If you wake on the morning of October 8, then you should consider yourself lucky – you survived a would-be apocalypse.
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An American cult, the eBible Fellowship, had predicted with glee that October 7 would see the world "pass away" in a ball of fire.
This is despite an earlier deathly prediction that the world would end on May 21, 2011. In case you are aware, the world is still hanging around.
The Philadelphia-based group had come up with the prediction based on the interpretation of the Bible by its leader, Chris McCann. On its website, it's claimed October 7 this year would be the end of the world because it was when the world had reached "10,000 overall days of judgment" and also because it is the last day of the "Feast of Tabernacles".
On the same webpage the reasons for why the world would end four years ago are also listed.
Among its faithful followers, the group's Facebook page has been openly mocked by those who are skeptical as to its claims.
One user, Jason Young, posted: "Let's make a deal, EBible Fellowship. We'll all go along with your belief that the world will end on Wednesday and make our preparations; but in return, if it doesn't end, you must take down your website and Facebook account, and stop dumbing down the rest of society. Fair, right?"
In an interview with The Guardian on October 6, Mr McCann was confident that his interpretation was correct and that humanity would end.
"There's a strong likelihood that this will happen," McCann said. "Which means there's an unlikely possibility that it will not."
"It'll be gone forever. Annihilated."
Despite his confidence, those in the southern hemisphere have not reported any fireballs of death.