Baj mus rau ntuj Ceeb Tsheej May 21 2011 - Judgment day



Kwvtij Hmoob es....

Hnub May 21 2011 no yog hnub uas huab tais ntuj los hloov tswv tuav
ntiaj teb. Yessus tag nws lub KEE kav ntiaj teb lawm. Tus tshiab yog
TXOOV SIV YIS uas yuav los tuav lub ntiaj neb no.

Yog li Hnub May 21 2011 no, YESSUS yuav coj no cov KHANAB mus nce rau
NTUJ CEEB TSHEEJ lawm. Ho cov nyob ces yog cia rau TXOOV SIV YIS no.

Peb hmoob yuav tau los nrog cov uas yog YESSUS khab nab mus noj FAWM
rau hnub May 20, ntawm ua ke rau lub LAB FAWM BAN BTSUAB nyob rau
Sacramento, thuam 12 PM nawb, ho mus TSAJ QAB (dance) thiab haus cawv
sib tham ua si nyob rau tom lub Club SABAIDEE ua ke ib zaug ua zaum
kawg.

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Tick tock goes the doomsday clock

By Jessica Ravitz, CNN

(CNN) - For months they’ve been spreading the word, answering the
biblical call of Ezekiel 33 to sound the alarm and warn the people.

Their message, which they say the Bible guarantees, is simple: The end
of the world is near.

And now, it’s suddenly really near - so near that if these folks are
right, you should probably pass on buying green bananas.

Perhaps you’ve already noticed, what with the billboards and signs
dotting the landscape, the pamphlets blowing in the wind and the RVs
plastered with Judgment Day warnings weaving through cities. Or maybe,
as the birds chirped outside and you sipped your morning coffee, a
full-page newspaper ad for the upcoming mass destruction caught your
eye.

May 21, 2011, according to loyal listeners of Family Radio, a
Christian broadcasting network based in Oakland, California, will mark
the Day of Rapture and the start of Judgment Day (which, they say,
will last five months). Those who are saved will be taken up to
heaven, and those who aren’t will endure unspeakable suffering. Dead
bodies will be strewn about as earthquakes ravage the Earth, they say.
And come October 21, they’ll tell you, the entire world will be kaput.

It’s the kind of belief that riles up churchgoers who insist no one
can know when Judgment Day will come, and the sort that many say does
a disservice to Christianity. And it’s the kind of message that
delights the types who are planning tongue-in-cheek End of the World
parties and are responding to a Facebook invitation to attend a post-
rapture looting. Rapture events, including one at a tiki bar in Fort
Lauderdale, are being hosted by American Atheists. News outlets,
comedians and even Doonesbury can’t seem to resist a good end-of-the-
world prophecy.

Billboard battle over Judgment Day

Earlier this year, CNN traveled with a team of believers - all of whom
had walked away from friends, families and jobs - as they set out to
share this serious message aboard a caravan of Judgment Day RVs. These
ambassadors or co-laborers in God’s work, as they see themselves, let
us into their world. Along the way we met other supporters, as well as
a sea of skeptics, many of them drunken pirates gathered for an annual
festival in Florida.

Read about that journey and the roots of this doomsday message

With only days to go, we wanted to know how the ambassadors are
feeling now. Are they making special plans and saying goodbyes? Have
their convictions stayed strong, or have doubts crept in? Are they at
peace, excited or maybe afraid?

“We’ve been a little busy, as you can imagine,” said Fred Store, the
team leader on our journey.

Reached at a motor home park in Providence, Rhode Island, Store spoke
of the surge of support he’s seen in recent months – the 60 like-
minded people (including someone who works for Homeland Security, he
boasted) who joined his small crew on the Mall in Washington, and the
hundreds who gathered in Times Square in New York.

But at the same time he said resistance from those who don’t believe
has grown, too. The more people heard about the May 21 warning, the
more they discussed it with their pastors and came prepared to argue.

Learn about doomsdays throughout time

And the media, while they’ve helped spread the message, will be turned
away in the coming days. CNN hoped to be with Store and his team on
doomsday, but the members said they needed that time to focus on their
relationship with God. Perhaps that’s just as well, as an official at
Family Radio headquarters pointed out: “What makes you think you’ll be
able to get to them? The roads will be a mess," he said, referring to
the expected earthquakes. Plus, Store said, even if we got there,
there would be no time to edit and publish, so what's the point?

Store’s faith remains unwavering. Come Saturday, he and his team will
be in Boston, standing in a spot with heavy foot traffic, passing out
their pamphlets – which they call tracts – and doing what they believe
God called them to do until the very end.

No longer with the team is Darryl Keitt, who ditched his caravan on
May 6. He said his time on the RV was a “gift from God,” but he
decided he needed to spend the last couple of weeks focusing on his
non-believing family and friends in New Jersey. It was a decision he
prayed about for several weeks.

His Elizabeth, New Jersey, apartment is pretty sparse, seeing as he
gave away most everything before hitting the road.

“I was able to get my old place back,” he said. “But we only have four
days to go, so I don’t need much.”

He’s reaching out to old friends and hoping his family will come
around and believe what he says he knows to be true.

“I have not seen any signs that they are believing the message,” he
said. “But I can’t read anybody’s heart; only God can. And I’m still
praying for them. All I can do is continue to share my convictions.”

Tisan Dawud may not share his older half-brother's beliefs, but he
supports the positive nature of what Keitt's doing and is awestruck by
his dedication.

"He's trying to spread what he believes is the word of God, and I
can't knock him for that," Dawud said Tuesday evening. "I became
Muslim when I was very young, and he remained Christian. But I've
always had respect for his beliefs, and he always had respect for my
beliefs."

And rather than criticize or ridicule his brother, who he said isn't
hurting anyone, Dawud wishes people would focus on those who deserve
examination and condemnation - those selling drugs, molesting
children, raping women or embezzling money, for example.

Keitt spends his days in prayer, reaching out to people on Facebook,
listening to Family Radio and walking around his neighborhood in his
Judgment Day cap and T-shirt. He ran out of tracts some time ago, and
at this point it’s too late to order any more, he said. As for where
he’ll be on Saturday: “It’s a good question," and one he's still
considering.

He doesn’t like goodbyes, he said, and only told two people in his
caravan team of 10 that he was leaving. He gave those two men, one of
them Store, a quick hug and that was it.

“Preferably we’ll meet each other again,” Keitt said, “in heaven.”

Dennis Morrell was driving through Jacksonville, Florida, pulling his
Judgment Day billboard trailer, when we reached him on his cell phone.
He wasn’t part of the caravan of RVs but was among the Floridians who
joined in to help Store’s team when they were in the city.

Morell and his wife quit their jobs to focus on warning others, a move
that’s left their four kids – ages 17 to 24 – thinking “Mom and Dad
are crazy,” he said.

He still hopes God will “open their spiritual eyes,” he said. “But
they’re at an age where they love their lives. They don’t want this
world to come to an end.”

His faith, though, is as firm as ever, and he wishes others would open
their minds and hearts to this possibility.

“Why would you wait to see if this is actually going to happen? You
have that option to cry out for mercy,” he said. “I don’t want to die
and go to hell. Do you?”

He plans to spend the last days praying, up until the early hours of
Saturday - when he’ll both pray and wait for 16 hours.

Why 16 hours? Morrell explained that the massive doomsday earthquake
will start at the International Date Line before moving west. New
Zealand, he said, will get hit first – at 6 p.m. local time. And then
that wave of destruction will roll around the world, wreaking havoc at
6 p.m. in each time zone.

While Morrell expects he’ll reserve Saturday for private time,
Benjamin Ramrajie of Ocala, Florida, doesn’t have any special plans.

We met Ramrajie in Tampa after his 7-year-old daughter issued a
doomsday warning about how the sun would “turn red like blood.” He
stood by and nodded his approval as she spoke about dead bodies and
her fears of dying.

“Most of my family doesn’t agree 100 percent, and I don’t blame them
because it is far-fetched,” he said. “I strongly believe it’s going to
happen. But I just figure I’ll relax, maybe watch TV. If that’s the
day we get raptured, great. If not, we’ll move on.”
.



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