Follows apocalyptic predictions for the blood moon on September 28

The eBible Fellowship warned earth will be destroyed by fire on October 7

Just a week after prophets of doom claimed the world would end on the blood moon, doomsday groups are at it again.

An online Christian organization, based in Philadelphia, is warning believers that earth will be 'annihilated' tomorrow.

The eBible Fellowship - which previously predicted the end of the world would fall on 21 May 2011- warn that life as we know it will be wiped out by fire on Wednesday, October 7, 2015. And this time they are sure they have the right date.

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New doomsday prophet Chris McCann (pictured), the leader and founder of The eBible Fellowship, says the apocalypse is still due - and it's tomorrow

The prediction follows panic last week when religious prophecy met rare astronomical phenomena to form the 'blood moon apocalypse' prediction.

Two influential ministers, Mark Blitz and John Hagee, had claimed in separate books, that the fourth lunar eclipse in just two years, known as a 'tetrad' would herald the end of days.

Their beliefs are based on a passage from the Bible that says: 'The sun shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great and the terrible day of the Lord comes.'

Fears were not helped by the fact that each of the four blood moons in this tetrad have fallen on April 14, 2014 (Passover), October 8, 2014 (Feast of the Tabernacle), April 4, 2015 (Passover) and September 28, the first day of this year's Feast of the Tabernacle.

According to those preparing for the apocalypse, this could be a sign of the Old Testament prophecy predicting the end of the world, the New York Post reported.

Of course, the September 28 eclipse passed without incident. But you may still want to hold off on buying those green bananas.

New doomsday prophet Chris McCann, the leader and founder of The eBible Fellowship, says the apocalypse is still due - and it's tomorrow.

McCann has warned that life as we know it will be wiped out by fire on October 7, 2015 (tomorrow)

The current prediction is based on those of Harold Camping who predicted the rapture in May 2011

'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,' he told The Guardian.

'It'll be gone forever. Annihilated.'

McCann bases his apocalyptic predictions on those made by Christian radio host Harold Camping who hit the headlines after he told listeners to his Family Radio station in California that the world would end on 21 May 2011.

His independent Christian media empire spent millions of dollars - some of it from donations made by followers who quit their jobs and sold all their possessions - to spread the word on more than 5,000 billboards and 20 RVs plastered with the Judgment Day message.

When the date came and went without incident, he claimed again that the end was nigh in October that year.

WHY NOW? THE WORKINGS OUT BEHIND THE END OF THE WORLD Chris McCann bases his prediction on Christian radio host Harold Camping's original claim the world would end on 21 May 2011. McCann believes that was 'judgement day' and the apocolypse would happen exactly y 1,600 days from that date - bringing it to October 7, 2015. Camping had based his own homemade mathematical formula for the apocalypse works, in part, like this. Firstly, on a verse in Chapter 2 of Peter verse 3:8, which says that one day is like a thousand years and a thousand years is like one day to God. Elsewhere it is said that there will be seven thousand years between Noah's flood and the end of the world. Camping believes that the Noah’s Ark flood happened in the year 4990 BC. So to Camping, the seven days translates to 7,000 years. And 4990 plus 2011, minus one because there was no year '0', equals 7,000 years. The date of May 21 has been derived from complex mathematical formula made up from numbers that appear repeatedly in the Bible. Advertisement

The preacher, who suffered a stroke three weeks after the May prediction failed, said the light dawned on him that instead of the biblical Rapture in which the faithful would be swept up to the heavens, the date had instead been a "spiritual" Judgment Day, which placed the entire world under Christ's judgment.

But after the cataclysmic event did not occur in October either, Camping acknowledged his apocalyptic prophecy had been wrong. He died at the ripe old age of 92 in 2013.

However, McCann claims that Camping had correctly predicted God's 'judgement day', rather than the final end of days, on May 21, 2011.

He believes that God had given himself exactly 1,600 days from that date to deciding which non-churchgoers would be saved in the rapture. Using his calculation, it brings the end of days to tomorrow.

The doomsday prediction is no new phenomenon.

In June, NASA were forced to deny a massive asteroid was on a collision course with Earth which would spell the end of humanity.

The radical claim came from an online community of biblical theorists who said that life as we know it will be wiped out between 22 to 28 September.

Despite their lack of credentials, the popularity of the prediction forced Nasa to speak up, dismissing the theory as unfounded.

Their gloomy prediction was set for the same time as the blood moon apocalypse theory.

John Hagee, a Christian pastor who has written a book on the Tetrad called 'Four Blood Moons: Something is About to Change', told the Daily Express after the first blood moon in that the tetrad marked the dawn of a 'hugely significant event' for the world.

'This is not something that some religious think tank has put together,' the notoriously outspoken church founder said.

Hagee said that every time there has been a tetrad over important days in the Jewish calendar, significant religious events have taken place; In 1493, the first Tetrad saw the expulsion of Jews by the Catholic Spanish Inquisition.

The second happened in 1949, right after the State of Israel was founded and the most recent one - in 1967 - happened during the Six-Day War between Arabs and Israelis.

In his book, Hagee says: 'The heavens are God's billboard.

'He's been sending signals to Earth, and we haven't been picking them up. Two blood moons, in 2014 and 2015, point to dramatic events in the Middle East and, as a result, changes in the whole world.'

Underground movement: A commuter on the New York subway stop at Times Square read an advertisement for the camping's apocalypse predictions in 2011

Controversial tech boss and presidential candidate John McAfee has warned a 'doomsday' electronic weapon could wipe out 90% of Americans and urged politicians to is the number one threat facing the country

A lunar eclipse occurs when the moon passes in the shadow of Earth, and appears red due to light refracting differently and hitting its surface.

Since 1900 there have only been five 'supermoon' lunar eclipses – in 1910, 1928, 1946, 1964 and 1982. Standard lunar eclipses are more common and it's thought that one can be seen from some point on the Earth every two-and-a-half years.

Earlier this week controversial tech boss and presidential candidate John McAfee has warned a 'doomsday' electronic weapon could wipe out 90% of Americans and urged politicians to is the number one threat facing the country.

McAfee, who recently announced he is running in 2016, wrote in a blog for International Business Times: 'Experts agree that an all out cyber attack, beginning with an EMP (electromagnetic pulse) attack on our electronic infrastructure, would wipe out 90% of the human population of this country within two years of the attack.

'That means the death of 270 million people within 24 months after the attack.'

He claims that the country, and its leaders are unprepared - and warned that gun crime should not be the 'single issue' that decided votes.

'Our leaders are nearly all ill prepared for this near certain, not-too-distant event.

'If I were forced to choose a single issue, this would obviously be the issue.'

While a group of Britiish scientists have made a (only slightly more optimistic) prediction that the world will end in 2100.

A group of British scientists have also made their prediction for the end of the world - based on a doom-laden US study in 1972 which found that the earth would run out of food and resources, becoming uninhabitable by around 2050.

Now scientists at Anglia Ruskin University’s Global Sustainability Institute have claimed we have a little more grace – until the end of this century, or the year 2100.