By Benjamin Seiler
Let me ask a question: how many times does one have to hurl
a hundred tree trunks into the air for them to fall from heaven
in the form of a complete log cabin?
This question is by no means as foolish as it sounds. Everyone
will naturally say that a log cabin could never become a reality
in this way. But many people believe something even more improbable:
namely that the universe and our earth with all its myriads
of mutually sustaining life forms is a product of pure chance.
They argue something like this: we were once fish who crawled
onto land and then climbed out of the trees. Purely by chance,
of course.
Although man has flown to the moon and has split the atom, he
is still unable to produce a simple blade of grass - which should
really make us ponder.
And whoever reduces love between two people to mere biochemical
processes in the brain must ask why don't all men simultaneously
fall in love with all women. The Siemens company made
a similar error in a completely different field. They used powerful
computers in an attempt to develop translation programs that
could compete with human translators. Surely a logical approach,
after all language is ultimately made up of a limited number
of building blocks composed of letters. A simple matter for
a supercomputer, one might think. Ultimately, however, the company
wasted billions of marks with little to show for it. For language
is more than merely an accumulation of letters. The whole is
always more than its constituent parts, and human consciousness
cannot be reduced to bits and bytes. Nor can living nature be
reduced to mere physical and chemical processes - although life
admittedly manifests through chemistry and even more through
physics in the material world.
We know from our everyday experience that the larger a company,
the more complex is its structure. It has an administrative
board and CEOs, departmental heads of all kinds and any number
of field employees. Nature alone seems to be able to dispense
entirely with 'employees'.
Really? Well, actually not. After all, it's not without reason
that we say 'as above, so below' - 'as in heaven, so also on
earth'. To return to our fictitious log cabin: it can become
a reality only when the process is guided by an intelligent
consciousness.
The same applies to our planet. For a cosmic intelligence ensouls
this celestial body: mother earth. Some call her Gaia, although
she prefers the name Lady Terra. This mighty and divine being
is like the Chief Executive Officer of Earth Inc. Her
employees are legion. And to make sure that everyone knows exactly
what he has to do, nature too has superiors. Life does not function
without a hierarchy, all political correctness notwithstanding.
Lady Terra's field employees are attired in the most diverse
forms: flowers, grasses, bushes, trees, animals etc. Just because
a sunflower differs somewhat from your face in appearance, it
would be arrogant to assume that it was without intelligence
or consciousness. Scientists such as Cleve Backster already
proved scientifically decades ago that plants can feel and react
to human thoughts and feelings. As early as 1966 Backster used
a lie detector to measure the electrochemical reactions of plants.
He also discovered that blood samples stored hundreds of kilometres
away from us continue to adapt their biochemistry exactly to
the conditions of the blood in our body! Everything is connected,
that's the nature of God. Or as the poet John Donne once said
(1622): "No man is an Island, entire of it self". A flutter
of a butterfly's wing can trigger a tornado at the other end
of the earth. Do I see you smiling? Do you know what a Hopi
shaman said when he was asked why he was tickling a beetle lying
on its back with a twig? "I will carry on annoying him until
the rain clouds will be attracted by it." If plants react to
human emotions in the same way as water (see page 46), why should
the earth itself be unaffected by them - quite apart from the
greenhouse gases and the rest of the garbage that we expect
it to cope with every day? For the planetary body is the physical
garment of Lady Terra. And exactly as we might get a fit of
the shivers or have an abscess burst on our face, the earth
organism must also submit to phases of cleaning. We experience
this as earthquakes, tornadoes or floods.
Due to modern technology, man's destructive thoughts and feelings
can spread out and multiply explosively over the entire globe,
for instance via the medium of film. Scary Movie, Scream,
Halloween, The Blair Witch Project are just a few of the
film titles that sent shivers down the spines of millions of
viewers. So it's hardly surprising that the earth needs to 'vomit'
with increasing frequency?
Although the climate seems to be increasingly out of sync, this
is by no means a chaotic process. Jesus is said to have calmed
a storm on the Sea of Galillee. And the ancient Greeks believed
in Zeus, the weather god of their mythology. Are these merely
fairy tales? Or are there invisible nature beings that guide
all the phenomena we can experience - and with whom we can communicate?
So we should not be too hasty in blaming God for natural catastrophes,
but rather ask ourselves whether they might have been triggered
by human behaviour.
Four tornadoes swept across the USA within just a few weeks
last year, an occurrence unknown for over 120 years. Do we really
think that we can incessantly abuse our precious planetary home
to this degree without facing the consequences at some time?
They are an inevitable response by the earth to secure the survival
of this cosmic schoolroom in the long term. Tectonic tensions
between continents, for example, do not always have purely physical
causes.
Despite all this, God is merciful wherever He can be. And His
servants keep the degree of destruction down to a minimum. Think,
if you will, what would have happened if the recent sea quake
would have taken place underneath highly populated areas instead
of the middle of the Indian Ocean. Hundred of thousands of people
could have died. It was the same regarding Hurricane Andrew,
the most expensive tornado of all time: Had it passed only a
hundred kilometres further south or east through Florida and
Louisiana in 1992, the damage could have been four times as
high. And the earthquake that struck Los Angeles on the early
morning of January 17, 1994 to become the greatest natural catastrophe
in American history with $30 billion worth of damage would have
killed thousands if it had taken place only a few hours later.
But even the death of thousands as a result of natural forces
is not as tragic in the eyes of God as it might seem to those
of us with a Christian heritage. After all, every human soul
is immortal and returns innumerable times to earth - with a
new physical body, a new name and with a new opportunity in
life.
When nature raises her voice
The year 2004 saw an unusual accumulation of tropical tornadoes
in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. Thousands of people died
in Haiti, and the material damage sustained in the USA reached
a new record. In the Atlantic region alone, no fewer than eight
hurricanes (with speeds of over 120 kilometres per hour) developed
from a total of fourteen storms.
Half of them swept over various Caribbean islands in August
and September and hit the American coast. The names Charley,
Frances, Ivan and Jeanne are synonymous with dread for many
people since then. The particularly hard-hit state of Florida
mourned 113 deaths this year. But that is nothing compared with
the toll taken by Hurricane Jeanne in Haiti alone: the subsequent
floods and landslides cost the lives of over 2,000 people.
In 2004, the insured damage in the USA was estimated at $20
to 25 billion by re-insurer Swiss Re. But the damage sustained
by the nation's economy is likely to be double that figure -
an unprecedented sum.
An unusually large number of tornadoes also developed in the
Pacific region. Japan was the main target, being struck by ten
typhoons - another record! Provisional estimates suggest that
the scale of damage amounted to six billion dollars.
Only a few days after Japan had been hit by the most destructive
typhoon for a quarter of a century (almost 100 dead), a series
of severe earthquakes and over 440 aftershocks rocked the island
at the end of October 2004 even as the next typhoon was already
approaching. Thousands were injured and over thirty killed in
the heaviest toll since the Kobe earthquake. It could have been
worse: experts estimate that a quake of the same strength striking
the Tokyo metropolitan area would have meant some 7,000 deaths.
Large parts of Asia were particularly hard hit by floods last
year. Experts spoke of extreme climatic conditions. In China
alone, over 1,000 people had already fallen victim to the floods
by mid-year. In November 2004, two tropical storms - Muifa and
Merbok - swept across the Philippines and cost more than 70
human lives. At the end of the same month, a severe earthquake
shook the eastern parts of Indonesia and killed almost 20 people.
And then, at Christmas, there was this sea quake in the Indian
Ocean that claimed more than 24,000 deaths.
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