January 3, 2005
From Back To The Bible:
http://www.backtothebible.org/radio/south_asia.htmThe Benevolence of God and the Tsunami - Page 2
Understanding Why God Allowed The Tsunami
Back to the Bible's Disaster Relief
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Apparently the good earth deteriorated rapidly, as did earth's inhabitants. Just three chapters later, Moses wrote:
Then the LORD saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually. And the LORD was sorry that He had made man on the earth, and He was grieved in His heart. So the LORD said, "I will destroy man whom I have created from the face of the earth, both man and beast, creeping thing and birds of the air" (Genesis 6:5-7).
Genesis 6-8 records the global destruction resulting from the Great Flood that was God's instrument of judgment on a corrupt earth. The Bible indicates that the waters which caused the Flood came from two sources: (a) the fountains of the great deep; and (b) the windows of heaven (Genesis 7:11).
The recent South Asian Tsunami proves the destructive power of moving water. Fishing boats were pushed a mile inland. Villages were washed away. A train at Telwatta, Sri Lanka carrying 1,000 people to the sunny resorts near the town of Galle was swept out to sea killing at least 800 people.
Put that into perspective. Imagine the vast devastation that must have been created when all the forces of the earth worked together in the Great Flood. Rain dropped like a rock from the canopy above the firmament. Earthquakes shook the earth. Volcanoes erupted all over the planet. The tectonic plates of the earth's crust shifted under the weight of the water. Mountains lifted up. Canyons were pressed into the ground. Tornados, hurricanes and multiple Tsunamis were spun into existence. Havoc reigned in God's creation.
Prior to the Great Flood our world was much different than it is today. Numerous biblical scholars have suggested that in those days the Earth was devoid of natural disasters like the Tsunami (see A. M. Rehwinkel, The Flood (1951, St. Louis, MO: Concordia), or Joseph C. Dillow, The Waters Above (1982, Chicago, IL: Moody). Whitcomb and Morris (John C. Whitcomb and Henry M. Morris, The Genesis Flood (1961, Grand Rapids, MI: Baker) suggest:
This is inferred from the fact that the "breaking-up of the fountains of the great deep" (Genesis 7:11), which implies this sort of activity, was one of the immediate causes of the Deluge; therefore it must have been restrained previously.... Thus the Biblical record implies that the age between the fall of man and the resultant Deluge was one of comparative quiescence geologically. The waters both above and below the firmament were in large measure restrained, temperatures were equably warm, there were no heavy rains nor winds and probably no earthquakes nor volcanic emissions (pp. 242,243).
It is not unreasonable to suggest that the global flood of Genesis 6-8 not only radically altered the face of the Earth, but also created the circumstances that are responsible for many natural disasters experienced since that time.
What causes natural disasters on the Earth today? One cause is the vastly different geological and meteorological phenomena now present. The drastically changed components of the Earth's crust (e.g., fault lines, the movement of tectonic plates, etc.) give rise to earthquakes which, when they occur under the sea, produce deadly Tsunamis like the one that took the lives of more than 120,000 people in Sri Lanka, Indonesia, India and elsewhere.
The Bible describes the wickedness of mankind in Noah's day (which precipitated the Flood) as the root cause for the changes that today produce various natural disasters, such as Tsunamis. As Brad Bromling observed:
While we may never know with precision what conditions prevailed between the Edenic period and the Flood, it seems that . . . since that event, man has been imperiled by tornadoes, blizzards, monsoons, and hurricanes . . . . Upon whom should we heap blame for the suffering resultant from such weather? Is it fair to accuse God, when He created man's home free from such things (Genesis 1:31)? In all honesty, the answer is no. Sin robbed us of our original garden paradise, and sin was responsible for the global deluge (Brad T. Bromling, "Who Sent the Hurricane?," Reasoning from Revelation, 4:17, September, 1992, p. 17].
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