News Stories
These are news stories breaking after the publishing of this Word
from.The Great
Tsunami...Was God Involved
Faiths Ask of Quake: 'Why Did You Do
This, God?'
By Peter Graff
LONDON (Reuters) - It is one of the oldest, most profound questions,
posed by some of the most learned minds of every faith throughout the
course of human history.
It was put eloquently this week by an old woman in a devastated village
in southern India's Tamil Nadu state. "Why did you do this to us, God?"
she wailed. "What did we do to upset you?" Perhaps no event in living
memory has confronted so many of the world's great religions with such a
basic test of faith as this week's tsunami, which indiscriminately
slaughtered Indonesian Muslims, Indian Hindus, Thai and Sri Lankan
Buddhists and tourists who were Christians and Jews.
In temples, mosques, churches and synagogues across the globe, clerics
are being called upon to explain: How could a benevolent god visit such
horror on ordinary people?
Traditionalists of diverse faiths described the destruction as part of
god's plan, proof of his power and punishment for human sins.
"This is an expression of God's great ire with the world," Israeli chief
rabbi Shlomo Amar told Reuters. "The world is being punished for
wrongdoing -- be it people's needless hatred of each other, lack of
charity, moral turpitude."
Pandit Harikrishna Shastri, a priest of New Delhi's huge marble and
sandstone Birla Hindu temple, told Reuters the disaster was caused by a
"huge amount of pent-up man-made evil on earth" and driven by the
positions of the planets.
Azizan Abdul Razak, a Muslim cleric and vice president of Malaysia's
Islamic opposition party, Parti Islam se-Malaysia, said the disaster was
a reminder from god that "he created the world and can destroy the
world."
Sheikh Ibrahim Mogra, a leading British Muslim cleric from Leicester in
England said: "We believe that God has ultimate controlling power over
his entire creation. We have a responsibility to try and attract god's
kindness and mercy and not do anything that would attract his anger."
END OF TIME?
Many faiths believe that disasters foretell the end of time or the
coming of a Messiah. Some Christians expect chaos and destruction as
foretold in the Bible's final book, Revelations.
Maria, a 32-year-old Jehovah's Witness in Cyprus who believes that the
apocalypse is coming said people who once slammed the door in her face
were stopping to listen.
"It is a sign of the last days," she said.
But for others, such calamities can prompt a repudiation of faith.
Secularist Martin Kettle wrote in Britain's Guardian newspaper that the
tsunamis should force people to "ask if the God can exist that can do
such things?" -- or if there is no God, just nature.
"This poses no problem for the scientific belief system. Here, it says,
was a mindless natural event which destroyed Muslim and Hindu alike," he
wrote. "A non-scientific belief system, especially one that is based on
any kind of notion of a divine order, has some explaining to do,
however."
It is a question that clergy have to deal with nearly every day, not
just at times of great catastrophe but when providing consolation for
the daily sorrows of life, said U.S. Rabbi Daniel Isaak, of Congregation
Neveh Shalom, in Portland, Oregon.
"It is really difficult to believe in a God that not only creates a
tsunami that kills 50 or 60 thousand people, but that puts birth defects
in children," he said. "Often the first question people ask on an
individual basis is that question that that Indian woman asked. Why is
God doing this to me?"
In one modern view, he said, God does not interfere in the affairs of
his creation. Disasters like the tsunami occur for the natural reasons
scientists say they do.
"This is not something that God has done. God hasn't picked out a
certain group of people in a certain area of the world and said: 'I am
going to punish them,"' he said.
"The world has certain imperfections built into the natural order, and
we have to live with them. The issue isn't 'Why did God do this to us?'
but 'How do we human beings care for one another?"'
Greek Orthodox Theologian Costas Kyriakides in Cyprus expressed a
similar view.
"I personally don't attach any theological significance to this -- I
listen to what the scientists say," he said. "God is always the fall
guy. We incriminate Him completely unjustly."
(Additional reporting by Michele Kambas in Cyprus, Dan Williams in
Jerusalem and Reuters correspondents in New Delhi and Kuala Lumpur)
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