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If you believe the Mayans, we only have about
3 years left
by: By Lindsay Perna
Religion News Service
Source: http://www.sj-r.com
It’s that time of the century again.
Time to sell your real estate, rid yourself of
cherished possessions and purge the evil tendencies
of your wicked soul.
The world is scheduled to end in late 2012 —
at least, according to New Age scholars who look
to a 2,000-year-old Mayan calendar for guidance
— and it’s time to start preparing.
The Mayans, who were scattered across southern
Mexico and Central America from about 2000 B.C.
until the Spanish conquest of the 17th century,
are noted for astronomical insight and for their
“Long Count” calendar, which comes
to an end, or perhaps resets, on Dec. 21, 2012.
Cue the destruction of the world.
Hollywood is already playing along. “2012,”
a big-screen blockbuster from the director of
2002’s “The Day After Tomorrow,”
is scheduled to hit screens in November. Publishers
are also cashing in, and the far reaches of the
Internet are abuzz with speculation on the end
of the world.
Our troubled times are proving to be fertile
soil for doomsayers sowing the seeds of Armageddon.
Experts say that’s usually how it works.
“Apocalypticism rises and falls with economic
and political conditions on the ground,”
said Stephen Prothero, chairman of the religion
department at Boston University. “Give a
culture some leisure time and excess income, and
they’ll forget about the end of the world
pretty fast. But mass an army at the border, and
prophesies of the end of times will spike just
as quickly.”
While the Mayans aren’t normally known
as major players on the religious scene, beliefs
in the end of the world, or the world to come,
are common themes across most major faith traditions.
“Our fears about the end of the world are
fairly universal,” Prothero said. “What
changes is the form those fears take.”
This time around, they’re taking the form
of Roland Emmerich’s “2012,”
in which the arms of the Christ the Redeemer statue
above Rio de Janeiro break off. St. Peter’s
Basilica is reduced to a pile of rubble, and Exodus-style
natural disasters plague the planet.
It’s not a religious film per se, but its
religious imagery and end-of-days tribulations
will resonate with audiences — particularly
young people — who take their spiritual
cues from pop culture, experts say.
“Hollywood movies tend to succeed if they
don’t underestimate (the sophistication
of) their audience,” said Lynn Clark, associate
professor of new media at the University of Denver.
“There is an urgency for (spiritual discovery)
that is part of the undercurrent of young people’s
lives these days.”
Youths may not be avidly reading their Bibles
and attending church in large numbers, but Clark
said they do look to the entertainment industry
to initiate religious discussions.
Indeed, religious notions of the apocalypse and
pop culture’s obsession with what rock band
R.E.M. called “The End of the World as We
Know It” have often gone hand-in-hand. When
Armageddon appears imminent, churches will exploit
those fears to get people into the pews.
It worked for William Miller in the midst of
an economic downturn in 1837, when he predicted
the Second Coming of Jesus in 1843. When that
date passed, he changed the date to 1844. Though
his failed prophecies eventually became known
as the “Great Disappointment,” his
followers nonetheless kept the faith. Today, they’re
known as Seventh-day Adventists, one of the world’s
fastest-growing churches.
People like knowing how it all ends — hoping,
of course, it will end well — or that someone
else has already figured it out.
“It’s an idea as old as the species
that we are part of a pattern; therefore, somebody
may be able to trace it ahead of us,” said
Volney P. Gay, a professor of psychiatry and chairman
of the religious studies department at Vanderbilt
University. “There is a certain kind of
comfort or relief in that we don’t have
to worry anymore.”
Which brings us back to the Mayan calendar and
its focus on 2012.
Publishing giant HarperOne recently released
a 356-page book by self-proclaimed Mayan shaman
Carlos Barrios, “The Book of Destiny: Unlocking
the Secrets of the Ancient Mayans and the Prophecy
of 2012,” that says many interpreters of
the Mayan calendar have gotten it all wrong.
The world won’t end when the calendar does
in 2012, he says. A new cycle will begin anew,
and the doomsday scenarios are already upon us.
Armageddon, it seems, may already be in progress.
“A large part of humanity will disappear.
This will not happen in 2012, but in the years
leading up to this date as one cycle ends and
another begins,” Barrios writes. “This
period is when are in the most danger.”
In other words, it’s time to clean up our
act so that the next cycle — what Barrios
describes as a 5,200-year era of peace and self-awareness
— can get started.
“If we take the chance to change, we have
the opportunity for harmony,” Barrios said
in an interview from Colombia. “We are going
to pass to the next level with more possibilities
to develop ourselves. It’s not today to
2012. It’s today to the future.”
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