The end of August and the beginning of September haven’t
been the kindest of months to many folks in the country. Hurricanes in the east
and infernos in the west displace families and destroy business.
Our feelings
go out to all who have suffered such losses, and in the American spirit,
volunteers, supplies, and money are pouring into those areas. Still, folks
wonder what the world is going on.
I don’t have a special line of communications to the good
lord that is different from all others, but I’m pretty sure that these events
aren’t His doings. He created things and now lets the world spin and “do its
things.” I don’t believe for one minute that these storms and fires are sent by
His hand to punish people for their misdeeds. As I see it, His doing so would
negate the loving character that is evident in the New Testament.
The more likely cause of these events is nature itself. A
system glides over the ocean, and fueled by warm air and water, it begins to
spin and churn and grow. At some point, it produces enough force to
be labeled
a hurricane. The fierceness of a hurricane depends upon the route it takes over
time. Traveling over more and more warm water adds to its fury. That’s the way nature works.
The fires in the west sometimes result from careless campers
or arsonists. However, nature is also the culprit of many of these fires.
Lightning strikes spark fires that in ages past cleared the undergrowth of
forests. I compare it to a dentist cleaning teeth. He digs out the trapped
particles and built-up plague to ensure healthy teeth. A fire can also bring
about healthier forests.
Another reason exists for the fires. Folks have moved out
from the cities, and their homes sit in those very areas where underbrush is
thick. When nature does her thing, man’s abodes are no more important than
other things in the paths of fires. The effects of global warming causes
droughts that fry lands that historically have received much more rainfall than
at present. When a fire does break out, the dry conditions exacerbate the
tender box forests and grasslands.
Hurricanes are also affected by the conditions of the
planet. Warming has caused polar caps to melt, something that raises sea
levels. That same warming increases the temperatures of waters which feed those
storms. Those environmental problems create monster tornadoes and widen the
paths of tornado alleys.
Arguments over global warming in no way helps solve the
immediate problems that folks of Texas, Florida, and California face. As
Americans and humans, we have a responsibility to help them in multiple ways.
However, we also might be wise to study man’s effects on the environment and to
understand how they negatively contribute to the disasters that will come in
the future. Nature is the boss. Her power can somewhat tamed with a change in
the way we go about our existence.
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