Faith in the face of tragedy
Often when a catastrophe hits a person or a nation, they cry out:
“How could a loving God allow such a thing to happen?” When a tragedy
is absent of reason, people will often turn to religious figures for
explanation and comfort. Even for us (religious leaders), it is very
difficult to explain the reasons why God does what he does, because
humankind is limited in his or her understanding and does not know
what the future holds.
For some, events that seem tragic and difficult to comprehend may
be a blessing in disguise. Even with the massive scale of lives lost,
perhaps the tsunami that struck across 11 nations was a forewarning
of another greater tsunami to come.
The leaders of countries that are vulnerable must take the
necessary precautions by implementing devices on the seabed that can
monitor for tsunamis and warn the residents of any imminent danger.
If such measures are taken, then thousands of lives can be saved in
the future. Also, such countries must educate and train the public on
how to be prepared in case of an earthquake or tsunami. Possibly, God
is sending a strong message to those who are responsible for the
safety of their people to take care of them.
Sometimes mankind needs to be shaken out of his slumber to seek
God and mend his offensive or complacent ways. Why were the poorest
nations on earth hit by such a tragedy? Why did so many lives have to
perish? Perhaps God is forcing us to inquire about these countries,
to ask about our neighbors. How did these people live? Why are they
poor? Perhaps, God wants the rest of world to feel obligated, to
spark the feelings of compassion and responsibility. Perhaps their
tragedy was our savior.
IMAM SAYED MOUSTAFA
AL-QAZWINI
Islamic Educational Center of
Orange County
Costa Mesa
“When I found Your words, I devoured them; Your words became my
joy and my heart’s delight, for I bear Your name, O Lord God of Hosts
... Why is my pain unending, my wound grievous and incurable? You are
to me like a brook that is not to be trusted, whose waters fail.”
Can there be a more defiant protest than Jeremiah’s? He stands in
the line of Abraham, who called God to task: “Shall not the Judge of
the world do justly?” He is true to Moses, who challenged God when
Pharaoh increased the burden on the Israelite slaves: “Why have you
done evil to this people?” He is faithful to the Prophet Habakkuk,
who lamented, “Why is God abandoning the people of Judea?”
The first question in the Bible is posed by God when he asks Adam,
“Where are you?” Since then, we have been turning the tables. It is
we who ask God, “Where are You?” Where are You when disease strikes,
when accidents occur, when nature rages, when the Angel of Death
arrives with our name next on the roster? Where is God in our
disappointments, doubts, frustrations, anger, sorrow and confusion?
Where was God in the concentration camps? In the Twin Towers? In
South Asia? Why can’t God be more visible, more involved, more
caring? Why do we so keenly experience his absence when we long for
His presence?
Anyone who decries the Archbishop of Canterbury’s view that pat
answers are no match for the enormity of tragedy should read the Book
of Job. This paradigmatic sufferer is visited by four friends, who
offer traditional, conventional, reflexive, rigid explanations for
Job’s plight. These “friends” violate the simple teaching: “It is
better to sympathize than sermonize.” Job rejects each simplistic
solution and God does as well. Rather than accept easy and convenient
dogmas, Job dismisses the “comforters” and rages against Heaven. In
the end, it is Job and not the friends whom God calls holy and
upright.
Since God can give us no answer that could reconcile us to a
disaster of such scope, he gives none, except to say: “I am the
creator and you are the creation. The finite cannot comprehend the
infinite; the mortal cannot apprehend the eternal. My ways are not
your ways. I accept and welcome your questioning, doubting and
challenging, but they do not impose upon me the obligation to answer.
Alongside your desire to know my ways, you must cultivate the
humility that I, and I alone, am the God of the universe. It is I who
knows why the sea engulfs the land, and it is I who decides who shall
live and who shall die. Ultimately, you need to know but one fact
about me, the same that I affirmed to Job. It is contained in but two
words that must echo in your mind, heart and spirit, in good fortune
and in adversity: ‘I exist.’”
May we have sufficient faith to continue to doubt, enough doubt to
continue to search and enough perseverance in searching that we find
the God who was, who is and who will ever be.
RABBI MARK S. MILLER
Temple Bat Yam
Newport Beach
The stories, the images, the faces leap out to us from the page,
speaker and screen. The magnitude of this horror overwhelms us. Given
that faith lies in our questions more than in our answers, is the
right question “Why?”
Traditional answers surely do not suffice. Yes, an “accident” is
“an event that neither God nor human beings intend or control;” and
“freedom of will” necessitates “a confusion in vocation for both
humans and creation.”
Morally neutral earthquakes, fires and floods destroy life; deadly
mutations like cancer afflict those on whom the rain falls and those
on whom the sun shines alike. I cannot imagine any explanation as to
how all this makes sense would help anyone feel better or believe in
God in ways that would affect the ways we live.
Belief survives such tests not because it comforts or explains,
but because believers learn to see life in this world as a freely
given gift, calling for acceptance of God’s grace and its
accompanying challenge to extend God’s mercy to all. The believers’
response is to see the immeasurable value, the preciousness, of life.
As our Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, wrote in the
column in question, “The very thing that lies closest to the heart of
a religious way of life in the world, the passion about the value of
each and every life, the passion that makes religious people so
obstinate and inconvenient when society discusses abortion and
euthanasia -- this is also just what makes human disaster so
appalling, so much of a challenge to the feelings.”
The way such an event moves our heart is beginning of faith, for
it acknowledges that there are no insignificant lives among us who
are, after all, visitors on this planet, small and vulnerable and
subject to nature
I appreciate the response of Jonathan Sacks, chief rabbi of the
United Hebrew Congregations of the British Commonwealth of Nations:
“The only adequate response is to say: ‘God, I do not know why this
terrifying disaster has happened, but I do know what You want of us:
to help the afflicted, comfort the bereaved, send healing to the
injured and aid those who have lost their livelihoods and homes.”
We cannot understand God, but we can strive to imitate his love
and care.
THE VERY REV. CANON
PETER D. HAYNES
St. Michael & All Angels
Episcopal Church
Corona del Mar
Everyone should be shaken to their core from the kind of
devastation we have seen. Death was designed to be a life-shattering
event. It is unnatural. God designed humans to be eternal, but He
also designed us to love.
Love requires a choice. It cannot be forced. When humanity (in
Adam and Eve) chose to walk away from God and love their own desires
over God’s, he honored their choice. But endless lives full of
selfish choices would mean an unbearable eternal suffering. God
introduced death as a temporary means of reducing suffering. What
would eternal cancer, famine or AIDS be like? One day, he will end
death, suffering and history, but until then death painfully rips at
our lives and relationships. Until then, God is still seeking people
who would be in love with him again.
In the midst of any tragedy, it is a natural question, what we are
made of and what we believe in. For those of us who believe in the
promise of the afterlife made by Jesus, we suffer the pain but not
doubt. In every relationship, storms arise, but a deep relationship
is able to trust and ride out the storm. Sometimes that trust is
called hope, or strength. For a Christ follower, that hope is based
on Jesus.
This hope is not represented in the fatalistic comment, “It is the
will of God.” In contrast, it is the belief that God loves us so
intensely that he is personally involved in redeeming humanity.
When humanity walked away from God, he didn’t do likewise. He
could have started over, but that would have ended humanity’s ability
to choose to love.
God had another way. He became one of us, lived a selfless (thus
sinless) life and died for his claims of deity. He was crucified in a
torturous death. Where was God during that tsunami?
He was on the cross, proving to humanity that he loves every one
of us intensely that he would rather die that to live without us.
He entered into our suffering, so that at the end of history, he
could remove suffering from us. He conquered death when he rose from
the dead. In his resurrection, we have hope that we too will be
resurrected to a new body.
That “hope” does not mean “wish,” but “confidence.” It is that
confidence that gives us strength in chaos.
The Bible tells us that the promises of Christ and the story of
redemption were given to us so that we could “know” that we have
eternal life.
It is possible to know and not have doubts. That knowledge is
based on our relationship with Jesus. It is not cocky. That
confidence gives us the ability to forsake comfortable lives in the
United States and go to countries like Sri Lanka and India and serve
those who need hope.
Rock Harbor has 33 people in India right now, giving up their
holidays at home to help people without hope. So yes, I am shaken,
but not moved. God has not changed. His love endures forever.
He is intervening in lives right now all around us, begging for
someone to hear his call of hope. Unfortunately, some people only
listen when tragedy strikes.
If people are in doubt about God right now from this tragedy, then
they should truly question what they believe in. Do they merely
believe in tradition, or ritual, or words, or liturgy, or do they
have a real relationship with God that will serve as a foundation for
them to make it through?
SENIOR ASSOCIATE PASTOR
RIC OLSEN
Harbor Trinity
Costa Mesa
“When you suffer a calamity, then be it so: now is the time of
calamity.” Thus wrote the Japanese poet and monk Ryokan in 1828,
following an earthquake that killed thousands of people.
Being fully in the moment includes sharing the grief of those who
have lost loved ones by being present to them, by offering whatever
help we can and by refusing to become involved in conversations
purporting to explain or justify the mystery of suffering. Someone is
hurting, and we reach out just as naturally as we would pull our hand
out of a fire. We hear and experience their pain as our own. Or
someone is hurting, and our pain is overwhelming, so we try to stay
busy, avoid the news, have a drink or watch a movie to medicate
ourselves. We experience the calamity.
A popular misconception about Zen is that the strong practitioner
will have no emotion, and that a transcendent, “blissed out,”
resigned or stoical state of mind is desirable. One of my favorite
Zen stories is about a monk who is upset at the cremation of his
teacher. Someone scolds him about his crying, since he should realize
that all things are transient. He replies, “But I miss him!”
The simple, human and genuine response is what Zen training
cultivates. Being in the moment during joyful times is not usually so
much an issue as staying with the difficult moments, and I often use
the analogy of bull riding to describe Zen meditation during these
painful times. Psychological and spiritual resources on grief
coincide with Zen practice in encouraging us to fully experience the
entire range of our emotions, with as little censoring, repression or
phoniness as possible.
A Buddhist practice I find helpful is to ask myself to briefly
focus on the difficult emotions, to allow myself to feel the pain of
it. Next I imagine myself embracing them the way I would comfort a
small child. Finally, I unite my experience with the suffering of the
universe. We might suppose that this would only create more
suffering, but it actually invites us to a deeper experience of the
nature of our life, which brings a kind of quiet satisfaction.
Doubt is helpful in Zen practice. Honesty, a critical, inquisitive
mind, individual responsibility and integrity are all assets. There
are no heresies, sacred doctrines, blasphemies or religious taboos in
the study and practice of Zen. A disaster reminds us that death
awaits us all. Someone else’s prefab answers will not hold up.
How does the famous Zen story about a man hanging over the edge of
a cliff by a thin vine relate? A tiger stalks on the ledge above and
the drop beneath is perilous. The man sees a berry, plucks it and
exclaims, “How delicious!”
Despite calamities, natural disasters, traffic accidents, heart
attacks and a limited number of years, do we taste the hours with
family and friends, working, playing, driving, cooking and cleaning
and find them to be delicious?
REV. DR. DEBORAH BARRETT
Zen Center of Orange County
Costa Mesa
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