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World’s Last Chance is a religious organization that promotes a unique blend of end-times prophecy, legalism, and unorthodox theology. Founded in the early 2000s, World’s Last Chance operates primarily through its website and YouTube channel, where it publishes videos on Bible prophecy, the calendar, and salvation. While the group claims to be Christian and to uphold the Bible as the Word of God, its teachings diverge significantly from biblical and historical Christianity. World’s Last Chance is best known for its promotion of the lunisolar calendar, its rejection of the traditional view of the Trinity, and its insistence on using the Hebrew name Yahuwah for God and Yahushua for Jesus. More recently, World’s Last Chance began promoting these aberrant views through a series of billboards in various parts of the United States.
One of the most distinctive features of World’s Last Chance is its use of the lunisolar calendar to determine the Sabbath and biblical feast days. According to World’s Last Chance, the modern Gregorian calendar is a deception of the papacy, and true worship must follow the calendar established at creation, which they claim is based on the moon’s cycles. This leads them to observe the Sabbath on different days of the week depending on the lunar month, rather than the consistent seventh-day Sabbath observed by Jews and Seventh-day Adventists. This teaching of a floating Sabbath has no support in Scripture, which consistently refers to the Sabbath as the seventh day of a continuous weekly cycle (Exodus 20:8–11; Leviticus 23:3).
World’s Last Chance also denies the doctrine of the Trinity, a core belief of biblical Christianity. The group teaches that the Holy Spirit is not a distinct Person of the Godhead but rather the impersonal power or presence of God. This contradicts clear biblical teaching that the Holy Spirit is a divine Person who speaks (Acts 13:2), teaches (John 14:26), and can be grieved (Ephesians 4:30). Furthermore, World’s Last Chance teaches that Jesus is not co-eternal with the Father but was begotten at some point in eternity past, a view that aligns more closely with Arianism or Jehovah’s Witness theology than with orthodox Christianity. In contrast, Scripture affirms the full deity and eternal nature of the Son of God (John 1:1–3; Colossians 1:15–17; Hebrews 1:3).
Another troubling aspect of World’s Last Chance’s theology is its emphasis on legalism and works-based salvation. The group teaches that obedience to the Torah, including the observance of the feast days and dietary laws, is essential for salvation. Mandating compliance to the Torah contradicts the gospel of grace as taught in the New Testament, where salvation is by grace through faith, not by works of the law (Ephesians 2:8–9; Galatians 2:16).
World’s Last Chance also promotes conspiracy theories, particularly regarding the papacy, the Jesuits, and global political powers. The group claims that the Roman Catholic Church is the beast of Revelation and that Sunday worship is the mark of the beast. While the Bible does warn of deception in the last days (2 Thessalonians 2:3–4), World’s Last Chance’s interpretations are speculative and sensational and lack solid exegetical support.
In summary, World’s Last Chance teaches the following:
• the use of a lunisolar calendar to determine Sabbath and feast days, rejecting the traditional weekly cycle.
• there is no Trinity—the Holy Spirit is not a person and Jesus is not co-eternal with the Father.
• the necessity of Torah observance for salvation, promoting a works-based gospel.
• the use of Hebrew names for God and Jesus are essential for true worship.
• conspiratorial interpretations of end-times prophecy, especially concerning the papacy and Sunday worship.
Because of these doctrinal errors, World’s Last Chance cannot be considered a Christian ministry in the biblical sense. While they use Christian terminology and claim to follow Scripture, their teachings distort the gospel and deny essential truths of the Christian faith. Believers are called to test all things against the Word of God (1 Thessalonians 5:21) and to hold fast to sound doctrine (Titus 1:9).• there is no Trinity—the Holy Spirit is not a person and Jesus is not co-eternal with the Father.
• the necessity of Torah observance for salvation, promoting a works-based gospel.
• the use of Hebrew names for God and Jesus are essential for true worship.
• conspiratorial interpretations of end-times prophecy, especially concerning the papacy and Sunday worship.
