For the creation was subjected to futility – not willingly, but because of Him who subjected it – in the hope that the creation itself will also be set free from the bondage of corruption into the glorious freedom of God’s children. For we know that the whole creation has been groaning together with labor pains until now. (Romans 8:20-22, HCSB)
If, as some alarmists would have you believe, a planned physics experiment on Wednesday spawns the creation of one or more quantum black holes, then in approximately four years, we shall see the earth giving birth to glorious light, just before it is consumed into an eternal pit of fire. The glorious freedom of God’s children will have fulfilled the destiny of the earth’s elements to be destroyed with the heat of heaven’s fire (2 Peter 3). Wormwood, anyone?
On Wednesday, Dr Evans will fire up the Large Hadron Collider, a 17-mile-long doughnut-shaped tunnel that will smash sub-atomic particles together at nearly the speed of light.
Built by the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN), the collider lies beneath the French-Swiss border, near the institution’s headquarters in Geneva, at depths ranging from 170ft to 600ft.
The aim of the £4.4billion experiment is to recreate the conditions that existed a fraction of a second after the Big Bang – the birth of the universe – and provide vital clues to the building blocks of life.
It will track the spray of particles thrown out by collisions in a search for the elusive Higgs Boson, a theoretical entity that supposedly lends weight, or mass, to the elementary particles. So important is this mysterious substance that it has been called the ‘God Particle’.
Scientists also hope to shed some light on the invisible material that exists between particles – dubbed ‘dark matter’ as no one knows what it really is – which makes up most of the universe.
But a handful of scientists believe that the experiment could create a shower of unstable black holes that could ‘eat’ the planet from within, and they are launching last-ditch efforts to halt it in the courts.
One of them, Professor Otto Rossler, a retired German chemist, said he feared the experiment may create a devastating quasar – a mass of energy fuelled by black holes – inside the Earth.
‘Nothing will happen for at least four years,’ he said. ‘Then someone will spot a light ray coming out of the Indian Ocean during the night and no one will be able to explain it.
‘A few weeks later, we will see a similar beam of particles coming out of the soil on the other side of the planet. Then we will know there is a little quasar inside the planet.’
Prof Rossler said that as the spinning-top-like quasar devoured the world from within, the two jets emanating from it would grow and catastrophes such as earthquakes and tsunamis would occur at the points they emerged from the Earth.
‘The weather will change completely, wiping out life, and very soon the whole planet will be eaten in a magnificent scenario – if you could watch it from the moon. A Biblical Armageddon. Even cloud and fire will form, as it says in the Bible.’
Full article: Meet Evans the Atom, who will end the world on Wednesday


3 Comments
Blood moons, black holes — I’m thinking I may want to create a new post category called “eschatological sarcasm”…
Well, seeing as how the birth pains have been going for some 2,000 years now, I would imagine that we should be close by now.
But what do I know? I’m just a preterist who can’t figure out how not to take time statements seriously
Preterism aside, you’ve got admit that a quantum black hole has some scientific romance in terms of depicting the fiery pit of hell: “the earth opened up and swallowed them”… “flung into the lake of fire”… “earth and heaven vanished away”…