"It's
Not Nice to Fool Mother Nature"?
by Gary
DeMar
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. is blaming the devastating effects
of Hurricane Katrina on climate changes that are the result of the
United States’ unwillingness
to be trapped by the provisions of the Kyoto Treaty. I find it interesting
that Kennedy and other secularists have no problem believing that “Mother
Nature” is in the judgment business, but an all holy God is not.
Polluting the air seems to be today’s unforgivable sin, but polluting
the airwaves with pornography and homosexuality, and polluting the minds
of young children with the illogic of moral relativism, does not move
God to act to get our attention.
Kennedy
has the audacity to quote Scripture in an attempt to make his point: “For
they that sow the wind shall reap the whirlwind.” So let’s
extend his cause and effect argument and apply it to his own family.
What might we attribute the tragic death of his uncles, Joseph and John,
and his own father killed by an assassin? Then there’s the death
of his cousin, John, on his way to a Kennedy wedding. We mustn’t
forget the misfortunes of his uncle Teddy, actually the misfortunes of
others, especially Mary Jo Kopechne at a place called Chappaquidick.
Let’s not forget Michael Kennedy, who was accused of having an
affair with his children’s 14-year-old baby sitter. He died later
that year on a ski slope in Aspen, Colorado. There’s more. David,
Robert’s brother, died in 1984 of a drug overdose. Robert’s
brother Joseph (Joe) was involved in a 1973 car accident that left a
female passenger paralyzed for life. In 1997, Joe left his wife and their
children after he appealed to the Roman Catholic Church for an annulment.
Have the Kennedy’s ever asked why so much tragedy has befallen
their family? Playing the post hoc1 card
cuts both ways. Who are the pro-homosexual and pro-abortion Kennedys
to judge anybody? Abortion and sodomy have killed more people than global
warming has.
It used to be that tornados, hurricanes, floods, wild
fires, and earthquakes were understood in two ways. First, the creation
itself is fallen, and these disasters are a reflection of the fall.
The created order goes through convulsions similar to the way disease
hits each of us leading to old age and inevitable death (see Gen. 3:17–19).
For the creation was subjected to futility, not of its
own will, but because of Him who subjected it, in hope that the creation
itself also will be set free from its slavery to corruption into the
freedom of the glory of the children of God. For we know that the whole
creation groans and suffers the pains of childbirth together until
now (Rom. 8:20–22).
Second, these events are a reminder that God does respond
to a world that “has forgotten Him.” In 1750, John Wesley wrote of “The
Cause and Cure of Earthquakes”:
Of all the judgments which the righteous God inflicts
on sinners here, the most dreadful and destructive is an earthquake.
This he has lately brought on our part of the earth, and thereby alarmed
our fears, and bid us “prepare to meet our God!” The shocks which have been
felt in divers places, since that which made this city tremble, may convince
us that the danger is not over, and ought to keep us still in awe; seeing “his
anger is not turned away, but his hand is stretched out still,” Isa.
x, 4.2
In 1756, Gilbert Tennent observed that earthquakes were “extraordinary
in respect of number and dreadful Effects”3 and
saw them as indicators that “some extraordinary Revolutions [might]
be near at Hand.” James West Davidson adds to this:
Ministers in 1755 as well as 1727, New Light as well as Old, accepted
the prevailing assumptions that earthquakes were naturally caused, that
they were inescapably meant as moral judgments, and that (most important)
they were compatible with other moral judgments which God accomplished
by using human instruments. They saw natural disasters as one proper
part of the climax of history, not because of a preference for any specific
millennial chronologies (once again a wide range of opinion appeared
on that subject), but because catastrophes fell under the more general
category of moral judgment, which was a necessary part of ultimate deliverance.4
At various times in history, God has used these phenomena as warnings
of impending judgment or as retribution for covenantal unfaithfulness
(Num. 16:30, 32, 34; 26:10; Deut. 11:6). Of course, not every earthquake
or famine has such a special meaning. Each occurrence, however,
ought to serve as a reminder that we are sinners and our world has been
ravaged by the effects of rebellion (John 9:1B3). We all need to heed
the possible warnings of God’s—not “Mother Nature’s”—judgment
for our manifold high handed national sins masquerading as personal freedom.
1. A shortened form of post hoc
ergo propter hoc, a Latin phrase that means “after this
therefore because of this.” A person commits this fallacy when
he assumes that because one thing follows another that the one thing
was caused by the other.
2. John Wesley, “The
Cause and Cure of Earthquakes” (1750), Sermons on Several Occasions,
2 vols. (New York: Carlton & Phillips, 1853), 1:506.
3. Gilbert
Tennent (1703B1764) quoted in James West Davidson, The Logic of Millennial
Thought: Eighteenth-Century New England (New Haven, CT: Yale University
Press, 1977), 102.
4. Davidson, Logic
of Millennial Thought, 97.
Gary DeMar is president of American Vision and the author of more than 20 books. His latest is Myths, Lies, and Half Truths.
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