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=jkiernan56;5354468]Tonyrey - the question that Severntofall asks is a very good one. I honestly don’t understand the relationship between moral evil … and how that impacts the natural world around us. I have always heard there is a connection between moral evil and the other evils of the natural world. One upset the balance of the other. I have a 1st grader understanding of this.
***No, I do not accept the idea that all Natural disasters are a result of the human condition that we term sin. Indeed, I would question if any natural disaster is a direct result of our sinful nature.Isn’t there a direct cause/effect relationship between moral evil and the evil of natural disasters?
That is not to say that God cannot and does not make use of Natural disasters for His Greater Glory and the possibility of our greater good. Certainly He does.
Natural disasters are a direct result of other Natural events and occurances; thau the term “natural.”
God is not in the common human sense of the word “vindictive”, Rather God is fair and just, and it is we who apply the label of being “vindictive,” as we struggle to make sense out of what at times seems to be senseless violence and discord.
God is always in charge, always in control. We are not.
However no sin is truly “personal.” Every sin effects us, our Church, the practice of our faith, often how God is perceived through our actions, and humanity in general.
Primarily because through sin we are giving assent and consent to an action that says “NO to God”, in a lesser or greater way. This then is seen by others as an affirmation of the action, and lowers there resistance to this act.***