ACTS OF GOD
a sermon preached by the Rev. Dr. Tim W. Jensen
at the First Religious Society in Carlisle, Massachusetts
Sunday September 11th, 2005
On the clear, calm morning of June 7th, 1692, just a few minutes after 11 o'clock,
the earth unexpectedly trembled and shook, and then without warning the ocean
surged up and permanently buried beneath the waves a significant portion of the
city of Port Royal, Jamaica. Over 40 ships at anchor in the harbor were also lost,
along with approximately 1700 lives. With a population of nearly 6000 souls, Port
Royal had been (up until that moment) the largest English speaking community in
the New World. At one time a popular haven for freebooters and buccaneers, the
town still retained much of that same wide-open spirit: a profligate prosperity
defined by decades of rum, plunder, and piracy. When news of the catastrophe eventually
reached New England (some two months later) the Reverend Cotton Mather briefly
turned his attention from the Witch Trials then taking place in Salem to "behold
an accident speaking to all our English America." Describing Port Royal as
"a very Sodom for wickedness," Mather characterized the catastrophe
as a sign of God's righteous wrath and judgment -- both a warning to the faithful,
as well as just punishment for those who flaunted their licentiousness and ignored
God's holy ordinances.
I mention this simply to illustrate that the practice of attributing theological
significance to natural catastrophes has a long and distinguished heritage even
here in New England, yet history has not always been kind to those who discern
the hand of God behind the misfortunes of their opponents. And I suspect that
much of what is now being said along these same lines about the devastation caused
by the Hurricane Katrina will likewise quickly be discredited and forgotten. Pronouncements
by Muslim Clerics that the hurricane represents the wrath of Allah against the
great infidel America may carry some credibility in the Arabic-speaking world,
but are generally ignored here in the homeland of the infidels themselves. The
handful of fundamentalist Christian preachers who have characterized the devastation
of the Big Easy as God's punishment of a community which openly promotes Gay tourism
and a libertine "let the good times roll" lifestyle are likewise routinely
dismissed as crackpots, except perhaps by the handful of fellow crackpots who
are willing to believe almost ANYTHING they're told, so long as they're also told
that "it sez so" in the Bible.
Pat Robertson once claimed to have rebuked a hurricane, and diverted it from it's
path and safely out to sea, but apparently this time around he was more concerned
about the assassination of foreign leaders and creating fresh vacancies on the
Supreme Court than with pestering God about the weather. And even the scientific
community can sometimes sound a little apocalyptic in their pronouncements. I
don't know for sure whether Global Warming is the underlying cause of all this
horrible weather we've been experiencing, but I do know that there are an awful
lot of awfully smart people who think that it is, many of whom were initially
skeptical but are now convinced by the data. I'm still waiting to hear of any
honest-to-God scientist whose opinion has been changed in the opposite direction.
Yet dire predictions of doom and destruction by wind and rain and flood as punishment
for our profligacy regarding greenhouse gasses sometimes sound a little reminiscent
of Cotton Mather, and his ultimately misguided obsession with witches and witchcraft.
There has to be a better way to get the message out.
Most homeowners insurance policies typically contain explicit exclusions, or require
a separate premium, for what are known in the industry as "Acts of God"
-- that is to say, "events arising out of natural causes with no human intervention,
which could not have been prevented by reasonable care or foresight," such
as lightning, and earthquakes, and floods. The reason events like these are excluded
from coverage has to do with the complex question of actuarial liability. My former
wife (who was an insurance adjuster before she became an attorney) once tried
to explain this to me, and as a theologian this is what I understood: if God is
ultimately responsible for things like lightning bolts, but "acts in mysterious
ways," how can we acccurately calculate the risk and assess the liability,
much less hold actual human beings (or human negligence) accountable for the damage?
Yet our contemporary scientific worldview increasing reveals to us that there
is really no such thing as a "natural" disaster. If the wind blows and
the rain falls and a swamp becomes flooded, that is hardly disastrous -- it's
just part of the natural order of things. It's only when people are hurt and their
property destroyed that a storm becomes a catastrophe, and presents us with a
slightly different set of moral and ethical choices. A disaster is a social phenomenon,
which is generally either mitigated or exacerbated by decisions we make as human
beings. Do we simply blame the victims and and excuse our inactivity by saying
that it is all simply God's will, nature taking it's natural course? Or do we
acknowledge that God sometimes also acts in the world through the actions and
activities of human beings, and then respond faithfully to the call to be of service
to others in their time of peril?
Our basic human powerlessness in the face of powerful natural forces like a hurricane
teaches us the important spiritual lesson of Humility. There are lots of things
in this world that are beyond our immediate control, and when we realize this
and accept it we gain an important insight into our true place in the universe.
But this isn't the only spiritual lesson we learn at times of natural disaster:
it is only the first. Our natural human empathy for the plight of those whose
lives have been afflicted by the storm also teaches us Compassion, and from this
we learn in turn the restorative power of our own Generosity. The word "generosity"
comes from a Latin root which means "to give birth" or to create, as
in Genesis. Through Generosity, we give birth to the power of our own creativity,
and generate good things in the world. And then finally, we learn as well the
spiritual lesson of Gratitude, as we discover through experience our mutual interdependence,
and the necessity of our helping one another and receiving help from others in
order to survive and transcend the many challenges that life itself holds for
each of us.
The wind and the rain of Hurricane Katrina have long since passed over the Gulf
Coast, but we are just now beginning to appreciate the full extent of the catastrophe.
Fortunately, it now appears that the number of people killed outright by the storm,
or who perished in the days immediately following, may be far less than many had
initially feared. The cost of repairing the extensive property damage can only
be guessed at, but could easily approach 60 billion dollars, while the overall
cost to the economy might well exceed 200 billion. And then there is the disruption
to our social fabric, which is difficult to measure in any currency. A million
people displaced from their homes, many of whom may never return to the same neighborhoods
and communities where they used to live. Ugly racial and class divisions brought
to the surface, and exposed for all the world to see. And then the failure which
makes this disaster truly tragic: the apparent inability (or perhaps unwillingness)
of the richest and most powerful nation in the history of the world to provide
assistance in a timely fashion to its most helpless and vulnerable members. I
don't really blame anyone in particular; I agree with the President, that there
will be plenty of time later to figure out what went right, and what went wrong,
and what might have been done better. But I do feel a little ashamed that so little
seemed to go right when it mattered most, and I'm not really sure what to do about
my shame, and my anger, and my trepidation about what will happen next.
Most homeowners insurance policies also typically carry an exclusion against damages
that arise from an Act of War, which is to say a deliberate and intentional act
of malice intended to do harm. Four years ago today our country was viciously
attacked by a small group of religious fanatics who believed that the cold-blooded
murder of 2973 human beings somehow reflected the will of their God. And as is
true, I suspect, for many of you, it doesn't take much for me to recall to mind
where I was and how I felt when I first learned of the attacks against the World
Trade Center on 9/11, or how I felt in the days and weeks afterwards: sadness
at the loss of life, and depression over the corresponding loss of innocence and
sense of security; pride in the courage of the first responders who risked (and
in many cases lost) their own lives while rushing to the aid of the victims; anger
toward those who had attacked us, and eventually dismay as I saw that anger manipulated
and exploited in order to lead our nation into a war I felt at the time and still
feel was misguided and unnecessary. In the past four years I've watched our country
answer the violent and intolerant religious fanaticism of the terrorists with
an often violent and intolerant religious fanaticism of our own: a crusade against
the jihadists, in which both our traditional political civility and our precious
and hard-won civil liberties often seem forgotten relics of a bygone era.
I understand the logic of "an eye for and eye." I understand how difficult
it is to struggle against an opponent who respects no limits of violence or brutality
-- who deliberately attacks civilians and other soft targets in order to strike
at the most vulnerable and the most cherished members of a society. I understand
that terrorism, as a tactic, is designed to evoke precisely that sort of a response
in kind: to goad the victim into become an aggressor, thereby matching the brutality
of the terrorists. But I also realize that there is an alternative, which we know
from the Gospels as the commandment to turn the other cheek, and to love our enemies,
to return good for evil, and do unto others as we would have others do unto us.
I'm not saying that it's easy, or even that it's logical, but it's an ethical
principle commonly held in some form or another by all of the world's great religions,
including, of course, the religion of Islam.
And I also know how easy it is, when you are feeling powerless and in danger,
and your home and your family and everything else you value is threatened by forces
beyond your control, and maybe you're hungry, and you're scared, and you can't
even be certain what's going to happen next... how easy it is to become angry
and bitter and to blame those who are powerful and in control and have the ability
to help and protect you for their failure to come to your rescue. And maybe that's
justified, maybe it's not; yet I also realize that there is another way: The way
that begins with Humility, and grows through Compassion to cultivate both a spirit
of Generosity and that essential Gratitude which recognizes the fundamental interdependence
of us all: rich and poor, black and white, even (dare I say it) Democrat and Republican,
and brings us together in a spirit of mutual respect and cooperation as we work
together to face and solve the problems that confront us as a Nation, as a Society,
and as a Community of Human Beings.
And this is why I am so proud, and so gratified by what happened here on the Common
Friday night. A handful of people saw a need and had an idea, they shared their
vision, brought people together, and created in a very short time a very Good
Time for a very good cause. And all I can say is "Laissez le Bon Temp Rouler!"
-- "Let the Good Times Roll!" and roll, and roll; and feel the Spirit
of God rolling through you into the world.
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