iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Adam Hamilton

GET UPDATES FROM Adam Hamilton
 

Japan's Earthquake and the Will of God

Posted: 03/21/2011 9:00 pm

It is natural, when faced with great suffering, to ask the question, "Why?" As we do, even those who are only nominally religious wonder if the tragedy is not an act of God, a punishment for our sins.

On Monday, Tokyo's governor, Shintaro Ishihara, was quoted as saying, "I think (the disaster in Japan) is tembatsu." Tembatsu is a Japanese term that means "divine punishment." His remarks are reminiscent of the 2005 comments of the then New Orleans' mayor Ray Nagin, following Hurricane Katrina's destruction of his city. At the time he noted, "Surely God is mad at America. He sent us hurricane after hurricane after hurricane." Both governor Ishihara's and Mayor Nagin's saw the disaster as punishment for human sin.

We often suggest the same when we're dealing with our own individual suffering. A woman in the church I serve miscarried. Her friends told her it must have been "the will of God." A man who lost his job two years ago asks me why God is so angry with him that he's kept the man unemployed for two years. A young woman asks me, "Why did God kill my sister?"

Does God send earthquakes and hurricanes that indiscriminately kill thousands upon thousands of people? Does God take babies from the wombs of their mothers, depress the American economy and keep people from getting jobs? And does God kill the people we love? This picture of God has led many people to reject God all together.

As a pastor, I've spent 25 years working through the problem of suffering with my congregation. While it is natural, in the midst of intense grief and loss, to blame both God and ourselves for terrible tragedies (God is punishing me for something I've done/God is punishing our nation for something we've done), these answers miss the mark.

From a Christian theological perspective there are two challenges to this view: The first is that the Bible consistently teaches that God is loving, merciful and just. There is nothing loving, merciful and just about thousands of people being buried alive in mudslides or rubble or washed out to sea by a tsunami. There is nothing loving, merciful and just about a child being born with cancer, or a young person being raped and murdered. These acts of violence and widespread destruction are inconsistent with the character of God. Further, when considering whether these acts may be punishment for human sin, the central focus of the Christian gospel, which the present season of Lent is pointing us towards, is that Jesus Christ bore the punishment for human sin on the cross, there offering a prayer that would echo throughout history, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do."

The answer to the question why is not to be found in a vengeful God who wreaks havoc on the human race. It is to be found in understanding that we live in a world of cause and effect. Our actions can have negative consequences for us or others. Others actions can have negative consequences for us. We also know that our bodies are not indestructible, and that there are genetic and external factors that affect our health. These can be exacerbated by our lifestyle and actions. And we know that there are forces of nature at work in our planet -- atmospheric, environmental and geological -- that are destructive. These very forces, which can be so destructive when human beings are in their path, are also essential to our planet being able to sustain life. Our actions as human beings can exacerbate these forces, but the forces themselves are a part of our planet's essential operating system.

Why did the earthquake and tsunami occur in Japan? Was it the act of an angry God? No, it was the result of the movement and collision of the earth's tectonic plates -- a process driven by the earth's need to regulate its own internal temperature. Without the process that creates earthquake, our planet could not sustain life.

So if God is not sending earthquakes, destroying economies and inflicting pain upon human beings, what is God doing? God works through people, calling them to help their neighbors in need. God comforts his people, walking with them even "through the valley of the shadow of death." And, as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. noted, God bends or forces suffering, tragedy and evil that occur to bring about good. God redeems the suffering. Those who are believers in God find strength from their faith in the face of suffering. They are compelled to give sacrificially to help those in need. And they have the hope that comes from knowing that, with God by their side, the tragedy they are facing is never the final word.

 
 
 

Follow Adam Hamilton on Twitter: www.twitter.com/RevAdamHamilton

It is natural, when faced with great suffering, to ask the question, "Why?" As we do, even those who are only nominally religious wonder if the tragedy is not an act of God, a punishment for our sins...
It is natural, when faced with great suffering, to ask the question, "Why?" As we do, even those who are only nominally religious wonder if the tragedy is not an act of God, a punishment for our sins...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 620
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Bloggers
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (14 total)
08:42 PM on 04/05/2011
I think this is a very well thought out and argued text which showed that there is a possibility of a conciliation of the belief in God with the causal/entropical concrete reality we live in. Notice that the author uses a key explanation, which i quote: "God redeems the suffering. Those who are believers in God find strength from their faith in the face of suffering." I understood that the author does not see God as an entity who is actively causing each and every event. I think he is saying that God is not "the big causer" but a comfort thought(?)idea(?)being(?) where the believer would find comfort and a moral code of conduct. I actually quite liked the non-delusional and non-teleological point-of-view of this pastor, despite the fact that it does not really equal mine. He is not trying to put the existance of God up for debate; he believes God exists. What he does is to try to give some kind of transcendental meaning or find spiritual cognition facing this tragedy.
07:52 PM on 03/29/2011
So if I see a child freezing in the street and say ah well the cold is a force of nature that's to bad for him that is ok. God could have made a world free of disaster, he could have warned the people about the quake, he could have given them the power to walk upon the water he did none of these things. If you have the power to prevent tragedy you are morally obligated to do so. To fail to act makes you responsible for the results. The same should hold true for any god worthy of worship. God if he exists must be limited in power, knowlege, or benevolence.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HGfromOmaha
A hungry, free man not a well-fed slave
07:06 PM on 03/29/2011
This isn't a bad article........yes, the tectonic plates moving absolutely caused the quake....
Maybe God shuffled his feet?
gclafontaine
Sand is a small price to pay for sandlessness.
11:25 AM on 03/29/2011
Good old god. I knew it wasn't him!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Reiner-von-Sinn
Fol de rol de rolly O
08:40 PM on 03/28/2011
Why?

Tectonic plate movement.

Enough of the god delusion.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rich3324
Likes: Chasing villagers. Dislikes: Fire
01:44 PM on 03/28/2011
I think it is the will of plate tectonics.
photo
GrantS
I'm liberal through and through.
07:32 PM on 03/27/2011
Suffering is pain.
Pain is bad or evil.
God creates suffering.
Therefore, God created evil or badness.
Therefore, God is evil or bad.
QED
05:48 AM on 03/27/2011
you are a false prophet just watering down the gospel and telling everyone that the blood of jesus gave everyone a free ticket to continue to live in sin. japan worships other gods and don't worship the one God who created all things and us. God states clearly you can read it in the old testiment and new that whoever worship false gods and other gods before him swift destruction will be upon them and god's anger is justified here he's a jealouse god and won't tolerate worship of other gods. and we are in the last days of christ soon to be returned. is this hate towards japan no it isn't this is a message to japan repent and turn away from other gods and turn back to the one true god who created everything and gave us jesus christ for our sins that shed and died on the cross. this could of been the cause of worshiping other gods and you can read it even before and after christ's death and resurrection that god is unchangeing and the blood of jesus doesn't justify you for worshiping other gods. SORRY BUT YOUR A FALSE TEACHER AND FALSE PROPHET
ladyearth
Give birth to your dancing star
08:18 AM on 03/28/2011
Jesus instructs us to love one another. Don't feel much love coming through in your message. In my opinion, anyone who does not teach love is a false teacher and a false prophet.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
John Mark Sappenfield
Truth, justice,the American way
04:38 PM on 04/20/2011
You obviously don't know what a false prophet is. For that matter, you don't seem to know who Jesus Christ is. All you're following is the traditions of men that Jesus warned us against.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Whoozthaboss
I just be chillin.
12:47 AM on 03/27/2011
no matter what, according to xtians, god ALWAYS comes out on top. Gotta love it
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
12:26 AM on 03/27/2011
God did not cause any of the calamities that have happened on this earth. It's the cycle of our planet and the conditions of the enviroment, the make-up of the land masses and the fault lines as well as the galaxy's pull that causes these things to happen..it's called mother nature.
I am spiritual but not religious. Religion causes people to buy into a set doctrine without evaluating ther eal meaning of life from any point of view other than what you are told to believe. I do believe we all have a higher power that is within us and guides us--be this whatever you want to call it. So I live by the golden rule of "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you", which when you come right down to it, isn't that what the basis of most religions are suposed to be to begin with? A good human is judged by how they help each other through this life the best way they can. That's all that counts in this harried life. Karma will take care of the rest when the time comes.
I am impressed with this article and thank the writer for keeping it as pure as he has rather than the damnation as some religions like to scare people with. A well written article. I'm not against religion--just not a follower from past experience.
05:24 PM on 03/26/2011
There are a lot of things I don't know, especially about God. Does he exist, why does he allow tragedy to happen, is it punishment for something they have done? Maybe it had nothing to do with the people in Japan, maybe his purpose was to remind us all that we are not in control. Once we accept that our future is uncertain then we are hopefully motivated to live life to the fullest. This article makes a lot of good points and I agree with his assessment. Earthquakes don't prove that God exists, and they don't prove that he doesn't. The fact is Earthquakes have to happen. The only way for them to stop is for the Earth's core to solidify, then there won't be plates, so there won't be earthquakes. There also wouldn't be a magnetic field, which would probably cause all life on earth to die of radiation from the sun. Earthquakes take the life of some, but they protect us all. It is the cost of having a planet that can sustain life.
12:09 PM on 03/26/2011
It’s clear to me that many of the atheists responding here haven’t bothered to read the article, and those that did read it, missed the article’s intention. Rev. Hamilton was making a point that no one should blame victims by saying God targeted them for punishment. He is giving encouragement and comfort to those who have been stricken by tragedy. That was the point that was missed, purposefully or not, during the feeding frenzy of comments trying to prove there is no God. I’m a Christian and accept the fact that others don’t believe what I do. I’m wondering why so many atheists can’t do the same? Are not judgment, hostility and intolerance some of the very things atheists hate about the Religious Right? Seems to me that you are no different when you try to make your point without humility or kindness.
photo
wolfiegirl
Princess Wolfie
12:35 PM on 03/28/2011
I'm largely agnostic, but have examined several religious doctrines. The one that makes most sense to me is my rather cursory study of Kabballah. According to Kabballah, God created the entire world, both good and evil. Every "bad" act is sent by God, not to punish, but as a learning experience. The human being, under the illusion that he is separate and apart from the rest of the humanity and in fact natures itself, goes through many incarnations in order to learn from both good and bad, in order to eventually evolve, as Jesus did, into a deity. If you follow the words of Christ very carefully, you will see that everything he says coincides with these beliefs. There is also some speculation among scholars that during those 'lost" 18 years of Christ's life he was studying Kabballah. Anyone recognized as a scholar or prophet, or special in those days would have had access to Kabballah.

It's an interesting angle on the life of Christ. It does not detract in any way from core Christian beliefs, rather it just enhances and explains it in a way that makes sense.
02:52 AM on 03/26/2011
I am certainly no scholar on this topic, just highly opinionated like everyone else! But it seems to me that the modern men of god can very often explain how/when god works and his rationale. Just like men of god did 250, 500 or 1500 years ago ... except the story about why/how he works seems to keep changing. Am I missing something or are these evolving explanations primarily an attempt to keep the culture of faith relevant in a world where advances in science and changing societal values are at odds with the views of major religions? Arguments for and against gods' involvement in human affairs can never be proven or disproven due to the central concept of the major religions which boils down to "this will all make sense and be so worthwhile ... after you die." Just cannot help but think that we all might be better served to shelve this debate about if, when and why god works and just do the human work to make small positive changes in our own communities and beyond. Cue the Kumbaya music in ... 3, 2, 1,
02:15 AM on 03/26/2011
Quit being silly. There is no God, and there certainly is no god "cause" of earthquakes. And believe it, no matter how many do, does not make it real. There is no "why" ... earthquakes are simply a part of life on earth. Some live through them, some don't. But there is no mystical "reason". All of us go eventually. So asking "why did God do X and not Y" is as childish and as big a waste of time as asking what is Santa Claus bringing me for Christmas this year.
02:09 AM on 03/26/2011
There are teachings of Jesus, which imply God controls every phenomena, even the death of a single sparrow: Mt10:29 "Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? Yet not one of them will fall to the ground apart from the will of your Father". Also, when Pilate threatens Jesus with crucifixion, Jesus replies in Jn 19:10: "You would have no power over me if it were not given to you from above". We could add calming the storm as well. I think it's a common temptation for people to think they know God's particular will, but knowing it is none of our business. Rather, being a good Samaritan is (Lk 10:25).