This talk brings Catherine Keller's process-relational engagement with apocalyptic imagination into conversation with Larisa Jasarević's Beekeeping in the End Times, a Sufi-inflected ethnography of Islamic eschatology in contemporary Bosnia. Although working within different traditions, both thinkers decenter the human and turn to more-than-human creatures as ethical and theological guides in a time of ecological crisis. Drawing on Keller's figure of the broken web and Jasarević's focus on the honeybee, the talk explores how spiders and bees model relationality, vulnerability, and responsiveness amid planetary rupture. It argues that these multispecies figures reveal a shared imagination shaped by damage, precarity, and responsibility, while also showing how war, ecological instability, and lived human-animal dependence condition which theological interpretations of the "end times" become salient.