Doomsday evangelicals have long believed the world was on the edge of apocalypse, but recent events surrounding President Donald Trump seem to lead many to believe the rapture — or saving of true Christians just before Armageddon — will soon be upon us.

As Vox reports, these supposed apocalypse signs — the president’s decision to move the American embassy in Israel to Jerusalem and the “smear campaign” against Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore — have triggered memories in people raised evangelical. Many have found community with the #RaptureAnxiety hashtag, which highlights the fear surrounding the rapture that they experienced as children. Those fears were often rooted in being “left behind” after family members where taken up to heaven.

ADVERTISEMENT

“If you have experienced or still experience rapture anxiety, it may be acting up with the # JerusalemEmbassy news,” ex-evangelical writer Christopher Stroop tweeted over the weekend.

If you have experienced or still experience rapture anxiety, it may be acting up with the #JerusalemEmbassy news. If you want to share your stories for solidarity, use the hashtags #EmptyThePews and #RaptureAnxiety. https://t.co/89Yyy1SNty — Chrissy Stroop (@C_Stroop) December 9, 2017

Soon, people began sharing their stories.

“I had nightmares about the rapture. I was a child. Despite saying the sinners prayer at 4, getting baptized at 6, I constantly worried that I would be left behind,” Twitter user M Livingston wrote. “Once we got a dog, I wondered, ‘When the rapture happens, who will take care of my dog? He’ll starve to death in the house alone.’ My parents told me looters would break in during the aftermath, so he’d be ok. God would make sure of it.”

Writer D.L. Mayfield claimed she didn’t plan on going to college, because she thought she’d be raptured before she was 16 years old.

ADVERTISEMENT

this really is how I grew up. Prepared for the end times. Never thought I would live past 16 (which is partly why I never made college plans). Thinking back on all of this #RaptureAnxiety stuff today and I have to say I am so grateful to still have faith in God and God's kingdom. https://t.co/ZgNjJjTfIc — D. L. Mayfield (@d_l_mayfield) December 11, 2017

This is far from the first time that evangelicals said they had “evidence” of the impending Armageddon. Podcast host Mason Mennenga said her youth pastor told her and their Sunday school class that the Iraq War and natural disasters signaled the End Times, but told they were “told to not fear but rejoice for Jesus was coming soon.”

ADVERTISEMENT

“Needless to say that did not subdue my fear,” Mennenga tweeted.

As a 9 year old I was obviously scared to death, but simply told to not fear but rejoice for Jesus was coming soon. Needless to say that did not subdue my fear. #RaptureAnxiety end/ — Mason Mennenga (@masonmennenga) December 9, 2017

ADVERTISEMENT

Check out some of the best #RaptureAnxiety tweets below.

https://twitter.com/mandilivingston/status/939575855910703104

ADVERTISEMENT

I grew up in an evangelical church and had such severe anxiety as a child that I couldn't sleep and had chronic headaches. I was told we should welcome the end of days. I didn't want to be plucked from the earth or watch heathen friends die. #RaptureAnxiety — AnnaMaria Stephens (@annamaria1word) December 11, 2017

https://twitter.com/TimCoeTweets/status/939617564950380544

Yes. At every alter call (there were a multitude) I would sit & silently pray (again) for Jesus to save me. I lived in real fear, also since age 5, that I would be left alone on the Earth after the rapture b/c I wasn't "saved" properly. — StaraIaah (@Finajack) December 9, 2017

ADVERTISEMENT

Most of all I wondered when the war was going to start, when the moon was going to turn to blood, and when God would unleash the hell that we all deserved. #RaptureAnxiety — Josh Way (@JoshWay) December 11, 2017

#RaptureAnxiety as an Evangelical teenager: wanting to get married and have sex (in that order of course!) before the world ends, but unable to admit that thought because you’re supposed to long for the rapture and to not be lustful. Ah, compounding guilt! #EmptyThePews — Chrissy Stroop (@C_Stroop) December 9, 2017

ADVERTISEMENT

We had to watch movies in Sunday School about waking up and finding your family was just a pile of clothing. I lived in 24/7 terror about this happening. I panicked every time I heard a train whistle. I was afraid of being left but maybe even more aftaid of going. (4/?) — Chase Night (@TheChaseNight) December 9, 2017

This is some real shit. Read the #RaptureAnxiety hashtag. I still have deep, possibly permanent damage from being taught as a child that the world could end at any second, and you better hope you aren't sinning when it happens, or you'll burn in hell forever. Suicidal anxiety. https://t.co/JjjN8ETTI9 — Jon Jones (@jonjones) December 9, 2017

ADVERTISEMENT

I wasn’t equipped to think critically about what was being told to me by these people I trusted. Some of the first chapter books I read were The Left Behind series. I was a fucking child and somehow I was supposed to cope with both the rapture and hell #RaptureAnxiety /2 — caity ☠️ (@caitynicole) December 9, 2017

when i was a teenager i came home to find an empty house with the tv on & groceries half put away. i thought the rapture happened & i missed it. turned out my mom had just left her wallet at the store. i had a nice nervous breakdown tho. #raptureanxiety — Tina Kills 🎄 (@tinaKills_) December 11, 2017

ADVERTISEMENT

https://twitter.com/MarieThearose/status/939537155721957376

I remember coming home from school and my mom was supposed to be home but she wasn't so I was certain the Rapture had happened and I was left behind. I started crying and ran around the house frantically looking for her. It was terrifying and awful. #RaptureAnxiety — Christian Nightmares (@ChristnNitemare) December 11, 2017

https://twitter.com/MeghanMorriso11/status/940417173180338177

ADVERTISEMENT

My #RaptureAnxiety came from fearing Jesus would come before I confessed a forgotten sin, & would leave my friends to be slaughtered in Armageddon. I proselytized LIKE A PRO in kindergarten to save my teachers & friends from Satan. 1/ — amy (@amycourts) December 11, 2017

#RaptureAnxiety was a powerful evangelistic tool when targeted at children and teenagers. I wrote notes to the parents of the children I babysat in high school, begging them to accept Christ before was too late. If they went to hell because I didn’t witness, it would be my fault. — Mandy Nicole, First of Her Name (@ThatMandyNicole) December 9, 2017

ADVERTISEMENT

https://twitter.com/NateSparks130/status/939588257020547073