The Tsunami

(republishing, copying, no restrictions)
By: Father Shay Cullen

The death toll from the greatest natural disaster in living memory has reached 260,000 dead. Hundreds of thousands of others injured, abandoned, hungry and homeless. This immense suffering coming so soon after the other disasters in the Philippines, man made at that, has left us reeling, wondering and asking why?

The Tsunami, a giant wave triggered by an earthquake under the Indian Ocean off Indonesia raced at hundreds of miles an hour washing all before it. As it hit the coasts surrounding the Indian Ocean it obliterated towns, villages, and resorts entire populations. Nothing could withstand its power. The only human failure was the lack of warning devices that would have alerted the coastal communities hours ahead and saved thousands of lives.

What believers ask is where God was in this terrible calamity and most religious leaders of all faiths try to explain how God was not in it. Some take a fatalist approach and say it was God’s will, most do not. Atheists say its evidence that there is no God.

If God is compassionate and caring why God allowed this to happen, believers ask. The Catholic Bishop of Birmingham, the Most Reverend Vincent Nicholas emphasized the positive saying at mass that God’s light and love is not wiped out by disasters but they are intensified by them “The light of God glows more persistently in that awful darkness . It shines in human heroism, generosity selflessness and courage.” The right Reverend Graham James Bishop of Norwich said that... “God has given us an Earth that lives and moves. It is alive-that is why we can live. These events were the starkest possible reminder that what gives life also takes it away.”

Some believers understand God as the creative energy from which the cosmos emerged grew and continues to expand to infinity as sciences have so far concluded.

God for them is this all positive energy, the power of infinite goodness that enabled the cosmos to come be. They understand God as the prime cause and first mover that brought about the Universe, the creative energy of all life. They say we are composed of star dust and the earth was indeed formed from the galactic explosions of collapsing stars and from that all life emerged. Our bodies are made of this primeval matter our spirit reaches back to be one with infinite goodness.

The volcanoes, the turbulent climate, the earthquakes are the ongoing movements of these creative physical forces. The emergence of life from the chemical soup of these energies and the long history of evolution led to humans.

To be human is to have been formed by these forces and even today having evolved from them we must continue to live and endure them. Destructive as they may be we must remember all life emerged from them and in many ways continues to be sustained by them as they influence climate, earth’s temperature, the ocean currents, the wind and rain they in turn make possible the continuation of life. To be human is to be an intimate part of this. We are the children of infinite goodness.

It is more blessed to be than not to be, and since we choose life we accept to live and respect the forces that give life and can take it away in the cycle of death and rebirth. The Tsunami is but one sad and destructive part of the living moving earth.

Our humanity has reached a spiritual and intellectual awareness of this creative energy, the infinite goodness that is present and emanates through all matter and all creatures. We are grateful to have life and worship its source-God. [End]

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