916 The Watchtower, pages 264–265 2009-07-13 at the Wayback Machine
  56. ^ Millions Now Living Will Never Die, 1920, page 97, "Based upon the argument heretofore set forth, then, that the old order of things, the old world, is ending and is therefore passing away, and that the new order is coming in, and that 1925 shall mark the resurrection of the faithful worthies of old and the beginning of reconstruction, it is reasonable to conclude that millions of people now on the earth will be still on the earth in 1925. Then, based upon the promises set forth in the divine Word, we must reach the positive and indisputable conclusion that millions now living will never die."
  57. ^ Holden, Andrew (2002). Jehovah's Witnesses: Portrait of a Contemporary Religious Movement. Routledge. p. 1. ISBN 0-415-26609-2.
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  59. ^ The Watchtower, 1 May 1922, page 132, "To abandon or repudiate the Lord's chosen instrument means to abandon or repudiate the Lord himself, upon the principle that he who rejects the servant sent by the Master thereby rejects the Master. ... Brother Russell was the Lord's servant. Then to repudiate him and his work is equivalent to a repudiation of the Lord, upon the principle heretofore announced."
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  61. ^ Revelation – Its Grand Climax, Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society, 1988, page 9.
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  68. ^ Doctrine and Covenants 45:26
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Further reading Edit

External links Edit

  •   Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1909). "Eschatology". Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 5. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSinger, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "Eschatology". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.
  • Christian Eschatology Explained (A short primer on the main schools of Christian Eschatology)

eschatology, several, terms, redirect, here, other, uses, times, disambiguation, eschaton, disambiguation, last, days, disambiguation, last, things, novel, examples, perspective, this, article, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, article, discu. Several terms redirect here For other uses see End times disambiguation Eschaton disambiguation Last days disambiguation and Last Things novel The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Eschatology ˌ ɛ s k e ˈ t ɒ l e dʒ i from Ancient Greek ἔsxatos eskhatos last and logy concerns expectations of the end of the present age human history or the world itself 1 The end of the world or end times 2 is predicted by several world religions both Abrahamic and non Abrahamic which teach that negative world events will reach a climax Belief that the end of the world is imminent is known as apocalypticism and over time has been held both by members of mainstream religions and by doomsday cults In the context of mysticism the term refers metaphorically to the end of ordinary reality and to reunion with the divine Various religions treat eschatology as a future event prophesied in sacred texts or in folklore Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse woodcut print from the Apocalypse of Albrecht Durer 1497 1498 Staatliche Kunsthalle KarlsruheThe Abrahamic religions maintain a linear cosmology with end time scenarios containing themes of transformation and redemption In later Judaism the term end of days makes reference to the Messianic Age and includes an in gathering of the exiled Jewish diaspora the coming of the Messiah the resurrection of the righteous and the world to come Some forms of Christianity depict the end time as a period of tribulation that precedes the second coming of Christ who will face the rise of the Antichrist along with his power structure and false prophets and usher in the Kingdom of God In Islam the Day of Judgment is preceded by the appearance of the Masiḥ ad Dajjal and followed by the descending of ʿisa Jesus which shall triumph over the false Messiah or Antichrist his defeat will lead to a sequence of events that will end with the sun rising from the west and the beginning of the Qiyamah Judgment Day Dharmic religions tend to have more cyclical worldviews with end time eschatologies characterized by decay redemption and rebirth though some believe transitions between cycles are relatively uneventful In Hinduism the end time occurs when Kalki the final incarnation of Vishnu descends atop a white horse and brings an end to the current Kali Yuga completing a cycle that starts again with the regeneration of the world In Buddhism the Buddha predicted his teachings would be forgotten after 5 000 years followed by turmoil It says a bodhisattva named Maitreya will appear and rediscover the teachings of the Buddha Dharma and that the ultimate destruction of the world will then come through seven suns Since the development of the concept of deep time in the 18th century citation needed the calculation of the estimated age of planet Earth scientific discourse about end times has considered the ultimate fate of the universe Theories have included the Big Rip Big Crunch Big Bounce and Big Freeze heat death Social and scientific commentators also worry about global catastrophic risks and scenarios that could result in human extinction Contents 1 Etymology 2 Linear cosmology 2 1 Judaism 2 1 1 Kabbalah 2 2 Zoroastrianism 2 3 Gnosticism 2 4 Christianity 2 4 1 Date 2 4 2 Great Tribulation 2 4 3 Catholicism and Orthodoxy 2 4 4 Protestantism 2 4 4 1 Millennialists and Amillennialists 2 4 4 2 Fundamentalists 2 4 4 3 Adventists and Millerites 2 4 4 4 Preterists 2 4 4 5 Dispensationalists 2 4 5 Post tribulation pre millennialism 2 4 6 Specific prophetic movements 2 4 7 Restorationism Christian primitivism 2 4 7 1 Jehovah s Witnesses 2 4 7 2 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints 2 4 8 Realized eschatology 2 5 Islam 2 5 1 Sunni 2 5 2 Shia 2 5 3 Ahmadiyya 2 6 Bahaʼi Faith 2 7 Rastafari 3 Cyclic cosmology 3 1 Hinduism 3 2 Buddhism 3 2 1 Maitreya 3 2 2 Sermon of the Seven Suns 3 3 Norse mythology 4 No end times 4 1 Taoism 5 Analogies in science and philosophy 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEtymology EditThe word eschatology arises from the Ancient Greek term ἔsxatos eschatos meaning last and logy meaning the study of and first appeared in English around 1844 3 The Oxford English Dictionary defines eschatology as the part of theology concerned with death judgment and the final destiny of the soul and of humankind 4 Linear cosmology EditJudaism Edit Main article Jewish eschatology nbsp Scroll of Book of IsaiahThe main tenets of modern Jewish eschatology in no particular order include 5 God will redeem Israel from the captivity that began during the Babylonian Exile in a new Exodus God will return the Jewish people to the Land of Israel God will restore the House of David and the Temple in Jerusalem God will raise up a regent from the House of David the Jewish Messiah to lead the Jewish people and the world and to usher in an age of justice and peace the Messianic Age Non Jews will recognize that the God of Israel is the only true god God will resurrect the dead God will create a new heaven and earth 6 Judaism usually refers to the end times as the end of days aḥarit ha yamim אחרית הימים a phrase that appears several times in the Tanakh The end times are addressed in the Book of Daniel and in numerous other prophetic passages in the Hebrew scriptures and also in the Talmud particularly Tractate Avodah Zarah The idea of a Messianic Age an era of global peace and knowledge of the Creator has a prominent place in Jewish thought and is incorporated as part of the end of days A well known passage from the Book of Isaiah describes this future condition of the world They shall beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks nation will not lift sword against nation and they will no longer study warfare 2 4 5 Maimonides 1135 1204 further describes the Messianic Era in the Mishneh Torah And at that time there will be no hunger or war no jealousy or rivalry For the good will be plentiful and all delicacies available as dust The entire occupation of the world will be only to know God the people Israel will be of great wisdom they will perceive the esoteric truths and comprehend their Creator s wisdom as is the capacity of man As it is written Isaiah 11 9 For the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of God as the waters cover the sea 7 Kabbalah Edit In Kabbalah the Zohar 8 maintains that the seven days of the week based on the seven days of creation correspond to the seven millennia of creation The seventh day of the week the Shabbat day of rest corresponds to the seventh millennium the age of universal rest or the Messianic Era The seventh millennium begins with the year 6000 AM and is the latest time the Messiah can come A number of early and late Jewish scholars have written in support of this including the Ramban 9 Isaac Abarbanel 10 Abraham Ibn Ezra 11 Rabbeinu Bachya 12 the Vilna Gaon 13 the Lubavitcher Rebbe 14 the Ramchal 15 Aryeh Kaplan 16 and Rebbetzin Esther Jungreis 17 Zoroastrianism Edit Main article Frashokereti Frashokereti is the Zoroastrian doctrine of a final renovation of the universe when evil will be destroyed and everything else will then be in perfect unity with God Ahura Mazda The doctrinal premises are Good will eventually prevail over evil Creation initially perfectly good was subsequently corrupted by evil The world will ultimately be restored to the perfection it had at the time of creation The salvation for the individual depended on the sum of that person s thoughts words and deeds and there could be no intervention whether compassionate or capricious by any divine being to alter this Thus each human bears the responsibility for the fate of his own soul and simultaneously shares in the responsibility for the fate of the world 18 Zoroastrian eschatology is considered one of the oldest in recorded history The birth of its founder Zoroaster is unknown with scholarly dates ranging from 500 BCE to 1 500 BCE Pliny the Elder even suggests there were two Zoroasters 19 However with beliefs paralleling and possibly predating the framework of the major Abrahamic faiths a fully developed concept of the end of the world was not established in Zoroastrianism until 500 BCE The Bahman Yasht describes At the end of thy tenth hundredth winter the sun is more unseen and more spotted the year month and day are shorter and the earth is more barren and the crop will not yield the seed And men become more deceitful and more given to vile practices They will have no gratitude Honorable wealth will proceed to those of perverted faith And a dark cloud makes the whole sky night and it will rain more noxious creatures than water A battle between the righteous and wicked will be followed by the Frashokereti On earth the Saoshyant will arrive as the final savior of mankind and bring about the resurrection of the dead The yazatas Airyaman and Atar will melt the metal in the hills and mountains which will flow as lava across the earth and all mankind both the living and resurrected will be required to wade through it Ashavan will pass through the molten river as if it were warm milk but the sinful will burn It will then flow down to hell where it will annihilate Angra Mainyu and the last vestiges of wickedness The righteous will partake of the parahaoma which will confer immortality upon them Humanity will become like the Amesha Spentas living without food hunger thirst weapons or injury Bodies will become so light as to cast no shadow All humanity will speak a single language and belong to a single nation with no borders All will share a single purpose and goal joining with Ahura Mazda for a perpetual and divine exaltation 20 18 Gnosticism Edit The Gnostic codex On the Origin of the World possibly dating from near the end of the third century AD states that during what is called the consummation of the age the Sun and Moon will become dark as the stars change their ordinary course Kings will make war with each other and thunder will cause the world to be shaken The corrupt Archons will mourn The sea will be troubled by fighting of the kings who became drunk from the flaming sword Finally great thunder will come from Sophia the woman in the firmament above the forces of Chaos She will cast the corrupt gods into the abyss where they will fight each other until only their chief Yaldabaoth remains and destroys himself Next the heavens of the Archons will collapse on each other before the Earth sinks into the abyss Light will cover the darkness and eliminate it then form into something greater than anything that ever existed before The source of the darkness will dissolve and the deficiency will be taken from its root Those who were not perfected in the unconceived one will receive glories in their realms and kingdoms of the immortals but those who were will enter a kingless realm All will be judged according to their deeds and gnosis 21 Christianity Edit Main articles Second Coming Christian eschatology and Last Judgment This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is Too long details need to be merged down into Christian eschatology until this is 1 5 paragraphs with no subsections Please help improve this section if you can February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Christian eschatology is the study concerned with the ultimate destiny of the individual soul and of the entire created order based primarily upon biblical texts within the Old and New Testaments Christian eschatological research looks to study and discuss matters such as the nature of the divine and the divine nature of Jesus Christ death and the afterlife Heaven and Hell the Second Coming of Jesus the resurrection of the dead the rapture the Tribulation millennialism the end of the world the Last Judgment and the New Heaven and New Earth in the world to come Eschatological passages occur in many places in the Bible in both the Old and the New Testaments In the Old Testament apocalyptic eschatology can be found notably in Isaiah 24 27 Isaiah 56 66 Joel Zechariah 9 14 as well as in the closing chapters of Daniel and in Ezekiel 22 In the New Testament applicable passages include Matthew 24 Mark 13 the parable of The Sheep and the Goats and the Book of Revelation Revelation often occupies a central place in Christian eschatology The Second Coming of Christ is the central event in Christian eschatology within the broader context of the fullness of the Kingdom of God Most Christians believe that death and suffering will continue to exist until Christ s return There are however various views concerning the order and significance of other eschatological events The Book of Revelation stands at the core of much of Christian eschatology The study of Revelation is usually divided into four interpretative methodologies or hermeneutics The Futurist approach treats the Book of Revelation mostly as unfulfilled prophecy taking place in some yet undetermined future The Preterist approach interprets Revelation chiefly as having had prophetic fulfillment in the past principally in the events of the first century CE The Historicist approach places Revelation within the context of history identifying figures and passages in Revelation with major historical people and events This view was commonly held by the early Christian church then among the predecessors to Protestantism such as John Wycliffe 23 need quotation to verify Joachim of Fiore 24 and later by the majority of Protestant Reformers such as Martin Luther 25 26 John Calvin 27 and John Wesley 28 Further supporters of this view included Isaac Newton 29 1642 1727 among others 30 31 The Idealist approach sees the events of Revelation as neither past nor future actualities but as purely symbolic accounts dealing with the ongoing struggle and ultimate triumph of good over evil Date Edit See also Historical Jesus Apocalyptic prophet First century Christians believed Jesus would return during their lifetime When the converts of Paul in Thessalonica were persecuted by the Roman Empire they believed the end of days to be imminent 32 Scholarly consensus would hold that Jesus and following him the early Christians understood the endtime as being imminent 33 While some who believe in the literal interpretation of the Bible insist the prediction of dates or times is futile others believe Jesus foretold signs of the end of days The precise time however will come like a thief in the night 1 Thess 5 2 They may also refer to Matthew 24 36 in which Jesus is quoted as saying But concerning that day and hour no one knows not even the angels of heaven nor the Son but the Father only Further information Predictions and claims for the Second Coming Great Tribulation Edit Main articles Abomination of desolation and Great Tribulation In the New Testament Jesus refers to this period preceding the end times as the Great Tribulation Matthew 24 21 Affliction Mark 13 19 and days of vengeance Luke 21 22 The Book of Matthew describes the devastation When ye therefore shall see the abomination of desolation spoken of by Daniel the prophet stand in the holy place whoso readeth let him understand Then let them which be in Judaea flee into the mountains Let him which is on the housetop not come down Neither let him which is in the field return back to take his clothes and woe unto them that are with child For then shall be great tribulation such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time no nor ever shall be And except those days should be shortened there should no flesh be saved but for the elect s sake those days shall be shortened Matthew 24 15 22 The resulting chaos will affect pregnancies newborns and a scourge will spread throughout the flesh save for the elect The vivid imagery of this section is repeated closely in Mark 13 14 20 The Gospel of Luke describes a complete unraveling of the social fabric with widespread calamity and war Then he said to them Nation will rise against nation and kingdom against kingdom There will be great earthquakes and in various places famines and pestilences And there will be terrors and great signs from heaven But before all this they will lay their hands on you and persecute you delivering you up to the synagogues and prisons and you will be brought before kings and governors for my name s sake This will be your opportunity to bear witness Settle it therefore in your minds not to meditate beforehand how to answer for I will give you a mouth and wisdom which none of your adversaries will be able to withstand or contradict You will be delivered up even by parents and brothers and relatives and friends and some of you they will put to death You will be hated by all for my name s sake But not a hair of your head will perish By your endurance you will gain your lives But when you see Jerusalem surrounded by armies then know that its desolation has come near Then let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains and let those who are inside the city depart and let not those who are out in the country enter it for these are days of vengeance to fulfill all that is written Alas for women who are pregnant and for those who are nursing infants in those days For there will be great distress upon the earth and wrath against this people They will fall by the edge of the sword and be led captive among all nations and Jerusalem will be trampled underfoot by the Gentiles until the times of the Gentiles are fulfilled And there will be signs in sun and moon and stars and on the earth distress of nations in perplexity because of the roaring of the sea and the waves people fainting with fear and with foreboding of what is coming on the world For the powers of the heavens will be shaken And then they will see the Son of Man coming in a cloud with power and great glory Now when these things begin to take place straighten up and raise your heads because your redemption is drawing near And he told them a parable Look at the fig tree and all the trees As soon as they come out in leaf you see for yourselves and know that the summer is already near So also when you see these things taking place you know that the kingdom of God is near Truly I say to you this generation will not pass away until all has taken place Heaven and earth will pass away but my words will not pass away Luke 21 10 33 In the Book of Revelation the great tribulation Rev 7 14b refers to a time of affliction upon God s people Catholicism and Orthodoxy Edit The Profession of Faith addresses Catholic beliefs concerning the last days 34 Catholicism adheres to the amillennial school of thought promoted by Augustine of Hippo in his work The City of God Protestantism Edit Contemporary use of the term End Times has evolved from literal belief in Christian millennialism In this tradition Biblical apocalypse is believed to be imminent with various current events as omens of impending Armageddon These beliefs have been put forward by the Adventist movement Millerites Jehovah s Witnesses and dispensational premillennialists In 1918 a group of eight well known preachers produced the London Manifesto warning of an imminent second coming of Christ shortly after the 1917 liberation of Jerusalem by the British Millennialists and Amillennialists Edit This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Eschatology news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The Antichrist by Lucas Cranach the Elder 1521 Here the Antichrist is shown wearing the triple crown of the Roman papacy Protestants are divided between Millennialists and Amillennialists Millennialists concentrate on the issue of whether the true believers will see the Great Tribulation or be removed from it by what is referred to as a Pre Tribulation rapture Amillennialists believe the end times encompass the time from Christ s ascension to the last day and maintain that the mention of the thousand years in the Book of Revelation is meant to be taken metaphorically i e not literally a view which continues to cause divisions within Protestant Christianity There is a range of eschatological belief in Protestant Christianity Christian premillennialists who believe the end times are occurring now are usually specific about timelines that climax in the end of the world For some Israel the European Union or the United Nations are seen as major players whose roles were foretold in scripture Within dispensational premillennialist writing there is the belief that Christians will be summoned to Heaven by Christ at the rapture occurring before a Great Tribulation prophesied in Matthew 24 25 Mark 13 and Luke 21 The Tribulation is described in the Book of Revelation End times may also refer to the passing of an age or long period in the relationship between man and God 35 Adherents to this view cite the Second Epistle to Timothy and draw analogies to the late twentieth and early twenty first centuries Post Exilic Hebrew books of prophecy such as Daniel and Ezekiel are given new interpretations in this Christian tradition while apocalyptic forecasts appear in the Judeo Christian Sibylline Oracles which include the Book of Revelation ascribed to John the apocryphal Apocalypse of Peter and the Second Book of Esdras Fundamentalists Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Most fundamentalist Christians anticipate biblical prophecy to be literally fulfilled They see current wars natural disaster and famine as the birth pains which Jesus described in Matthew 24 7 8 and Mark 13 8 They believe mankind began in the garden of Eden and point to the Valley of Megiddo as the place where the current world system will terminate after which the Messiah will rule for 1 000 years Adventists and Millerites Edit This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Eschatology news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Icon of the Second Coming Greek ca 1700 A D Religious movements which expect that the second coming of Christ will be a cataclysmic event are generally called adventism These have arisen throughout the Christian era but were particularly common after the Protestant Reformation Emanuel Swedenborg considered the second coming to be symbolic and to have occurred in 1757 Along with others he developed a religious system around the second coming of Christ disclosed by new prophecy or special revelation not described in the Bible The Millerites are diverse religious groups which similarly rely upon a special gift of interpretation for predicting the second coming The difference between the 19th century Millerite and adventist movements and contemporary prophecy is that William Miller and his followers based on biblical interpretation predicted the time of the Second Coming to have occurred in 1844 Contemporary writing of end time has suggested the timetable will be triggered by future wars and moral catastrophe and that this time of tribulation is close at hand Seventh day Adventists believe biblical prophecy to foretell an end time scenario in which the United States works in conjunction with the Catholic Church to mandate worship on a day other than the true Sabbath Saturday as prescribed in the Ten Commandments Exodus 20 8 11 This will bring about a situation where one must choose for or against the Bible as the will of God 36 Preterists Edit Main article Preterism Another view of the end times is preterism It distinguishes the time of the end from the end of time Preterists believe the term last days or Time of the End refers to neither the last days of the Earth nor the last days of humankind but the end of the Old Covenant between God and Israel which according to preterism took place when the Temple in Jerusalem was destroyed in 70 CE Preterists believe that prophecies such as the Second Coming the desecration of the Jewish Temple the destruction of Jerusalem the rise of the Antichrist the Great Tribulation the advent of The Day of the Lord and a Final Judgment had been fulfilled when the Romans sacked Jerusalem and completely destroyed its Temple Proponents of full preterism do not believe in a coming resurrection of the dead They place this event as well as the Second Coming in the year 70 Advocates of partial preterism do believe in a coming resurrection Full preterists contend that partial preterists are merely futurists since they believe the Second Coming the Resurrection the Rapture and the Judgment are yet to come Many preterists believe first century Christians experienced the Rapture to rejoin the Christ According with Preterism s interpretation of end times many time passages in the New Testament foretell a Second Coming of Christ with last days to take place within the lifetimes of his disciples Matt 10 23 Matt 16 28 Matt 24 34 Matt 26 64 Rom 13 11 12 1 Cor 7 29 31 1 Cor 10 11 Phil 4 5 James 5 8 9 1 Pet 4 7 1 Jn 2 18 Dispensationalists Edit Main articles Dispensationalism and Christian Zionism Dispensationalism is an evangelical futurist Biblical interpretation that foresees a series of dispensations or periods in which God relates to human beings under different Biblical covenants The belief system is primarily rooted in the writings of John Nelson Darby and is premillennial in content The reestablishment of Israel in 1948 provided a major impetus to the dispensationalist belief system The wars of Israel after 1948 with its Arab neighbors provided further support according to John F Walvoord 37 After the Six Day War in 1967 and the Yom Kippur War in 1973 it seemed plausible to many Fundamentalist Christians in the 1970s that Middle East turmoil may well be leading up to the fulfillment of various Bible prophecies and to the Battle of Armageddon Members of the dispensationalist movement such as Hal Lindsey J Dwight Pentecost John Walvoord all of whom have Dallas Theological Seminary backgrounds and some other writers claimed further that the European Economic Community which preceded the European Union would become a United States of Europe which would in turn become a Revived Roman Empire ruled by the Antichrist The Revived Roman Empire also figured into the New Testament writers vision of the future The fact that in the early 1970s there were erroneously thought to be seven nations in the European Economic Community was held to be significant this aligned the Community with a seven headed beast mentioned in Revelation This specific prophecy has required revision but the idea of a Revived Roman Empire remains Dispensationalism in contrast to the Millerite Adventist movement had its beginning in the 19th century when John Nelson Darby founder of the Plymouth Brethren religious denomination incorporated into his system of Biblical interpretation a system of organizing Biblical time into a number of discrete dispensations each of which marks a separate covenant with God Darby s beliefs were widely publicized in Cyrus I Scofield s Scofield Reference Bible an annotated Bible that became popular in the United States Since the majority of the Biblical prophets were writing at a time when the Temple in Jerusalem was still functioning they wrote as if it would still be standing during the prophesied events According to preterism this was a fulfillment of the prophecies However according to Futurists their destruction in AD 70 put the prophetic timetable on hold Many such believers therefore anticipated the return of Jews to Israel and the reconstruction of the Temple before the Second Coming could occur 38 39 Post tribulation pre millennialism Edit A view of the Second Coming of Christ as held by post tribulational pre millennialists holds that the Church of Christ will have to undergo great persecution by being present during the great tribulation Specific prophetic movements Edit Main article Great Disappointment nbsp William Miller predicted the end of the world in 1843 known as the Great Disappointment In 1843 William Miller made the first of several predictions that the world would end in only a few months As his predictions did not come true referred to as the Great Disappointment followers of Miller went on to found separate groups the most successful of which is the Seventh day Adventist Church Members of the Bahaʼi Faith believe Miller s interpretation of signs and dates of the coming of Jesus were for the most part correct 40 They believe the fulfillment of biblical prophecies of the coming of Christ came through a forerunner of their own religion the Bab According to the Bab s words 4 April 1844 was the first day that the Spirit descended into his heart 41 His subsequent declaration to Mulla Husayn i Bushru i that he was the Promised One an event now commemorated by Bahaʼis as a major holy day took place on 23 May 1844 It was in October of that year that the Bab embarked on a pilgrimage to Mecca where he openly declared his claims to the Sharif of Mecca 42 43 The first news coverage of these events in the West was in 1845 by The Times 44 followed by others in 1850 in the United States 45 The first Bahaʼi to come to America was in 1892 42 Several Bahaʼi books and pamphlets make mention of the Millerites the prophecies used by Miller and the Great Disappointment most notably William Sears s Thief in the Night 46 47 48 Restorationism Christian primitivism Edit End times theology is also significant to restorationist Christian religions which consider themselves distinct from both Catholicism and Protestantism Jehovah s Witnesses Edit Main article Eschatology of Jehovah s Witnesses nbsp Former Watchtower headquarters in Brooklyn The society made a number of emphatic claims of impending last days and ensuing chaos between 1879 and 1924 The eschatology of Jehovah s Witnesses is central to their religious beliefs They believe Jesus Christ has been ruling in heaven as king since 1914 a date they believe was prophesied in the Bible and that after that time a period of cleansing occurred resulting in God s selection of the Bible Students associated with Charles Taze Russell as his people in 1919 They also believe that the destruction of those who reject the Bible s message 49 and thus willfully refuse to obey God 50 51 will shortly take place at Armageddon ensuring that the beginning of the new earthly society will be composed of willing subjects of that kingdom The religion s doctrines surrounding 1914 are the legacy of a series of emphatic claims regarding the years 1799 52 1874 52 1878 53 1914 54 1918 55 and 1925 56 made in the Watch Tower Society s publications between 1879 and 1924 Claims about the significance of those years including the presence of Jesus Christ the beginning of the last days the destruction of worldly governments and the earthly resurrection of Jewish patriarchs were successively abandoned 57 In 1922 the society s principal magazine The Watchtower described its chronology as no stronger than its weakest link but also claimed the chronological relationships to be of divine origin and divinely corroborated in a class by itself absolutely and unqualifiedly correct 58 and indisputable facts 52 and repudiation of Russell s teachings was described as equivalent to a repudiation of the Lord 59 The Watch Tower Society has acknowledged its early leaders promoted incomplete even inaccurate concepts 60 The Governing Body of Jehovah s Witnesses says that unlike Old Testament prophets its interpretations of the Bible are not inspired or infallible 61 62 63 It says that Bible prophecies can be fully understood only after their fulfillment citing examples of biblical figures who did not understand the meaning of prophecies they received Watch Tower Society literature often cites Proverbs 4 18 The path of the righteous ones is like the bright light that is getting lighter and lighter until the day is firmly established NWT to support their view that there would be an increase in knowledge during the time of the end and that this increase in knowledge needs adjustments Watch Tower Society publications also say that unfulfilled expectations are partly due to eagerness for God s Kingdom and that they do not call their core beliefs into question 64 65 66 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Edit Main articles Second Coming LDS Church and Apocalyptic beliefs among Latter day Saints Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church believe there will be a Second Coming of Jesus to the earth at some time in the future The LDS Church and its leaders do not make any predictions of the date of the Second Coming According to church doctrine the true gospel will be taught in all parts of the world prior to the Second Coming 67 They also believe there will be increasing war earthquakes hurricanes and man made disasters prior to the Second Coming 68 Disasters of all kind will happen before Christ comes 69 Upon the return of Jesus Christ all people will be resurrected the righteous in a first resurrection and the unrighteous in a second later resurrection Christ shall reign for a period of 1000 years after which the Final Judgement will occur Realized eschatology Edit Main article Realized eschatology Realized eschatology is a Christian eschatological theory that holds that the eschatological passages in the New Testament do not refer to the future but instead refer to the ministry of Jesus and his lasting legacy 70 71 Islam Edit Main article Islamic eschatology Further information Akhirah and Resurrection in Islam nbsp Diagram of Plain of Assembly Ard al Hashr on the Day of Judgment from an autograph manuscript of Futuhat al Makkiyya by Sufi mystic and Muslim philosopher Ibn Arabi ca 1238 Shown are the Arsh Throne of God pulpits for the righteous al Aminun seven rows of angels Gabriel al Ruh A raf the Barrier the Pond of Abundance al Maqam al Mahmud the Praiseworthy Station where the Prophet Muhammad will stand to intercede for the faithful Mizan the Scale As Sirat the Bridge Jahannam Hell and Marj al Jannat Meadow of Paradise 72 Muslims believe there are three periods before the Day of Judgment with some debate as to whether the periods could overlap 73 74 75 Sunni Edit Sunnis believe the dead will then stand in a grand assembly awaiting a scroll detailing their righteous deeds sinful acts and ultimate judgment note 1 76 Prophet Muhammad will be the first to be resurrected 77 Punishments will include adhab or severe pain and embarrassment and khizy or shame 78 There will also be a punishment of the grave between death and the resurrection 79 Several Sunni scholars explain some of the signs metaphorically The signs of the coming end time are divided into major and minor signs Following the second period the third is said to be marked by the ten major signs known as alamatu s sa ah al kubra The major signs of the end note 2 They are as follows A huge black cloud of smoke dukhan will cover the earth note 3 Three sinkings of the earth one in the East note 3 One sinking of the earth in the West note 3 One sinking of the earth in Arabia note 3 The false messiah anti Christ Masih ad Dajjal shall appear with great powers as a one eyed man with his right eye blind and deformed like a grape Although believers will not be deceived he will claim to be God to hold the keys to heaven and hell and will lead many astray 80 In reality his heaven is hell and his hell is heaven The Dajjal will be followed by seventy thousand Jews of Isfahan wearing Persian shawls note 4 The return of Isa Jesus from the fourth sky to kill Dajjal 81 Ya jooj and Ma jooj Gog and Magog a Japhetic tribe of vicious beings who had been imprisoned by Dhul Qarnayn will break out They will ravage the earth drink all the water of Lake Tiberias and kill all believers in their way Isa Imam Al Mahdi and the believers with them will go to the top of a mountain and pray for the destruction of Gog and Magog God eventually will send disease and worms to wipe them out note 5 82 The sun will rise from the West 83 84 85 The Dabbat al ard or Beast of the Earth will come out of the ground to talk to people note 6 The second blow of the trumpet will be sounded the dead will return to life and a fire will come out of Yemen that shall gather all to Mahshar Al Qiy amah The Gathering for Judgment 86 Shia Edit Many of the signs shown above are shared by both Sunni and Shia beliefs with some exceptions e g Imam Al Mahdi defeating Al Masih ad Dajjal Concepts and terminology in Shia eschatology include Mi ad the Occultation Al Yamani and Sufyani In Twelver Shia narrations about the last days the literature largely revolves around Muhammad al Mahdi who is considered by many beliefs to be the true twelfth appointed successor to Prophet Muhammad Muhammad al Mahdi will help mankind against the deception by the Dajjal who will try to get people in to a new world religion which is called the great deception 87 need quotation to verify Ahmadiyya Edit Ahmadiyya is considered distinct from mainstream Islam In its writing the present age has been witness to the evil of man and wrath of God with war and natural disaster 88 Ghulam Ahmad is seen as the promised Messiah and the Mahdi fulfilling Islamic and Biblical prophecies as well as scriptures of other religions such as Hinduism His teaching will establish spiritual reform and establish an age of peace This will continue for a thousand years and will unify mankind under one faith 89 Ahmadis believe that despite harsh and strong opposition and discrimination they will eventually be triumphant and their message vindicated both by Muslims and non Muslims alike Ahmadis also incorporate the eschatological views from other religions into their doctrine and believe Mirza Ghulam Ahmed falls into this sequence 90 Bahaʼi Faith Edit See also Bahaʼi Faith on life after death and Bahaʼi teachings nbsp Baha i House of Worship Delhi IndiaIn the Bahaʼi Faith creation has neither a beginning nor an end 91 Bahaʼis regard the eschatologies of other religions as symbolic In Bahaʼi belief human time is marked by a series of progressive revelations in which successive messengers or prophets come from God 92 The coming of each of these messengers is seen as the day of judgment to the adherents of the previous religion who may choose to accept the new messenger and enter the heaven of belief or denounce the new messenger and enter the hell of denial In this view the terms heaven and hell become symbolic terms for a person s spiritual progress and their nearness to or distance from God 92 In Bahaʼi belief Baha u llah 1817 1892 the founder of the Bahaʼi Faith was the Second Coming of Christ and also the fulfilment of previous eschatological expectations of Islam and other major religions 93 The inception of the Bahaʼi Faith coincides with Great Disappointment of the Millerite prophesy in 1844 ʻAbdu l Baha taught that Armageddon would begin in 1914 94 but without a clear indication of its end date 95 Bahaʼis believe that the mass martyrdom anticipated during the End Times had already passed within the historical context of the Bahaʼi Faith 96 97 Bahaʼis expect their faith to be eventually embraced by the masses of the world ushering in a golden age Rastafari Edit Main article Rastafari movement nbsp Haile Selassie I is viewed as god incarnate in Rastafari Rastafari have a unique interpretation of end times based on the Old Testament and the Book of Revelation They believe Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie I to be God incarnate the King of kings and Lord of lords mentioned in Revelation 5 5 They saw the crowning of Selassie as the second coming and the Second Italo Ethiopian War as fulfillment of Revelation There is also the expectation that Selassie will return for a day of judgment and bring home the lost children of Israel which in Rastafari refers to those taken from Africa through the slave trade There will then be an era of peace and harmony at Mount Zion in Africa 98 Cyclic cosmology EditHinduism Edit Main articles Hindu eschatology and Kalki Further information Hindu units of time The Vaishnavite tradition links contemporary Hindu eschatology to the figure of Kalki the tenth and last avatar of Vishnu Many Hindus believe that before the age draws to a close Kalki will reincarnate as Shiva and simultaneously dissolve and regenerate the universe In contrast Shaivites hold the view that Shiva is incessantly destroying and creating the world 99 In Hindu eschatology time is cyclic and consists of kalpas Each lasts 4 1 8 2 billion years which is a period of one full day and night for Brahma who will be alive for 311 trillion 40 billion years Within a kalpa there are periods of creation preservation and decline After this larger cycle all of creation will contract to a singularity citation needed and then again will expand from that single point as the ages continue in a religious fractal pattern 75 need quotation to verify Within the current kalpa there are four epochs that encompass the cycle They progress from a beginning of complete purity to a descent into total corruption The last of the four ages is Kali Yuga which most Hindus believe is the current time characterized by quarrel hypocrisy impiety violence and decay The four pillars of dharma will be reduced to one with truth being all that remains 100 As written in the Gita Yada yada hi dharmasya glanirbhavati BharataAbhyutthanam adharmasya tadatmanam sṛjamyaham Whenever there is decay of righteousness in Bharata Aryavarta And a rise of unrighteousness then I manifest Myself 101 At this time of chaos the final avatar Kalki endowed with eight superhuman faculties will appear on a white horse Kalki will amass an army to establish righteousness upon the earth and leave the minds of the people as pure as crystal At the completion of Kali Yuga the next Yuga Cycle will begin with a new Satya Yuga in which all will once again be righteous with the reestablishment of dharma This in turn will be followed by epochs of Treta Yuga Dvapara Yuga and again another Kali Yuga This cycle will then repeat until the larger cycle of existence under Brahma returns to the singularity citation needed and a new universe is born 98 The cycle of birth growth decay and renewal at the individual level finds its echo in the cosmic order yet is affected by vagueries of divine intervention in Vaishnavite belief Buddhism Edit Main article Buddhist eschatology This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is Too long details need to be merged down into Buddhist eschatology until this is 1 5 paragraphs with no subsections Please help improve this section if you can February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message There is no classic account of beginning or end 102 in Buddhism Masao Abe attributes this to the absence of God 103 History is embedded in the continuing process of samsara or the beginningless and endless cycles of birth death rebirth 104 Buddhists believe there is an end to things 105 but it is not final because they are bound to be born again However the writers of Mahayana Buddhist scriptures establish a specific end time account in Buddhist tradition this describes the return of Maitreya Buddha who would bring about an end to the world 106 This constitutes one of the two major branches of Buddhist eschatology with the other being the Sermon of the Seven Suns End time in Buddhism could also involve a cultural eschatology covering final things which include the idea that Sakyamuni Buddha s dharma will also come to an end 107 Maitreya Edit Main article Maitreya The Buddha described his teachings disappearing five thousand years from when he preached them 108 corresponding approximately to the year 4300 since he was born in 623 BCE 109 At this time knowledge of dharma will be lost as well The last of his relics will be gathered in Bodh Gaya and cremated citation needed There will be a new era in which the next Buddha Maitreya will appear but it will be preceded by the degeneration of human society This will be a period of greed lust poverty ill will violence murder impiety physical weakness sexual depravity and societal collapse and even the Buddha himself will be forgotten 75 This will be followed by the coming of Maitreya when the teachings of dharma are forgotten Maitreya was the first Bodhisattva around whom a cult developed in approximately the third century CE 110 The earliest known mention of Maitreya occurs in the Cakavatti or Sihanada Sutta in Digha Nikaya 26 of the Pali Canon In it Gautama Buddha predicted his teachings of dharma would be forgotten after 5 000 years At that period brethren there will arise in the world an Exalted One named Maitreya Fully Awakened abounding in wisdom and goodness happy with knowledge of the worlds unsurpassed as a guide to mortals willing to be led a teacher for gods and men an Exalted One a Buddha even as I am now He by himself will thoroughly know and see as it were face to face this universe with Its worlds of the spirits Its Brahmas and Its Maras and Its world of recluses and Brahmins of princes and peoples even as I now by myself thoroughly know and see them Digha Nikaya 26 The text then foretells the birth of Maitreya Buddha in the city of Ketumati in present day Benares whose king will be the Cakkavatti Sankha Sankha will live in the former palace of King Mahapanada and will become a renunciate who follows Maitreya 111 112 In Mahayana Buddhism Maitreya will attain bodhi in seven days the minimum period by virtue of his many lifetimes of preparation Once Buddha he will rule over the Ketumati Pure Land an earthly paradise sometimes associated with the Indian city of Varanasi or Benares in present day Uttar Pradesh In Mahayana Buddhism the Buddha presides over a land of purity For example Amitabha presides over Sukhavati more popularly known as the Western Paradise 113 nbsp Bodhisattva Maitreya from the second century Gandharan art periodA notable teaching he will rediscover is that of the ten non virtuous deeds killing stealing sexual misconduct lying divisive speech abusive speech idle speech covetousness harmful intent and wrong views The ten virtuous deeds will replace them with the abandonment of each of these practices Edward Conze in his Buddhist Scriptures 1959 gives an account of Maitreya The Lord replied Maitreya the best of men will then leave the Tuṣita heavens and go for his last rebirth As soon as he is born he will walk seven steps forward and where he puts down his feet a jewel or a lotus will spring up He will raise his eyes to the ten directions and will speak these words This is my last birth There will be no rebirth after this one Never will I come back here but all pure I shall win Nirvana Buddhist Scriptures 114 Maitreya currently resides in Tushita but will come to Jambudvipa when needed most as successor to the historic Sakyamuni Buddha Maitreya will achieve complete enlightenment during his lifetime and following this reawakening he will bring back the timeless teaching of dharma to this plane and rediscover enlightenment 115 The Arya Maitreya Mandala founded in 1933 by Lama Anagarika Govinda is based on the idea of Maitreya Maitreya eschatology forms the central canon of the White Lotus Society a religious and political movement which emerged in Yuan China 116 It later branched into the Chinese underground criminal organization known as the Triads which exist today as an international underground criminal network citation needed Note that no description of Maitreya occurs in any other sutta in the canon casting doubt as to the authenticity of the scripture In addition sermons of the Buddha normally are in response to a question or in a specific context but this sutta has a beginning and an ending and its content is quite different from the others This has led some to conclude that the whole sutta is apocryphal or tampered with 115 Sermon of the Seven Suns Edit In his Sermon of the Seven Suns in the Pali Canon the Buddha describes the ultimate fate of the Earth in an apocalypse characterized by the consequent appearance of seven suns in the sky each causing progressive ruin until the planet is destroyed All things are impermanent all aspects of existence are unstable and non eternal Beings will become so weary and disgusted with the constituent things that they will seek emancipation from them more quickly There will come a season O monks when after hundreds of thousands of years rains will cease All seedlings all vegetation all plants grasses and trees will dry up and cease to be There comes another season after a great lapse of time when a second sun will appear Now all brooks and ponds will dry up vanish cease to be Anguttara Nikăya VII 6 2 Pali Canon 75 The canon goes on to describe the progressive destruction of each sun The third sun will dry the Ganges River and other rivers whilst the fourth will cause the lakes to evaporate the fifth will dry the oceans Later Again after a vast period of time a sixth sun will appear and it will bake the Earth even as a pot is baked by a potter All the mountains will reek and send up clouds of smoke After another great interval a seventh sun will appear and the Earth will blaze with fire until it becomes one mass of flame The mountains will be consumed a spark will be carried on the wind and go to the worlds of God Thus monks all things will burn perish and exist no more except those who have seen the path Anguttara Nikăya VII 6 2 Pali Canon 75 The sermon completes with the Earth immersed into an extensive holocaust The Pali Canon does not indicate when this will happen relative to Maitreya 75 Norse mythology Edit Main article Ragnarok 1905 Paintings by Emil Doepler nbsp Odin fighting his old nemesis Fenrir nbsp Ragnarok after Surtr has engulfed the world with fire Norse mythology depicts the end of days as Ragnarok an Old Norse term translatable as twilight of the gods It will be heralded by a devastation known as Fimbulvetr which will seize Midgard in cold and darkness The sun and moon will disappear from the sky and poison will fill the air The dead will rise from the ground and there will be widespread despair There follows a battle between on the one hand the Gods with the AEsir Vanir 117 and Einherjar led by Odin and on the other hand forces of Chaos including the fire giants and jotunn led by Loki In the fighting Odin will be swallowed whole by his old nemesis Fenrir 118 The god Freyr fights Surtr but loses Vidarr son of Odin will then avenge his father by ripping Fenrir s jaws apart and stabbing the wolf in the heart with his spear The serpent Jormungandr will open its gaping maw and be met in combat by Thor Thor also a son of Odin will defeat the serpent only to take nine steps afterwards before collapsing in his own death 119 After this people will flee their homes as the sun blackens and the earth sinks into the sea The stars will vanish steam will rise and flames will touch the heavens This conflict will result in the deaths of most of the major Gods and forces of Chaos Finally Surtr will fling fire across the nine worlds The ocean will then completely submerge Midgard 120 After the cataclysm the world will resurface new and fertile and the surviving Gods will meet Baldr another son of Odin will be reborn in the new world according to Voluspa The two human survivors Lif and Lifthrasir will then repopulate this new earth 121 No end times EditTaoism Edit Main article Taoist eschatology The Taoist faith is not concerned with what came before or after life knowing only their own being in the Tao The philosophy is that people come and go just like mountains trees and stars but Tao will go on for time immemorial citation needed Analogies in science and philosophy Edit nbsp A diagram showing the life cycle of the SunMain article Global catastrophic risk Researchers in futures studies and transhumanists investigate how the accelerating rate of scientific progress may lead to a technological singularity in the future that would profoundly and unpredictably change the course of human history and result in Homo sapiens no longer being the dominant life form on Earth 122 123 improper synthesis Occasionally the term physical eschatology is applied to the long term predictions of astrophysics about the future of Earth and ultimate fate of the universe 124 125 The Sun will turn into a red giant in approximately 6 billion years Life on Earth will become impossible due to a rise in temperature long before the planet is actually swallowed up by the Sun 126 Even later the Sun will become a white dwarf See also Edit nbsp Philosophy portal nbsp Religion portal nbsp World portalAncient Aztec eschatology Cosmogony Eschatology religious movement Four kingdoms of Daniel Gotterdammerung Immanentize the eschaton Last Roman Emperor List of conspiracy theories List of dates predicted for apocalyptic events List of eschatological topics Millenarianism Messianism The Pocket Guide to the Apocalypse Ussher chronology Whore of BabylonNotes Edit Quran 74 38 Sahih Muslim Book 41 Hadith 6931 a b c d Sahih Muslim Muslim Book 41 Hadith 7034 Quran 21 96 Quran 27 82References Edit Carroll 2000 p 420 BBC Religions Christianity End Times BBC Online 2011 07 19 Retrieved 2017 11 10 Dictionary Definition of Eschatology Webster s Online Dictionary Eschatology n def a Oxford English Dictionary Retrieved 2016 05 18 a b Jewish Eschatology Jewish Encyclopedia Retrieved 1 May 2012 Ginzburg Yitsḥaḳ 2007 Kabbalah and Meditation for the Nations GalEinai Publication Society ISBN 978 965 7146 12 5 Mishneh Torah Laws of Kings 12 5 Zohar Vayera 119a Ramban on Genesis 2 3 Abarbanel on Genesis 2 Ramban quoting Ibn Ezra at Leviticus 25 2 Bachya on Genesis 2 3 Safra D Tzniusa Ch 5 Sefer HaSichos 5750 254 Derech Hashem 4 7 2 Page 318 The Real Messiah Kaplan Aryeh 1 August 1991 The Aryeh Kaplan Anthology Illuminating Expositions on Jewish Thought and Practice by a Revered Teacher Mesorah Publications ISBN 9780899068664 Retrieved 2 September 2015 Fleisher Malkah 27 October 2008 It s Erev Shabbos of the World Jewish World News Israel National News a b Boyce Mary 1979 Zoroastrians Their Religious Beliefs and Practices London Routledge amp Kegan Paul pp 27 29 ISBN 978 0 415 23902 8 West Martin Litchfield 2013 Hellenica Volume III Philosophy Music and Metre Literary Byways Varia OUP Oxford pp 89 109 ISBN 978 0 19 960503 3 Taylor Richard P 2000 Death and Afterlife A Cultural Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 312 Marvin Meyer Willis Barnstone 2009 On the Origin of the World The Gnostic Bible Shambhala Retrieved 2022 02 01 Bauckham R J 1996 Apocalyptic In D R W Wood I H Marshall A R Millard J I Packer amp D J Wiseman Eds New Bible Dictionary 3rd ed p 53 Leicester England Downers Grove IL InterVarsity Press Tyndale William Parable of the Wicked Mammon c 1526 facsimile copy of later printing no ISBN Benediction Classics 2008 at pages 4 5 Smith John Howard 2021 02 05 A Dream of the Judgment Day American Millennialism and Apocalypticism 1620 1890 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 753375 8 Luther Martin Sermon for the Twenty Fifth Sunday after Trinity Matthew 24 15 28 Church Postil 1525 J H Merle D aubigne s History of the Reformation of the Sixteen Century book vi chapter xii p 215 Calvin John Lecture Fifty Second Commentary on Daniel Volume Explanatory Notes on the Whole Bible Matthew Matthew Chapter 24 www sacred texts com All Roads Lead to Rome by Michael de Semlyen Dorchestor House Publications p 205 1991 Gregg Steven 1997 Revelation Four Views Nashville Tennessee Thomas Nelson Publishing p 34 ISBN 978 0840721280 Elliott Edward Bishop 1862 Horae Apocalypticae Vol IV 5th ed London Seely Jackson and Halliday pp 562 563 See 2 Thessalonians chapter 2 and Son of perdition Collins John Boyer Paul Tabor James Fredriksen Paula Apocalypticism Explained Apocalypse FRONTLINE PBS www pbs org Retrieved 2020 09 16 An explanation of these beliefs appears on the Holy See s website Chang Soppe Seok Lyun 2014 God s Mystery That Is Christ WestBow Press ISBN 978 1490815947 How Seventh day Adventists View Roman Catholicism Archived from the original on 6 December 2006 Retrieved 4 July 2009 Main Statements of Belief from the official Adventist Church website John F Walvoord 1990 1974 Armageddon Oil and the Middle East Crisis Proclamation of the 3rd International Zionist Congress Christian Action For Israel 25 February 1996 Archived from the original on 19 July 2012 Retrieved 27 November 2012 The Untold Story The Role of Christian Zionists in the Establishment of Modern day Israel Rabbi Jamie Cowen 13 July 2002 Retrieved 27 November 2012 Momen Moojan 1992 Fundamentalism and Liberalism towards an understanding of the dichotomy Bahaʼi Studies Review 2 1 Momen Moojan 2007 Messianic Concealment and Theophanic Disclosure PDF Online Journal of Bahaʼi Studies 1 71 88 ISSN 1177 8547 Retrieved 14 April 2012 a b Cameron Glenn Momen Wendi 1996 A Basic Bahaʼi Chronology Oxford UK George Ronald pp 15 20 125 ISBN 0 85398 404 2 via Baha i Library Online Shoghi Effendi Rabbani God Passes By p 9 Momen Moojan 1999 Early Western Accounts of the Babi and Bahaʼi Faiths Encyclopedia articles Baha i Library Online Retrieved 2 February 2012 Early mention of Babis in western newspapers summer 1850 Historical documents and Newspaper articles Bahaʼi Library Online 17 September 2010 Retrieved 14 April 2012 Sears William 1961 Thief in the Night London George Ronald ISBN 0 85398 008 X Bowers Kenneth E 2004 God Speaks Again An Introduction to the Bahaʼi Faith Bahaʼi Publishing Trust p 12 ISBN 1 931847 12 6 Motlagh Hushidar Hugh 1992 I Shall Come Again The Great Disappointment ed Mt Pleasant MI Global Perspective pp 205 213 ISBN 0 937661 01 5 The House to House Ministry Why Important Now The Watchtower 15 July 2008 pp 5 6 You Can Live Forever in Paradise on Earth Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1989 p 155 Revelation Its Grand Climax at Hand Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1988 p 6 a b c The Watchtower 1 March 1922 page 73 The indisputable facts therefore show that the time of the end began in 1799 that the Lord s second presence began in 1874 Our Faith PDF The Herald of the Morning September 1875 p 52 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 05 12 The Watchtower July 15 1894 p 1677 Archived April 1 2019 at the Wayback Machine We see no reason for changing the figures nor could we change them if we would They are we believe God s dates not ours But bear in mind that the end of 1914 is not the date for the beginning but for the end of the time of trouble 1 September 1916 The Watchtower pages 264 265 Archived 2009 07 13 at the Wayback Machine Millions Now Living Will Never Die 1920 page 97 Based upon the argument heretofore set forth then that the old order of things the old world is ending and is therefore passing away and that the new order is coming in and that 1925 shall mark the resurrection of the faithful worthies of old and the beginning of reconstruction it is reasonable to conclude that millions of people now on the earth will be still on the earth in 1925 Then based upon the promises set forth in the divine Word we must reach the positive and indisputable conclusion that millions now living will never die Holden Andrew 2002 Jehovah s Witnesses Portrait of a Contemporary Religious Movement Routledge p 1 ISBN 0 415 26609 2 The Strong Cable of Chronology Watch Tower 15 July 1922 page 217 The chronology of present truth is to begin with a string of dates Thus far it is a chain and no stronger than its weakest link There exist however well established relationships among the dates of present truth chronology These internal connections of the dates impart a much greater strength than can be found in other secular archeological chronologies Some of them are of so remarkable a character as clearly to indicate this chronology is not of man but of God Being of divine origin and divinely corroborated present truth chronology stands in a class by itself absolutely and unqualifiedly correct The Watchtower 1 May 1922 page 132 To abandon or repudiate the Lord s chosen instrument means to abandon or repudiate the Lord himself upon the principle that he who rejects the servant sent by the Master thereby rejects the Master Brother Russell was the Lord s servant Then to repudiate him and his work is equivalent to a repudiation of the Lord upon the principle heretofore announced Jehovah s Witnesses Proclaimers of God s Kingdom Watch Tower Society 1993 chapter 10 Revelation Its Grand Climax Watch Tower Bible amp Tract Society 1988 page 9 False Prophets Reasoning From the Scriptures Watchtower Bible and Tract Society p 137 Have not Jehovah s Witnesses made errors in their teachings To Whom Shall We Go but Jesus Christ Watchtower 1 March 1979 p 23 the faithful and discreet slave has alerted all of God s people to the sign of the times indicating the nearness of God s Kingdom rule In this regard however it must be observed that this faithful and discreet slave was never inspired never perfect Those writings by certain members of the slave class that came to form the Christian part of God s Word were inspired and infallible the bible but that is not true of other writings since Why have there been changes over the years in the teachings of Jehovah s Witnesses Jehovah s Witnesses Reasoning From the Scriptures 1989 Watchtower Bible and Tract Society page 205 Allow No Place for the Devil The Watchtower 15 March 1986 page 19 Keep in Step With Jehovah s Organization Watchtower 15 January 2001 page 18 Matthew 24 14 KJV Doctrine and Covenants 45 26 doctrine and covenants 45 26 George Eldon Ladd Donald Alfred Hagner 1993 A Theology of the New Testament Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 56 ISBN 0802806805 Archived from the original on 2019 06 24 Retrieved 2019 06 03 McKim Donald K 2014 Westminster Dictionary of Theological Terms 2nd ed Louisville KY Presbyterian Publishing p 106 ISBN 978 1611643862 Retrieved April 3 2017 Begley Wayne E The Garden of the Taj Mahal A Case Study of Mughal Architectural Planning and Symbolism in Wescoat James L Wolschke Bulmahn Joachim 1996 Mughal Gardens Sources Places Representations and Prospects Dumbarton Oaks Washington D C ISBN 0884022358 pp 229 231 Yahya Harun 1 January 2008 Clarity Amidst Confusion Imam Mahdi and the End of Time Global Publishing Kindle Edition p 64 Richardson Joel 7 April 2006 Antichrist Islam s Awaited Messiah Pleasant Word A Division of WinePress Publishing p 284 ISBN 9781414104409 a b c d e f Hooper Rev Richard 20 April 2011 End of Days Predictions of the End From Ancient Sources Sedona AZ p 156 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link permanent dead link Muhammad S Umar 1999 Muslims Eschatological Discourses on Colonialism in Northern Nigeria Journal of the American Academy of Religion Oxford University Press 67 1 59 84 doi 10 1093 jaarel 67 1 59 JSTOR 1466033 Esposito John 2003 The Oxford Dictionary of Islam Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 512558 4 p 264 Reward and Punishment Encyclopedia of the Qur an 2005 Leor Halevi https www nytimes com 2007 05 04 opinion 04iht edhalevi 1 5565834 html Christine Huda Dodge 18 April 2009 The Everything Understanding Islam Book A complete guide to Muslim beliefs practices and culture F W Media p 182 ISBN 9781605507248 permanent dead link John L Esposito 13 July 2011 What Everyone Needs To Know About Islam Oxford University Press USA p 28 ISBN 9780199794133 Javed Ahmad Ghamidi 2009 Islam A Concise Introduction p 46 permanent dead link طلوع الشمس من مغربها Rising of the sun from the west in Arabic Alwi Shihab 2011 Examining Islam in the West Gramedia Pustaka Utama p 16 ISBN 9789792267716 طلوع الشمس من مغربها Rising of the sun from the west in Arabic 26 March 2018 Yahya Harun 1 January 2008 Clarity Amidst Confusion Imam Mahdi and the End of Time Global Publishing Kindle Edition p 64 The Wrath of Yeshua Page xxxv Leo Paul Giampietro 2008 Prophecies of the Promised Messiah www aaiil org PDF Archived from the original PDF on 26 May 2011 Retrieved 27 March 2010 The Review of Religions January 2009 Vol 104 issue 1 pp 18 22 HFaith and Philosophy of Islam Page 180 Shamim Akhter 2009 Smith Peter 2008 An Introduction to the Baha i Faith Cambridge University Press p 112 ISBN 978 0 521 86251 6 a b Smith Peter 2000 Eschatology A concise encyclopedia of the Bahaʼi Faith Oxford Oneworld Publications pp 133 134 ISBN 1 85168 184 1 Buck Christopher 2004 The Eschatology of Globalization The Multiple Messiahship of Baha u llah Revisited pp 143 178 In Sharon Moshe ed Studies in Modern Religions Religious Movements and the Babi Baha i Faiths Boston Brill ISBN 9004139044 Abdu l Baha 1959 Tablets of the Divine Plan First written Apr 1 1916 ed Wilmette Illinois Baha i Publishing Trust p 45 Western States Msg 1 Universal House of Justice October 1985 The Promise of World Peace Haifa Israel Baha i World Center p 1 ISBN 085398 216 3 Smith P 1999 A Concise Encyclopedia of the Baha i Faith Oxford UK Oneworld Publications pp 98 amp 247 248 ISBN 1 85168 184 1 Stephen Lambden Catastrophe Armageddon and Millennium some aspects of the Babi Baha i exegesis of apocalyptic symbolism Bahai library com Retrieved 12 November 2011 a b Browne Sylvia Harrison Lindsay 2008 End of Days Predictions and Prophecies About the End of the World Penguin Publishing Group ISBN 978 1 4406 3141 2 BBC Shiva bbc co ke BBC Retrieved 23 March 2021 Vishnu Purana Astrojyoti com Retrieved 21 November 2011 The Mahabharata Book 6 Bhagavad Gita Chapter IV Section 7 Sacred texts com 12 November 2012 Retrieved 12 November 2012 Lopez Donald S 2001 The Story of Buddhism New York Harper p 33 Unlike so many other traditions the Buddhist scriptures contain no classic account of an end time an apocalypse an eschaton quoted in Netland Harold Yandell Keith 2009 The Dharma or the Gospel Buddhism A Christian Exploration and Appraisal Downers Grove Illinois InterVarsity Press p 196 ISBN 9780830838554 Retrieved 7 July 2019 Abe Masao 1985 Buddhist Nirvana Its Significance in Contemporary Thought and Life In LaFleur William R ed Zen and Western Thought Library of Philosophy and Religion reprint ed Basingstoke Macmillan p 214 ISBN 9781349069941 Retrieved 7 July 2019 Since there is no God in Buddhism there is no creation or last judgment but rather Emptiness Thus for Buddhism history has neither beginning nor end Netland Harold Yandell Keith 2009 Buddhism A Christian Exploration and Appraisal Downers Grove IL IVP Academic p 196 ISBN 9780830838554 Vetter Tilmann 1988 The Ideas and Meditative Practices of Early Buddhism Brill Birx H James 2009 Encyclopedia of Time Science Philosophy Theology amp Culture Thousand Oaks CA SAGE p 409 ISBN 9781412941648 Bryant Clifton Peck Dennis 15 July 2009 Encyclopedia of Death amp Human Experience 1 Thousand Oaks CA SAGE p 422 ISBN 9781412951784 Johnston F S S James 1889 Report of the Centenary Conference on the Protestant Missions of the World Held in Exeter Hall June 9th 19th London 1888 J Nisbet amp Company ISBN 978 0 8370 6891 6 Vidyabhusana Satis Chandra 1988 A History of Indian Logic Ancient Mediaeval and Modern Schools Motilal Banarsidass Publishe ISBN 978 81 208 0565 1 Maitreya Britannica Encyclopedia 20 July 2023 Pitaka Sutta Nikaya Digha Canon Pali Cakkavatti Sutta The Wheel turning Emperor Basic Buddhism p 26 Archived from the original on 5 May 2012 Vipassana info Pali Proper Names Dictionary Metteyya 彌勒上生經 與 彌勒下生經 簡介 PDF Retrieved 27 November 2012 Conze Edward 30 July 1959 Buddhist Scriptures Penguin Classics pp 256 ISBN 0140440887 a b Richard Gombrich Theravada Buddhism A Social History from Ancient Benares to Modern Colombo Routledge and Kegan Paul 1988 pages 83 85 Mote Frederick W 2003 Imperial China 900 1800 Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01212 7 Dan The Aesir Vanir War Norse Mythology for Smart People Retrieved 2022 09 07 Larrington 1996 266 Larrington Carolyne 1999 The Poetic Edda Oxford World s Classics ISBN 0 19 283946 2 Bellows Henry Adams 2004 The Poetic Edda The Mythological Poems Dover Publications ISBN 0 486 43710 8 Byock Jesse 2005 The Prose Edda Penguin Classics ISBN 0 14 044755 5 Sandberg Anders An overview of models of technological singularity h Magazine Covering technological scientific and cultural trends that are changing human beings in fundamental ways Hplusmagazine com Archived from the original on 2010 12 23 Retrieved 2011 09 09 Cirkovic Milan M Resource letter PEs 1 physical eschatology American Journal of Physics 71 2 2003 122 133 Baum Seth D Is humanity doomed Insights from astrobiology Sustainability 2 2 2010 591 603 Zeilik M A Gregory S A 1998 Introductory Astronomy amp Astrophysics 4th ed Saunders College Publishing p 322 ISBN 0 03 006228 4 Further reading EditCarroll John T 2000 Eschatology In Freedman David Noel Myers Allen C eds Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible Eerdmans ISBN 978 9053565032 Craig C Hill In God s Time The Bible and the Future Grand Rapids Eerdmans 2002 ISBN 0 8028 6090 7 Dave Hunt A Cup of Trembling Harvest House Publishers Eugene Oregon 1995 ISBN 1 56507 334 7 Jonathan Menn Biblical Eschatology Eugene Oregon Wipf amp Stock 2013 ISBN 978 1 62032 579 7 Joseph Ratzinger Eschatology Death and Eternal Life Washington D C Catholic University of America Press 1985 ISBN 978 0 8132 1516 7 Robert Sungenis Scott Temple David Allen Lewis Shock Wave 2000 subtitled The Harold Camping 1994 Debacle New Leaf Press Inc 2004 ISBN 0 89221 269 1 Stephen Travis Christ Will Come Again Hope for the Second Coming of Jesus Toronto Clements Publishing 2004 ISBN 1 894667 33 6 Jerry L Walls ed The Oxford Handbook of Eschatology New York Oxford University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 19 973588 4 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to End Times nbsp Herbermann Charles ed 1909 Eschatology Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 5 New York Robert Appleton Company nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Singer Isidore et al eds 1901 1906 Eschatology The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls Christian Eschatology Explained A short primer on the main schools of Christian Eschatology Eschatology at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eschatology amp oldid 1177957721, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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