abcnews.go.com/sections/us/DailyNews/shuttle_beliefnet_god030206.html

God�s Will?
Strong Debate Taking Place Over Higher Reason for Columbia�s Crash

By Deborah Caldwell and Steven Waldman


Feb. 6 � When a notorious Muslim cleric, Abu Hamza al-Masri, told
reporters in London that the space shuttle disaster was "a punishment
from God" because the crew included the "trinity of evil" of an American,
a Hindu and an Israeli, he was condemned. On Tuesday, government
officials kicked him out of his mosque.
 

Yet while his comments were unusual in their grotesqueness, they bore one
similarity to comments being heard from others: many people believe the
tragedy happened for a reason.
The interpretations of "the message" could not vary more widely. Some say
God intervened to prevent more loss of life; others that it was a sign
that America's posture toward the world is too arrogant, and still others
are chilled by what they feel are suggestive coincidences but cannot
fathom the meaning. 

On Internet message boards, in man-on-the-street interviews and among
some spiritual teachers, certain facts or assertions are being strung
together as evidence that something special happened: 

At a time when America is preparing to wage war on Iraq, one of the Space
Shuttle Columbia crew members who died was an Israeli pilot who had
bombed an Iraqi nuclear plant in 1981.

The first debris spotted by TV cameras had fallen in a town called
Palestine, Texas.

One of the crew members, Laurel Clark, had a first cousin, Timothy
Haviland, who died in the Sept. 11 attacks.

Columbia exploded over George Bush's home state.

Apollo 1 burned up in 1967 on Jan. 27, the Challenger exploded on Jan.
28, 1986 and the Columbia on Feb. 1.

Columbia took off on 1/16, for 16 days, expected to land at 8:16 a.m.


Might Over America

Some in the Arab world viewed this as evidence against America.

"God wants to show that his might is greater than the Americans. They
have encroached on our country. God is avenging us," an Iraqi government
employee Abudul Jabbar Quraishi told Reuters news service.

Referring to the Israeli astronaut, a Baghdad car mechanic said, "Israel
launched an aggression on us when it raided our nuclear reactor without
any reason. Now times has come and God has retaliated to their
aggression." 

Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, a leader in Hezbollah, a Lebanon-based terrorist
group, told attendees at a graduation ceremony, "What happened yesterday
is a message to all humanity, and especially Arab, Muslim and Third World
people, a message to those who thought in the past few years that America
was a god that couldn't be defeated or defied." 

France's "Liberation" newspaper discussed the tragedy in an editorial
titled "Humility": "Some think they see a bad omen in this latest drama.
The disaster should be a lesson in humility and show the United States
that whatever its financial might, its scientific know-how, its
technological prowess, its training of men, it cannot control all,
dominate all, foresee all, parry all." 

Poignantly, even some in Israel concluded there was a hostile message. A
16-year-old student whose high school had designed an experiment that was
aboard the shuttle, told The New York Times, "Maybe someone didn't want
us to be happy. No matter what we do, nothing comes up right." 

Arik Bechar, foreign editor of the Israeli newspaper Maariv, mused, "The
mystics will nod their heads and the skeptics will have to mobilize all
their skepticism to convince people there was no hand of God in the
accident; that in life there are cruel coincidences, even if they include
Palestine, Texas and the first Israeli astronaut. But how can we explain
the curse pursuing us across the length and breadth of the land these
past few years, which pursued us to the limits of the atmosphere? Ilan
Ramon was a victim of that same curse, which has turned the Israelis into
a nation of paranoids. And who can blame them?" 


Just a Horrible Tragedy?

Of course, many � perhaps the majority � believe that this was simply a
horrible tragedy with no larger significance, but in a nation as
religious as the United States, there is a substantial group that
ascribes supernatural connections. In Beliefnet's highly unscientific
poll, roughly a third of those responding believed it wasn't a
coincidence.

Some turned to the Bible for clues. Beliefnet member called Oracles
wrote, "God does have His purpose and things don't just happen like this.
What if someone very powerful were trying to send Mr. Bush a message?
Ever hear of the [so called] hidden codes in scripture?"

Member ears2hear wondered about "encrypted messages from God," perhaps
designed to give a president inclined toward war a "renewed sense of what
I means to lose people you care about."

One member, Noisefree, saw something else: "I cannot shake this feeling
that, somehow, God sent us a message � and particularly a message to
Israel � that they have abandoned Him in their desires to dominate the
middle east, and in their persecution of the Palestinians. Is it just
coincidence that this disaster should happen as the vindictive Ariel
Sharon is re-elected?"

At Morning Star Missionary Baptist Church in Spokane, Wash., hometown
church of astronaut Michael Anderson, the Rev. Freeman Simmons speculated
that God "permitted" the shuttle accident to get America's attention.
"God works strange," Simmons said.

Others wrestled with the question-so frequently asked after 9/11 � How
could a loving God have allowed something like this to happen?

KDPeters's answer to that classic theological dilemma was that God's
compassion was apparent on Saturday: "Let's talk miracle, okay? On
Saturday, God chose to take the 7 lives abour the Columbia. Good took
ONLY seven lives on Saturday. The Dallas/Ft. Worth metroplex is very
populated, yet no life was lost. I tell you, we witness a miracle that
day. God loves us. This is not a coincidence."

And NjoyAADAirbrush absolved God and fingered the Devil. "God would NOT
take the lives of these individuals; No Way. I serve a God of love,
compassion and mercy; who is the LivingGodd. Satan is the god of the
dead, and is the destroyer. Satan most likely had a hand in this."

Some are attracted to a concept called "synchronicity." In popular
culture, it was captured in the Celestine Prophecy by James Redfield, one
of the best selling contemporary spiritual books. In intellectual and
scholarly circles, it is reflected in the work of psychologist Carl Jung.
Oversimplified, it is the view that coincidences have meaning � events
happen for a reason � but that it is not a deity pulling the strings, but
some collective human spiritual network.

Albert Clayton Gaulden, founder of the Sedona Intensive � a teacher
Redfield calls his mentor � believes that synchronicity is apparent in
the Columbia tragedy. "It's a sign that if we try to go beyond limits and
we cannot take care of the world in which we live, then how in the world
can we go out there?"

Gaulden, who just published a new book called Signs and Wonders:
Understanding the Language of God, said Tuesday in an interview with
Beliefnet that he believes the astronauts were "martyrs" on assignment
from God. And, he said, the fact that the accident happened over Texas is
meaningful because it is a warning to the Bush administration not to go
to war with Iraq.

Gaulden claimed his website recorded a dramatic increase in visitors in
the days since the accident. 

Talk of 'Higher Destiny'

Several Beliefnet members viewed events through this lens. "Yes, it was
'coincidnetal' although, another word is synchronicity, of which I
believe," said Dmdrden:. "Everything happens for a reason that contains a
message. I haven't focused on what the message is � I do believe there is
one."

BerndtSM wrote, "I believe if we pay attention and are open to seeing the
synchronicity or coincidences in our lives and the world they can lead us
a long a path of higher destiny." 

A discussion board on a website dedicated to the teachings of Carl Jung
had this message: "So, yesterday in the morning a grand event occurs 'in
the sky'. A coveted and important symbol/tool of America's power is
destroyed in what can only be interpreted as 'an act of God'. I was just
reading the Odyssey over again, and.... there is of course a whole series
of signs and omens that pointed clearly to the destruction of the
'arrogant wooers' but these signs went completely unheeded. Whether we
(Americans) accept it as true or not, most people have interpreted and
will continue to interpret this event as an act of Divine Will AGAINST
the will of the US."

To be sure, there are many people who believe this is just a horrible
tragedy without broader meaning or message. They point out that the
shuttle actually broke up not over Palestine Texas but across a large
swath of the state and some of California. And the Rev. James Mayfield,
pastor of Tarrytown United Methodist Church in Austin--Bush's church when
he was Texas Governor, said, "I haven't talked to anybody who reads
superstitious meaning into this. If you buy that, then you believe God is
responsible for babies being bashed. People who go that way play a
convenient, inconsistent game about the way God works. The implication of
saying God does this kind of thing is so grim and grotesque that that
doesn't gibe with what I understand about Jesus and about God."

So what does it mean? "We human beings are fallible, make mistakes, and
get very arrogant--and our arrogance expresses itself in complacency so
we think flying in space is no longer a dangerous thing," says Mayfield.

But clearly there is a powerful desire to ascribe meaning, and in some
cases to look for clues as to whose side God is on. President Bush
himself seems to believe God is intervening directly in current events.
"Freedom and fear, justice and cruelty, have always been at war, and we
know that God is not neutral between them," he said during his address to
the nation in September, 2001.

In a recently published book, former Bush speechwriter David Frum
describes a moment involving Bush and chief speechwriter Michael Gerson.
After seeing the president give his speech to Congress Gerson said, "Mr.
President, when I saw you on television, I thought God wanted you there."
Bush responded, "He wants us all here, Gerson."

But if God is on America's side in the war on terrorism, how can we then
say that he was not involved in the Columbia disaster? Conversely, if we
say that God was not involved in the space shuttle catastrophe, how can
we be so confident that he is not "neutral" in the War on Terrorism?

For now, Beliefnet user marakama, sums up her confusion like this: "It
may be clich� to say, 'there is no such thing as a coincidence," but
seems everything is tied together some how, no matter how fine the thread
may be. But what is the relation?" 

 

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