Oh no you didn't!
Snap!
Well, conveniently as you have seen, He has now moved the goalposts to 80 years from 1948, and when that fails He's switch to 70 years from 1967... and when that fails, He'll switch to 80 years from '67, and when that fails he can cite Genesis 6:3 and move it to 120 years... and He'll be dead and gone by the time that comes and goes without incident, so, as luck would have it, He does not have to be accountable for any of his failed predictions... not to us anyway...
Well, Scripture informs us we should therefore not believe you anymore, nor shall we fear you or what you say, and that your fate is sealed:
Deuteronomy 18:20-22
20 But the prophet who presumes to speak a word in My name, which I have not commanded him to speak, or who speaks in the name of other gods, that prophet shall die.’ 21 And if you say in your heart, ‘How shall we know the word which the Lord has not spoken?’— 22 when a prophet speaks in the name of the Lord, if the thing does not happen or come to pass, that is the thing which the Lord has not spoken; the prophet has spoken it presumptuously; you shall not be afraid of him.
Sad how so many people don't understand the very real consequences of prophesying presumptuously. Simply apologizing for it and then moving the goalposts will profit you nothing.
Like the flavors of Baskin Robbins...........
Unfulfilled Christian religious predictions - Wikipedia
This article lists
unfulfilled Christian religious predictions that failed to come about in the specified time frame, listed by religious group.
Contents
Adventism, Millerism
Adventism has its roots in the teachings of a
Baptist preacher by the name of
William Miller. He first predicted the
Second Advent of Jesus Christ would occur before March 21, 1844.
[1] When this date passed a new date was predicted, April 18, 1844.
[2] Again the date passed and another Millerite,
Samuel S. Snow, derived the date of October 22, 1844.
[3] The non-fulfillment of these predictions has been named the
Millerite Great Disappointment.
Anabaptist Church
Certain
Anabaptists of the early 16th century believed that the
Millennium would occur in 1533.
[4] Another source reports: "When the prophecy failed, the Anabaptists became more zealous and claimed that two witnesses (Enoch and Elijah) had come in the form of
Jan Matthys and
Jan Bockelson; they would set up the
New Jerusalem in
Münster. Münster became a frightening dictatorship under Bockelson's control. Although all Lutherans and Catholics were expelled from that city, the millennium never came."
[5]
Lutheran Church
Michael Stiefel predicted the end of the world in 1533 and lost his living as minister in consequence. He was found another by
Philip Melanchthon.
[27]
One later writer noted, "In all of [
Martin Luther's ] work there was a sense of urgency for the time was short... the world was heading for Armageddon in the war with the Turk."
[28]
Even after Luther's death in 1546, Lutheran leaders kept up the claim of the nearness of the end. About the year 1584, a zealous Lutheran named Adam Nachenmoser wrote the large volume '[Prognosticum Theologicum]' in which he predicted:
"In 1590 the Gospel would be preached to all nations and a wonderful unity would be achieved. The last days would then be close at hand." Nachenmoser offered numerous conjectures about the date; 1635 seemed most likely.
[29]
The Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod issued a study in 1989 refuting any end times claim, declaring that "repeatedly taught by Jesus and the apostles is the truth that the exact hour of Christ's coming remains hidden in the secret counsels of God (Matt. 24:36)."[30]
Presbyterian Church
Thomas Brightman, who lived from 1562 to 1607, has been called "one of the fathers of
Presbyterianism in England." He predicted that "between 1650 and 1695 [we] would see the conversion of the many Jews and a revival of their
nation in Palestine...the destruction of the Papacy...the marriage of the Lamb and his wife."
[35]
Christopher Love who lived from 1618–1651 was a bright graduate of Oxford and a strong Presbyterian. Love predicted that: (1) Babylon would fall in 1758 (2) God's anger against the wicked would be demonstrated in 1759 and (3) in 1763 there would occur a great earthquake all over the world.
[36]
Roman Catholic Church
When in 1525
Martin Luther, an ex-monk, married
Katharina von Bora, an ex-nun, his enemies[
who?] said that their offspring would fulfill an old tradition that the
Antichrist would be the son of such a union. The
Catholic scholar and theologian
Erasmus remarked that the tradition could apply to thousands of such children.
[37]
In 1771 Bishop
Charles Walmesley published, under the
nom de plume of "Signor Pastorini",
[38] his "General History of the Christian Church from Her Birth to Her Final Triumphant State in Heaven Chiefly Deduced from the
Apocalypse of St. John the Apostle and Evangelist".
[39] In it he attributed to what he called the fifth age of the Church a duration of 300 years, beginning with the
Protestant Reformation in 1520 or 1525.
[40]
This was widely interpreted as predicting the downfall of
Protestantism by 1825.
[41] In fact, just four years later, the
Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 brought to a culmination the process of
Catholic Emancipation throughout the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.