News Stories
These are news stories breaking after the publishing of this Word
from.The Great
Tsunami...Was God Involved
Don't blame God for
Asian casualties
By Rabbi Daniel Lapin - WorldNetDaily
With the final death toll in Asia yet unknown, analyzing the calamity
can appear callous, especially in the light of ancient Jewish wisdom's
advice to refrain from even comforting mourners whose dead still lie
before them, let alone analyzing their loss. Still, once we have, in
some human way, associated ourselves with the disaster by means of
financial or other contribution, we surely are obliged to try and learn
something from it.
Sometimes before the answers can be found, the right questions must be
asked and there are certainly questions well worth asking. However, it
is as well not to be distracted by the wrong questions.
"What sort of God would have let this happen?" is one example of the
wrong question. First, it is a perfect example of narcissism. The
questioners, including one columnist from the Guardian, convert an
international human tragedy of mind-staggering proportions into a
maudlin expression of their own spiritual angst. This question escalates
self-indulgence to new heights of obnoxiousness.
It reminds me of the older man sitting in the next seat during a certain
memorable flight I took back in 1980. As the flight attendants
graciously served my special kosher meal, he began a conversation. "I am
also Jewish" he unnecessarily informed me, as he tucked into his bacon
omelet. I responded politely and he resumed. "I used to keep kosher, but
after Hitler, I could no longer believe in God."
"And do you by any chance remember how old you were when you first
abandoned Jewish religious observance?" I innocently asked. "Sure, I
remember, it was my 18th birthday and I walked into a non-kosher
restaurant for the first time."
Later, as our flight neared its destination, we exchanged further
personal and family details. In response to another question of mine, he
revealed that he was 65 years old. The arithmetic wasn't hard to do. As
we touched down, I leaned over and gently said, "Look, I don't mean any
offense, but you didn't abandon Judaism as a result of God allowing the
Holocaust. You entered that restaurant in 1933, well before World War II
began. Hitler and his Holocaust merely provided you with the excuse you
needed to feel comfortable abandoning your faith."
To find the same comfort, those who shape their lives according to the
doctrines of secular fundamentalism, take an evident delight in stating
the usual "Where is God now?" questions after tragedies, especially
those natural ones like earthquakes that can't be blamed on human
actions.
However the horrifying consequences of these calamities can certainly be
blamed on human inactions. Look, I know that it is nowadays considered
distasteful to attribute any complicity in a problem to the victim. It
is as if being a victim today automatically confers moral virtue, but
being that delicate can cost us truth.
The simple truth is that American seismological specialists in Pasadena,
Calif., and elsewhere were horrified that no warning systems are in
place in these Asian countries by means of which residents can be
alerted. Remember that there were several hours of warning available. "A
warning centre such as those used around the Pacific could have saved
most of the thousands of people who died in Asia's earthquake and
tsunamis" said the U.S. Geological Survey.
Many lives could surely have been saved. Some countries have pleaded
poverty, but that is not an adequate explanation. We are not talking
rocket science here. We are talking about sirens on poles. Remember them
from the cold war era? This is World War I technology and very
inexpensive.
In 1953, nearly 2,000 Dutchmen drowned when the North Sea breached a
dyke and flooded part of low-lying Holland. Within a few years, they had
commenced the world's largest civil engineering project and Holland has
never flooded significantly since. Sadly, this is far from the first
time that some of these nations have faced natural disasters in which
people died by the tens of thousands as the result of monsoons,
typhoons, flooding and earthquakes. Yet, few warning systems exist, let
alone seawalls and evacuation routes.
On Dec. 26, 2003, over 30,000 victims perished in the Iranian earthquake
in the town of Bam. To explain the vast death toll inflicted by an
earthquake no stronger than that which struck the Californian town of
Paso Robles within a few days, Iranian authorities pleaded poverty. It
costs considerably more to engineer large-scale nuclear capability as
Iran has done, than it costs to retrofit buildings for safety in an
earthquake-prone zone. The problem is not poverty, it is priority.
Here in the United States, the standard bearer of Western Civilization,
we have two cultural imperatives imbedded deeply within our national
DNA. Both flow from the Bible with which our founders were intimately
familiar and by means of which they sculpted their worldviews.
Our first distinctive cultural imperative is to render ourselves less
vulnerable to nature. We believed we were following Divine will when we
developed medicine and medical technology to dominate disease. We found
insecticides to protect our food supply, and we built dams to control
rivers. We took seriously the commandment in the 28th verse of the
Bible, "And God blessed them [Adam and Eve] saying 'Be fruitful and
multiply, fill the earth, and subdue it.'"
We never understood "subdue the world" to mean obliterate nature, or
otherwise despoil the environment. We knew it meant responsible
stewardship and making ourselves less vulnerable to nature which is not
always benign. We knew we were pleasing God by making ourselves safer
and more secure and this knowledge lent added urgency and meaning to our
efforts which then seemed to be blessed. Not by coincidence did the
overwhelming majority of these scientific and technical developments
take place in the West.
Western Civilization's second distinctive cultural imperative is the
importance of preserving human life. This, too, derives directly from
our biblical roots and distinguishes us from the peculiar fatalism
toward death found in so many other cultures.
Together, these two values enshrined in the West, in general, and in
America, in particular, are chiefly responsible for the vastly
diminished impact that natural disasters inflict upon our society.
God runs this world with as little supernatural interference as
possible. Earthquakes, hurricanes, volcanic eruptions and, yes, tsunamis
happen. It is called nature, which is not benign. Fortunately, God also
gave us intelligence and commanded us to make ourselves less vulnerable
to nature. He also implanted in us a culture in which each and every
life is really important. That is why Deuteronomy, chapter 30 states, "I
call heaven and earth to record this day against you, that I have set
before you life and death, blessing and cursing; therefore choose life,
that both you and your seed may live."
God may have allowed the earthquake to happen, just as he has allowed
germs to exist and just as he has allowed cold weather each winter.
However, under the influence of biblical culture, people have defended
themselves against germs and they have learned how to produce energy to
defeat winter's frigid conditions.
A long time ago, in His book, God provided the incentive and
encouragement to survive nature. He isn't to blame for the deaths in the
Asian disaster. Many of the deaths are attributable to misguided
cultures. Innocent people died because culpable governments reject
American values instead of imitating them.
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