Thursday, April 8, 2010

TSUNAMI--By Christine Lindsay

My posting last month was supposed to be my last one on my trip to India. Alas, I have one more story I must share.

Life isn’t easy. Even for people who are closely yoked to Christ, life isn’t easy.

In each and every group of people I belong to, the pain or confusion of life often washes over us. If it’s not us, it’s someone else whose struggles feel like a riptide has snatched them from the safe shore and is carrying them off.

The 2004 tsunami hit a lot of coastlines, India being one. The earthquake that started that killing wave had the energy of 23,000 atomic bombs. The wave—insignificant at first—roared out with centrifugal force at the speed of a jet plane until it escalated into something monstrous when it neared land. People, human beings, didn’t have a chance.


Five years after the tsunami some of our visiting team sat out on a hotel veranda overlooking the Bay of Bengal. The sun shone. Soft breezes played like silk against our skin. The scent of tropical flowers teased our senses. Part of our team was involved in a meeting. They had bibles open on their laps, and at times they bowed together in prayer. Anyone walking in the hotel courtyard below, or standing on another veranda could see them.

An Indian lady climbed the stairs to the team’s veranda and asked to speak to them. She could see that they were Christians and wanted to tell her story.

She had seen firsthand what the tsunami did that December day. All her life she had been a Catholic Christian, but when she saw the devastation and the staggering numbers of the dead, she raised her eyes to heaven and asked what we all ask. Why?

There had to be answers, yet the local clergy had none. Nor did her husband have answers to this horrible question of devastation and loss.

Just after the catastrophe, this lady had picked up her Bible and began to read. She began to pour out her heart in honest prayer. Slowly, she realized God did not answer her question as to why He allowed the disaster. What she did find was a God calling her to a deeper relationship with Him. All her life, she had thought she knew the One who hung on that cross for her sins. But in reading her bible, for the first time she realized it was a personal letter to her from God. A lot of people died the day of the tsunami, but today God was comforting her with His own presence.

Everyone I know has some kind of pain in their lives. We are either hurting with sickness or someone we love is. We struggle with the loss of a loved one or the lack of a loved one. We often don’t know which road to take in life. God seems to call us in a certain direction, we take a step of faith . . . and yet the expected outcome falls far short. The visualization of the original dream dies.

Is God in any of this?

Take comfort in these selected thoughts. “Then the Lord answered Job out of the whirlwind . . . "Where were you when I laid the foundation of the earth? . . . Who enclosed the sea with doors? When bursting forth, it went out from the womb. . . . I placed boundaries on it . . . I said, 'Thus far you shall come, but no farther. Here shall your waves stop'. He makes the depths boil like a pot; He makes the sea like a jar of ointment.

Behind Him he makes a wake to shine.”




If you would like to read more by Christine Lindsay, check out her blogsite, www.christinelindsay.com

3 comments:

  1. Thank you for these thoughts, Christine. Sometimes, when we are in the midst of a storm, it is hard to understand that God is in control ... especially when evil seems to prevail. John 3:16 reveals how much God loves us. We must live by faith--particularly when life's road get rocky.

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  2. Wonderful post, Christine, & one that makes us think. Thanks!

    browncarole212@yahoo.com
    http://sunnebnkwrtr.blogspot.com

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  3. Thanks for sharing, Christine, and yes, I'm sure we've all asked the "Why?" question on more than one occasion.

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