On the Lord's Day of fiery wrath, He will send fire from the sun.
A CME is not "fire from the Sun" as in fire actually hitting the Earth. The flames of a CME only go so far and stop, then the electrical forces travel to the Earth, not the fire.
from the article you posted but didn't read yourself:
The eruption, known as a coronal mass ejection, may cause a minor geomagnetic storm and some active auroras.
www.newsweek.com
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Some CMEs have the potential to cause disruption to modern life due to the effect they have on Earth's magnetic field. CMEs can also cause electrical disturbances that might affect power grids, cause increased drag on satellites, and even cause auroras to appear in parts of the world where they're rarely seen. The effects of CMEs on Earth are referred to as geomagnetic storms.
The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC) said in an alert on Sunday that the expected arrival of Wednesday's CME should only cause a minor geomagnetic storm.
The potential effects include weak power grid fluctuations, a minor impact on satellite operations, and possibly auroras that may be visible in U.S. states like northern Michigan and Maine.
The SWPC has predicted that the storm will be a G1-class storm—the mildest possible score on the geomagnetic storm scale, which goes up to G5. G1 space weather storms are common, sometimes occurring multiple times a month.
For most people on Earth, their effects aren't noticeable.
G5 storms, on the other hand, have the potential to cause the complete collapse of some power grid systems, disruption to high frequency radio communications for days, and auroras in states as far south as Florida and southern Texas. Such storms are rare."
That doesn't match anything written about the wrath of God.