I remember 9/11. My wife and I received a phone call from a friend at 6 AM and we rushed into the living room and turned on the TV. Before the first building fell, the commentators were trying to determine who was responsible for the disaster - was it an accident? Was this an attack on our country? Soon after events unfolded and it was clear that it was not an accident, the media settled into uncovering who was at fault. When Bill Maher suggested that we, ourselves, the American people may share culpability for bringing on the attack, he was fired from ABC and lost his TV show. We claimed to care for the victims of the tragedy, but it took Congress ten years and some serious political maneuvering to pass a law to help the people involved who still needed help;
When the hurricane hit Haiti, TV preachers in the US were quick to determine that God was bringing down His wrath on an evil nation. The same thing is happening with the earthquake in Japan - although, to a lesser extent - possibly because Japan is more like us than Haiti.
So here is my observation; we seem to be so afraid of events that are out of our control that we scramble around looking for a reason to explain chaos before we even get to the point of helping the victims. Does it really matter who is at fault for these types of events? Frankly, I see this excessive need to find meaning to be an example of a lack of faith. Jesus didn't look for someone to blame in the death of Lazarus - he got to the mourning and then the helping part immediately. So in the coming days, lets not let fear get to us - lets skip the blaming and get to the helping part.
When the hurricane hit Haiti, TV preachers in the US were quick to determine that God was bringing down His wrath on an evil nation. The same thing is happening with the earthquake in Japan - although, to a lesser extent - possibly because Japan is more like us than Haiti.
So here is my observation; we seem to be so afraid of events that are out of our control that we scramble around looking for a reason to explain chaos before we even get to the point of helping the victims. Does it really matter who is at fault for these types of events? Frankly, I see this excessive need to find meaning to be an example of a lack of faith. Jesus didn't look for someone to blame in the death of Lazarus - he got to the mourning and then the helping part immediately. So in the coming days, lets not let fear get to us - lets skip the blaming and get to the helping part.