US Trends

why does everyone think the rapture is happening

A mix of viral TikToks, world anxiety, and specific 2025 date predictions has people talking like the rapture is right around the corner.

Quick Scoop

  • A South African preacher’s viral prophecy that the rapture would happen around September 23–24, 2025 (Rosh Hashanah) lit up TikTok, YouTube, and forums.
  • The hashtag “RaptureTok” pushed endless short videos about “signs,” timelines, and how to “prepare,” which made it feel like everyone was talking about it.
  • Many people are already on edge because of wars, political chaos, climate worries, and pandemics, so “end times” explanations feel emotionally satisfying.
  • The idea that you’ll be suddenly rescued from a broken world into a perfect heaven is comforting when life feels overwhelming.
  • Historically, rapture dates keep getting set…and then quietly fail, but a new generation sees the “same old” predictions for the first time, so it feels urgent and new again.

What “the rapture” actually is

In popular Christian teaching (especially some evangelical and Pentecostal circles), the rapture is the belief that Jesus will suddenly take all true believers out of the world—dead believers are raised, living believers are transformed, and they all meet Christ “in the air.”

Some key points from this belief system:

  • It is often separated from the “Second Coming,” which is seen as Jesus visibly returning to earth to judge evil and establish a renewed world.
  • Many versions place the rapture before a period of intense global trouble (a “tribulation”), so it functions like an escape hatch from suffering.
  • Supporters point to passages like 1 Thessalonians 4 and 1 Corinthians 15, plus end‑times language in the Gospels and Revelation to build their timelines.

Not all Christians even believe in a distinct rapture; some see it as a 19th‑century theological innovation that became popular through study Bibles and prophecy books.

Why it feels especially loud right now

1. A specific viral date: Sept 23–24, 2025

  • A South African pastor, Joshua Mhlakela, claimed that Jesus appeared to him in a vision and told him the rapture would happen on the first day of Rosh Hashanah, which in 2025 fell around September 23–24.
  • That prophecy spread quickly through TikTok, YouTube, and other social platforms, with people doing “rapture math,” counting days from other biblical events, and linking it to Jewish feasts.
  • Search interest for “rapture” and “the rapture Tuesday” spiked right before the predicted date, and thousands of short videos appeared about what to do, what to expect, and whether to be scared.

Once there’s a clear date and a nameable trend (#RaptureTok), you suddenly notice it everywhere—classic “frequency illusion.”

2. The TikTok/short‑video effect

  • On TikTok, a niche can seem like “everyone” because the algorithm aggressively feeds content based on what you watch or hover on even once.
  • Rapture content has a built‑in hook: “Something huge is about to happen, and most people have no idea,” which is perfect for attention‑grabbing short videos.
  • There is a mix of:
    • Sincere believers giving warnings and advice.
    • People half‑nervous, half‑curious, asking “What if?”
    • Skeptics and comedians making parody videos for the same hashtag.

That blend of fear plus humor can make it trend even more, because both serious content and jokes use the same buzzwords.

3. A world that feels apocalyptic already

  • Rapture and apocalypse talk tends to spike when people feel like “everything is falling apart”—political chaos, culture wars, wars, plagues, climate disasters, economic stress.
  • Some forms of end‑times teaching literally say that things must get worse—more disasters, more moral breakdown—before Jesus returns, so bad headlines are interpreted as “signs of the times.”
  • For many, saying “the rapture is close” makes sense of random suffering and gives a narrative: the world isn’t just broken, it’s in its final chapter and rescue is coming soon.

When people feel powerless, apocalyptic frameworks can feel like the only story that explains all the chaos.

Why people want to believe it’s happening

Underneath the memes and countdowns there are some deeper emotional drivers:

  • Hope of escape: The idea of being instantly taken to a “comfy cozy Heaven” instead of slogging through endless crises is deeply appealing.
  • Order in the chaos: If history is heading toward a planned climax, then suffering and injustice aren’t meaningless; they are “birth pains” before something better.
  • Fear and guilt: Some videos use terror (“You’ll be left behind”) to pressure people into religious decisions, especially younger viewers.
  • Community identity: Talking about the rapture, watching the same videos, and “decoding” signs together can create a tight little group of people who feel they “get it” while the rest of the world is oblivious.

An illustration: imagine you already feel the world is unsafe, then you’re fed a stream of clips saying “This Tuesday everything changes.” Because it fits your emotional state, it can feel more convincing than years of quiet normal days.

Why rapture “dates” keep appearing (and failing)

This isn’t the first time a wave of certainty has swept through:

  • Past predictions include Harold Camping’s high‑profile rapture dates in 1994 and 2011, plus many lesser‑known forecasts that came and went.
  • Each time, followers interpret current wars, earthquakes, or social changes as unique, even though similar events have been happening for centuries.
  • Many Christian teachers actually warn against setting dates, pointing to verses that say “no one knows the day or the hour,” but those cautions are less click‑worthy than bold predictions.

After a date passes, serious harm can follow: shaken faith, embarrassment, financial or life decisions people can’t undo, or just a deeper cynicism about religion.

Different viewpoints on all this

Here are some of the main ways people are looking at the current “rapture” buzz:

Viewpoint| How they see the rapture hype| Typical reaction
---|---|---
Rapture‑believing Christians| Signs show Jesus could come at any moment; viral dates might be off, but the general urgency is real.510| Repent, evangelize, “be ready,” share more content.
Non‑rapture Christians| Think a secret rapture is unbiblical or over‑emphasized, and prefer focusing on Christ’s return without timelines.37910| Warn against fear‑mongering and false prophets, emphasize steady faith and ethics now.
Curious / anxious viewers| Aren’t sure what they believe but are spooked by constant end‑times talk in their feeds.468| Doomscroll, watch more videos, maybe panic a bit, maybe laugh it off.
Skeptics / nonreligious| See it as another round of doomsday predictions, worthy of memes and parody.468| Make jokes, treat #RaptureTok like entertainment.

If this stuff is stressing you out

If your feeds are making it feel like “everyone” is bracing for a cosmic event, a few grounding moves can help:

  1. Reality check history. Rapture and doomsday dates have come and gone many times; so far, every specific countdown has been wrong.
  1. Watch your algorithm. The more you linger on end‑times videos, the more the platform will assume you want more; one or two taps can build a whole “everyone is talking about this” bubble.
  1. Look for thoughtful voices, not just viral ones. Many Christian teachers and scholars actively discourage date‑setting and hype, and focus on long‑term, steady living rather than panic.
  1. Zoom back into the present. Regardless of what you believe spiritually, you still have today’s relationships, responsibilities, and joys—those are real and matter now.

In simple terms: people think the rapture is happening because they’re scared, they’re hopeful, they’re online a lot, and a few loud voices set specific dates that algorithms then amplify.

TL;DR: “Everyone” doesn’t actually think the rapture is happening—but a mix of viral 2025 predictions, apocalyptic moods, and social‑media echo chambers makes it feel that way if you’re caught in that corner of the internet.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.