King K’inich Kan Bahlum II reigned in Baalak from 685 AD to 702 AD. Like his father, the great K’inich Janaab Pakal, he was responsible for many of the most glorious architectural and artistic achievements of Mayan civilization’s “classical period;” it was he who oversaw the completion of the great pyramidal Temple of Inscriptions in Palenque, on one of whose walls he left a legend predicting that his dynasty would last until 21 October 4772.
I have to say, I’ve always been impressed by the absolute precision of these old Mayan prophecies: never any vague predictions of nameless catastrophes occurring at uncertain hours—“In the time of great sorrow, when the moon is in the third house and the curlew’s nest is empty, a dark fortune will descend upon the house of Tarquinio” or anything like that—but only exactly dated auguries of specific events. Admittedly, I would be considerably more impressed if, in addition to their precision, they occasionally exhibited some tendency toward accuracy, but you can’t ask for everything.
As it happens, Kan Bahlum’s dynasty died out some time in the early ninth century. There’s no need to quibble over four millennia here or there, though; what makes Kan Bahlum’s prophecy interesting is that it refers to an event scheduled to occur exactly 2759 years and ten months after 21 December 2012, which is supposedly the day on which, by the reckoning of the Mayan long calendar, the current “Great Cycle” of 5125 years will reach its end.
We have recently entered a period of popular fascination—which will become more intense over the next thirty-six months or so—with this date, or at least with the year 2012. Any number of recent books, articles, television programs, and viral videos, as well as one particularly bad film, tell us that this is date that the classical age Mayas predicted would end the world, or at least inaugurate a cataclysm of such enormous proportions that the vast majority of life on earth will perish. And yet here was Kan Bahlum, ever the sunny optimist it seems, confidently asserting that his family’s reign would continue on for better than twenty-seven centuries beyond that mark.
There’s no mystery here, really. The truth of the matter is that the ancient Mayas understood 2012 as the terminal year not of the cosmos or the planet, but of a calendrical rotation. There is clear evidence that they did indeed regard every transition from one Great Cycle to another as something quite momentous, with some greater mystical or cosmic significance, but they certainly did not see it as ushering in the end of time. In fact, they do not seem to have had any concept of the end of time.
Rather, they had an insatiable predilection for large numbers arranged in magnificently intricate mathematical schemes, as well as an equally insatiable fascination with astronomy; and these two appetites in combination produced marvelous and fantastical myths and monuments and vaticinations, all embraced within a vision of time as a kind of endless epochal spiral, rather like Yeats’s system of “gyres,” but on a far greater order of magnitude. There could scarcely be a more drastic confusion of categories, therefore, than the application of eschatological themes to what is in essence a mythology of perpetual periodic regeneration within natural time.
It is probably an inevitable mistake for modern Westerners, of course, or for any people raised in a culture shaped by one of the “Abrahamic” faiths. For us, it seems perfectly natural to think in terms of a catastrophic or redemptive conclusion to the narrative of history and nature as we know them. And even many of those systems of thought with which we are most likely to be familiar and which involve some idea of eternal recurrence, like Stoicism or certain schools of Hinduism, presume periodic annihilations of the cosmos.
Some sense that “time must have a stop” is part of the common conceptual property of the whole “Indo-European world.” And that perhaps goes some way towards explaining the popular fascination with an imminent end of days. It does not, however, explain everything.
There is a question here worth pondering, I think. Why are apocalyptic fantasies such inexhaustible sources of popular entertainment? What is it that draws a great many of us to the idea of a world shattered and scorched and whelmed by the seas, or of civilization reduced to savagery in a single day? More importantly, why is the prospect of that day’s imminence one of the most tantalizing elements in these fantasies?
Admittedly, they probably would not entertain us very much at all if we really found them credible. But, still, there’s been such an abundance of post-apocalyptic novels, films, television stories, and so forth over the past five or six decades that the whole genre seems now to enjoy the sort of perennial appeal that once belonged to westerns. And it would be difficult to exaggerate the popularity of books, magazine articles, or “documentaries” that pretend to warn of the impending cataclysm in earnest.
Moreover, it is a market that crosses almost every cultural demographic boundary, albeit with significant variations. For some, the eschatological genre is simply a subcategory of the horror genre, and has no grander function than to inspire little macabre thrills of unease or Schadenfreude. For the more morally serious, it has a graver, minatory purpose, and should apprise us (ponderously) that nuclear war, environmental devastation, genocidal pandemics, swarms of omnivorous nano-robots, and dangerous experiments on subatomic particles are very bad things that ought to be avoided on most occasions. For certain Christian fundamentalists, “end times” fantasy is a kind of licit pornography, absorbed with an altogether unhealthy relish.
And so on. But I suspect that, underlying all the superficial differences, some essentially uniform impulse of the imagination—or collection of impulses—is at work, some species of shared desire or fear.
Not to say that I have any clear notion of what it is. It might simply be the result of history. The latter half of the twentieth century being what it was, it may be that our shared visions of the impending eschaton are nothing more than memories of the recent past allegorically inverted into fabulous premonitions of the near future. That, however, explains only the element of collective therapy in these fantasies, not the great pleasure they seem to afford.
I suppose it’s possible that their appeal reaches down to a more fundamental level, either more basically physiological or more obscurely metaphysical, or both at once. Perhaps, for example, it is all merely an expression of some “death instinct” in us, a way of sublimating the Freudian ferment of Thanatos rising from the depths of our organic existence. Or perhaps it’s evidence of the ineradicable element of sadism residing in our brute or fallen nature (whichever you prefer): just another of the “theaters of cruelty” humanity devises for itself in every age.
On the other hand, maybe these fantasies principally arise from a wholly understandable desire to know how any story ends. It is occasionally difficult to accept that each of us occupies only a vanishingly minuscule portion of terrestrial time, and that most of us are not destined to play any conspicuous role in the great drama of history. In many of us, surely, there must be some tacit impulse to rebel against the indignity of our transience and seeming irrelevance, and to mythologize our brief moment in the light as one that coincides with the end of time.
Or perhaps the greater part of the appeal of such stories—even granting morbidity and nihilism their places—lies in a curiously subdued but persistent longing for innocence: the bright golden innocence of the desert. Maybe what draws many of us to the poetry of annihilation is the thought of a world of sublime simplicity, purged of politics, taxes, national and corporate interests, social coercions, and private ambitions: a world without the ambiguities or structures of sin. In utter desolation—some inner voice may sometimes whisper to us—there is a kind of purity, the fallow time before Eden, from which a blameless new order of things might arise.
But who knows, really? I certainly don’t. I can say, however, and with some confidence, that the world will almost certainly not end in 2012. Kan Bahlum II—however wrong the rest of his prophecy may have proved to be—was certainly right on that score.
David B. Hart is a contributing writer of First Things. His most recent book is Atheist Delusions: The Christian Revolution and Its Fashionable Enemies (Yale University Press).
Comments:
Fundies drool over the thought of the end times, because that would be a confirmation that THEY WERE RIGHT on this side of the grave.
And, boy, wouldn't they lord it over all the rest of us.
An identical plot sequence can support both the cautionary (global warming, the nuclear arms race, etc. will destroy our civilization) and the celebratory (our civilization despite its flaws keeps a kernel of virtue that allows us to rebuild.) Science (and religion) can be cast as either villain or hero, depending on the whim of the author. Mankind stripped of the trappings of civilization can be shown to be either nobler or more brutish.
It's truly a wide open canvas
We need to keep a close eye on those second class Christians. Would you identify them please?
Do we enjoy watching these films because we know what we deserve?
Seriously, though, if the world did come to an end in December 2012, it would be a bummer; couldn't the end of the world wait until after the college football bowl games are over?
The fact is, modern times has achieved as much success as are ancestors dreamed of and live is just plain boring because there is nothing left to do. Now it is true that we would not really like to live in "interesting times" and that indeed, daily life was just as tedious when looked at closely. But maybe that is the point. We have perhaps reached the summit of human achievement and find that it cannot satisfy.
But I also suspect that something like the reverse is true. Some of the bus-tripping ghosts in C. S. Lewis' "Great Divorce" only made the trip to the heavenly outskirts (paraphrasing here) so that, once and for all, they could spit out a volley of nastiness at the beautiful people, the "haves." Not for the sake of humility, but rather to compete with the "haves" by asserting the superiority of their "have-not-ed-ness." A Hollywood that has assiduously spurned the Christian values of Western civilization needs to assert the superiority of the alternative they have chosen, not knowing that it is Hell, and proceed to churn out some pretty damned hellish movies!
"[I]t is often said that it is no wonder people are anxious nowadays, what with the possibility that the Bomb might fall any minute. The Bomb would seem to be sufficient reason for anxiety; yet as it happens the reverse is the truth. The contingency “what if the Bomb should fall?” is not only not a cause of anxiety in the alienated man but is one of his few remaining refuges from it. When everything else fails, we may always turn to our good friend just back from Washington or Moscow who obliges us with his sober second thoughts – “I can tell you this much, I am profoundly disturbed . . .” – and each of us has what he came for, the old authentic thrill of the Bomb and the Coming of the Last Days. Like Ortega’s romantic, the heart’s desire of the alienated man is to see vines sprouting through the masonry. The really anxiety question, the question no one asks because no one want to, is the reverse: What if the Bomb should not fall? What then?"
It's Eric Voegelin, from Modernity Without Restraint.
For myself, not a fundamentalist and possessed of a disgustingly cheerful disposition (life is GOOD!), I think of apocalyptic movies as similar to riding a roller-coaster: scary but safe, and after it's over, perhaps a bit silly. But let's ride it again, eh!
The truly poor live out their private apocalypses daily, and probably have no emotional energy left to indulge in such useless worries.
Then I was becalmed. Godless writers want to play god all the time, all-judging as they can be in print for this fleeting time on earth before we all know the final answers. End times have fascinated every civilization and pre-civilization since the beginning of time, inspired by the real catastrophies we know to have occurred, just waiting to finally end our toil.
Apocalyptic literature was very popular in the Middle Ages; popular preaching focused on it to an excessive degree. It's certainly not just a middle class interest.
I remember growing up during the tail end of the Cold War and playing imaginative games with friends which revolved around a post-apocalyptic world, where the old order had passed away and anything was possible. A large amount of children's literature focused on it (I particularly liked "The Tripods" series about a future Earth ruled by aliens and, as an adolescent, John Wyndham’s books, particularly “The Kraken Wakes” and “The Day of the Triffids”), and I am certain that this reflected the very real fears of a nuclear war that swirled around at the time.
Tellingly, the stories were all of the “Mayan” death-and-rebirth sort, not the straight-up “death” sort, which wouldn’t have had as much scope for adventure, I don’t think. What ten year old boy doesn’t like the thought of crawling out from the rubble of his school gym and finding nothing but opportunity, and enough danger to test his manhood against? Bliss!
Thank you for your comment. I still can't shake off my conviction that apocalyptic speculations are predominantly indulged in by those who share certain characteristics. I too think that such fantasies may meet some need.
For example, it seems to me that those who have experienced real, and not just abstract, evil, are generally reserved about their experiences. One exception being, if they decide to join in a public effort to confront it. In any case, I can't imagine such people wanting to further indulge in dilettante fantasies about that, which they have first hand knowledge of.
Thus, one of these certain characteristics may be the lack of an actual experience - combined with the desire to prepare oneself for it, just in case. Which the entertainment industry is more than willing to tap into and feed.
Surely you know of things like The Late Great Planet Earth and the Left Behind novels. I think "licit pornography" is a perfectly fair assessment.



“The attempt at constructing an eidos of history will lead into the fallacious immanentization of the Christian eschaton. The understanding of the attempt as fallacious, however, raises baffling questions with regard to the type of man who will indulge in it. The fallacy looks rather elemental. Can it be assumed that the thinkers who indulged in it were not intelligent enough to penetrate it? Or that they penetrated it but propagated it nevertheless for some obscure evil reason? The mere asking of such questions carries their negation. Obviously one cannot explain seven centuries of intellectual history by stupidity and dishonesty. A drive must rather be assumed in the souls of these men that blinded them to the fallacy.
The nature of this drive cannot be discovered by submitting the structure of the fallacy to an even closer analysis. The attention must rather concentrate on what the thinkers achieved by their fallacious construction. On this point there is no doubt. They achieved a certainty about the meaning of history, and about their own place in it, which otherwise they would not have had. Certainties, now, are in demand for the purpose of overcoming uncertainties with their accompaniment of anxiety; and the next question then would be: What specific uncertainty was so disturbing that it had to be overcome by the dubious means of fallacious immanentization?
One does not have to look far afield for an answer. Uncertainty is the very essence of Christianity. The feeling of security in a “world full of gods” is lost with the gods themselves; when the world is de-divinized, communication with the world-transcendent God is reduced to the tenuous bond of faith, in the sense of Heb. 11: 1, as the substance of things hoped for and the proof of things unseen. Ontologically, the substance of things hoped for is nowhere to be found but in faith itself; and, epistemologically, there is no proof for things unseen but again this very faith.
The bond is tenuous, indeed, and it may snap easily. The life of the soul in openness toward God, the waiting, the periods of aridity and dullness, guilt and despondency, contrition and repentance, foresakenness and hope against hope, the silent stirrings of love and grace, trembling on the verge of a certainty that if gained is loss—the very lightness of this fabric may prove too heavy a burden for men who lust for massively possessive experience. The danger of a breakdown of faith to a socially relevant degree, now, will increase in the measure in which Christianity is a worldly success, that is, it will grow when Christianity penetrates a civilizational area thoroughly, supported by institutional pressure, and when, at the same time, it undergoes an internal process of spiritualization, of a more complete realization of its essence.
The more people are drawn or pressured into the Christian orbit, the greater will be the number among them who do not have the spiritual stamina for the heroic adventure of the soul that is Christianity; and the likeliness of a fall from faith will increase when civilizational progress of education, literacy, and intellectual debate will bring the full seriousness of Christianity to the understanding of ever more individuals.”