A few days ago
asmith1022_2006

Who said ” the world will end with a whimper, and not with a bang.”?

or something to that effect. thanks in advance.

Top 3 Answers
A few days ago
Diana

Favorite Answer

That’s from “The Hollow Men” by T. S. Eliot. That poems packed with allusions, but, as far as I know, those lines are his own.
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5 years ago
Anonymous
All the so-called “Mayan prophecies of 2012” are nothing more than wildly speculative extrapolations, which are based on the yet uncertain interpretations by scholars of Mayan hieroglyphs. However, the truth is that apart from the astrological convergence, there is little indication that the Mayans prophesied anything specific regarding the events of this distant future. The Mayans were not prophets; they were not even able to predict their own cultural extinction. They were great mathematicians and accomplished sky watchers, but they were also a brutally violent tribal people with a primitive understanding of natural phenomena, subscribing to archaic beliefs and the barbaric practices of blood-letting and human sacrifice. There is absolutely nothing in the Bible that would present December 21, 2012, as the end of the world. While that date is no less valid for an end-times event than any other future date, the Bible nowhere presents the astronomical phenomena the Mayans pointed to as a sign of the end times. It would seem very inconsistent of God to allow the Mayans to discover such an amazing truth while keeping the many Old Testament prophets ignorant of the timing of the events. In summary, there is absolutely no biblical evidence that the 2012 Mayan prophecy / prediction of doomsday is in any sense valid or probable. Accepting the Mayan 2012 prophecy logically requires acceptance of the following theories: our sun is a god; the sun is powered by the blood of human sacrifice; the creation moment occurred at 3114 B.C. (despite all evidence that it happened much earlier); and the visual alignment of stars has some significance for everyday human life. Like every other false religion, the Mayan religion sought to elevate to the point of worship that which was created in place of the Creator Himself. The Bible tells us about such false worshipers: “They exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and worshiped and served created things rather than the Creator” (Romans 1:25), and “since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities – His eternal power and divine nature – have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that men are without excuse” (Romans 1:20). To accept the Mayan 2012 prophecy also denies the clear biblical teaching about the end of the world, because Jesus told us “…of that day and hour no one knows, no, not the angels in Heaven, nor the Son, but the Father” (Mark 13:32).
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A few days ago
Tom K
T. S. Eliot said something close to that.

As best I remember:

“This is the way the world ends,

This is the way the world ends,

This is the way the world ends,

Not with a bang, but a whimper.”

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A few days ago
pat z
Poet T.S. Eliot wrote it in his saga poem “The Wasteland”. “…this is the way the world ends, not with a bang but a whimper.”
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5 years ago
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A few days ago
Anonymous
Tom K is correct. I would add that Elliott was a depressive right-wing gay during WW2, which maybe explains some of his poetry output.
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