The Philadelphia-based online Christian church, eBible Fellowship, has been preparing for almost two years for this day. According to the Christian group, today, Oct. 7, will be the day that the world would definitely meet its fiery end.
The group posted a video on YouTube last March 8, 2015, sharing to the public about the coming predicament of every transgressor.
"According to what the Bible is presenting, it does appear that 7 October will be the day that God has spoken of: in which, the world will pass away," said Chris McCann, the leader and founder of the fellowship.
In a report by the Guardian, McCann said that the world would "be gone forever. Annihilated." He also stated that the world will end by fire and nothing else.
"God destroyed the first Earth with water, by a flood, in the days of Noah. And he says he'll not do that again, not by water. But he does say in 2nd Peter 3 that he'll destroy it by fire," McCann said.
McCann based his Oct. 7 end of the world prediction from the 2011 failed prediction of Christian Radio Host, Harold Camping. Camping announced that the world would end on May 2011, but nothing happened. He later on moved his prediction to October 2011, but not a single country was destroyed.
However, McCann believes that the May 21, 2011 prediction of Camping had some truths behind it. The 2011 predictions, according to McCann, is the 'judgement day' because it is the day that God stopped the selection process of the churchgoers he wanted to save.
And from May 21, 2011 up until today Oct. 7, 2015, McCann said that God has been selecting who to save from the non-churchgoers group. God devoted 1600 days in the choosing process.
"There's a strong likelihood that this will happen," McCann said, although he did leave some room for error, saying, "Which means there's an unlikely possibility that it will not [as well]."
The eBible Fellowship posted a couple of biblical evidences on their website to support their claim that the end-of-world would most likely occur on Oct. 7, 2015.