Like most people, I
grieve for the tremendous tragedy the Nepalese people are suffering after a
violent 7.8 earthquake and its aftershocks devastated much of the nation on
Saturday. According to the latest reports, over 4,800 people have dies and at
least 9,200 have been injured in the disaster.
1 Those
numbers are staggering and help is desperately needed for the survivors.
Of
course, when a tragedy like this happens, questions of why arise. I saw one meme
that shows an image of a girl praying with the superimposed text:
"Dear God,
please help the victims of that terrible earthquake — wait, aren't you the one
that created it? Why are we asking you for help?
This makes no sense!" (Emphasis
in the original.)
As with
most memes, this is a dramatic oversimplification of
an issue that seeks to sound good without thinking through its underlying
assumptions.
I don't think there's any doubt that this meme is meant to
argue against the existence of God. It seems to be implying at least two reasons
to hold that belief in God is unreasonable. The broader question is "Why would a
loving God create something as devastating as earthquakes?" But another question
may be "Why would a loving God allow such a devastating earthquake strike such
an impoverished nation like Nepal where the death toll would most certainly be
high?" Let's look at each in turn.
Earthquakes and Life
The causes of earthquakes are studied by geologists in a rather new field of
science named plate tectonics. As this
LiveScience article explains, scientists believe the Earth's outer layer is
like a hard shell broken into several plates that move over the earth's mantle.
When the mantle pushes and pulls these plates, they rub against one another in
certain ways, causing earthquakes. Sometimes plates are pulled apart, such as
the process that forms the deep trenches in the oceans, sometimes they rub
sideways like those like in Los Angeles's San Andreas fault, and sometimes one
plate is pushed underneath another, like the plates that for the fault in Nepal.
2
The plate movement in Nepal is much faster than most other plates on earth, and
it is the reason why eight of the ten highest mountains on earth fall within the
borders of the small nation.
3
As we learn more about
the earth's plates and their movements, astrobiologists and geologists are
beginning to discover just how crucial plate tectonics is for life to exist. In
their book
Rare Earth: Why Complex Life Is Uncommon in the Universe, Drs. Peter
Ward and Donald Brownlee note that of all the planets we observe in our solar
system, only the earth has signs of shifting plates in the form of mountain
ranges and ocean basins.
4 Some of the key benefits they
list concerning plate tectonics are:
5
-
It promotes high levels of global biodiversity as species as they must adapt to
different environments which ensures they don't fall extinct easily.
-
It manages the amount chemicals that form carbon dioxide in the atmosphere,
helping to keep the earth's temperature stable, keeping liquid water abundant on
the planet.
- It creates
ocean basins and lifts dry land out of the sea, allowing advanced life like
humans to be land-dwelling animals.
-
It also recirculates the minerals that erosion has deposited in the sea,
-
Finally, it creates earth's magnetic field, sheltering life from "potentially
lethal influx of cosmic radiation, and solar wind "sputtering" (in which
particles from the sun hit the upper atmosphere with high energy) might slowly
eat away at the atmosphere, as it has on Mars."
Ward and Brownlee conclude
that if there were no more earthquakes, the earths temperatures would quickly
become unlivable and "planetary calamity for complex life would occur shortly
after the cessation of plate movement."
6 Earthquakes are
necessary for you and me to exist on earth at all.
Why would such a poor country be hit by such a big earthquake?
At this point the atheist may narrow his claim and simply ask "OK, but why
would God allow such devastation in an area where there are so many people?" AS
I explained above, there are many areas such as the sea floor where these kinds
of earthquakes occur and they hurt no one. But land-based earthquakes are
necessary to do some of the things I mentioned above. It is no surprise that
Nepal is prone to devastating earthquakes. The Himalayas attest to the fault's
activity. In fact, the last devastating quake happened in 1934, killing about
10,000 people. Geologist Hongfeng Yang said that geology of that part of the
world is "generally consistent and homogenous" and the region should expect a
severe earthquake every four to five decades.
7
I live
in Southern California, with my house very close to the San Andreas Fault. We
know that the San Andreas is overdue for a very large earthquake. While we don't
know when it will come, it is a recognized danger. Both private citizens and the
government have made preparations for when "the big one" hits. In Nepal, the
warnings of the 1990's were ignored, as Samrat Upadhyay explained in
his recent article in the
Los Angeles Times.
8 My survival may depend on
having emergency supplies in my home if an earthquake hits. But in other areas
of the world, planning and infrastructure buttressing may be thwarted not by God
but by the corruption or greed of those responsible for such safeguards. While
no one can assume there would be no loss of life in any natural disaster, the
loss of lives can be significantly mitigated by those who live in the area.
The meme seeks to blame God for creating earthquakes. Yet, without them, our
world may be a sterile as Mars or as lifeless as Venus. People have the
capability to prevent a significant amount of damage and loss of life from the
quakes. Perhaps we should begin by investigating why no one acted on the
warnings instead of trying to point an uninformed finger at God.
References