Is Hurricane Katrina God's Wrath?
In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and with the damage from Hurricane Rita, New Orleans faced setbacks on the progress they had attained. My local talk radio station took their afternoon show to invite people to call in with a one-word summary of what had happened down in New Orleans and other affected areas. "Humbling" and "devastating" were a couple words offered up by the hosts, but the first three callers offered suggestions such as "Biblical," "repent," and "Revelations." Each of these callers suggested that God had sent the hurricane(s) for such-and-such a reason. Of course, New Orleans isn't quite the Salt Lake City of the south, but I still remained uneasy about the willingness of these people to pronounce that Katrina was simply God's wrath on the sinful city of the south.
I was reading through The Religion & Philosophy Blog from Houghton College's Religion & Philosophy department tonight. It's a new blog with only a couple entries to date. The most recent entry to date was written by Dr. Richard Eckley. Eckley is the author of the book Revelation: A Commentary for Bible Students, so I knew he would have some interesting insight into the issue of claiming that Katrina's destruction was due to God's wrath or even the end times.
I urge you to read the article, titled "Leviathan Alive and Well in Louisiana." For the click-challenged and just plain lazy, here's an excerpt that should serve as some motivation to read the entire article:
Though these natural forces are deemed demonic because of their destructive chaos, the line between God's sovereign control and Satan's activity is blurred.
Certainly assigning an apocalyptic meaning to such natural disasters gives some sort of purpose and meaning to these cataclysmic horrors, howbeit merely to resign us to their happening in the "end times"–as if such things never happened in the "middle times" or the "earlier times!"
Natural disasters allow us to see evil at work in an indiscriminate and meaningless way (when a tornado runs through your neighborhood, trees fall on the rich and the poor alike.) Evil as surd at least allows our theology to stay neutral. No one caused Katrina to happen, and no one should try to find purpose in it happening to them.

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