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Does God Have An Emergency Preparedness Plan?
What
does God think about disaster preparedness?
People
of faith challenged to take lead!
By
Thomas Horn
Today, a strange paradox
exits. What looks like the fulfillment of prophecy is everywhere;
unrest in the Middle East, the rise of a European Superstate, the
alignment of Gog and Magog, forming of a national ID and gateways
through biotechnology that could unleash upon earth pestilence of
biblical proportions. People from all three of the world’s great
religions see these developments as potential omens of an ‘End Times’
scenario leading to the Apocalypse.
Yet many believers in
God, especially in America, are indifferent to the need to prepare
for the unexpected.
An article by Mimi Hall
in USA TODAY this week said, "Most Americans haven't taken
steps to prepare for a natural disaster, terrorist attack or other
emergency, according to a new study on preparedness, and only about
a third have made plans with family members about how they would
communicate with each other during a crisis."
Part of the reason for
this may be that we are well off in the United States, and we trust
in our bank accounts to sustain us. Unfortunately, money sitting
in savings and investments are useless if you become stuck in a
storm or other crisis.
Another disarming reason
I witnessed during my 25 years of pastoring for why people of faith
neglect preparedness has to do with an odd defeatism that says,
"If current events are prophesied to happen, then there’s nothing
we can do about it anyway."
The notion that calamity
is unavoidable if it is divinely predicted is even sanctioned by
some expositors who miss the pattern for preparedness in the Bible.
While it is true that famine was prophesied for Egypt, it is also
a fact that God led Joseph to prepare for it, and, as a result,
he saved his family and the nations around about.
Proverbs 22:3 tells us
that a prudent person will foresee such difficulties and prepare
for them, while a simpleton will go blindly on and suffer the consequences.
This is good advice not only for religious folks, but also people
of any persuasion.
A third and perhaps the
greatest reason why some people, including religious people never
plan for disaster, is that they view the need to prepare for the
unexpected as too complicated and costly. They imagine the back
yard being dug up for construction of a massive bomb shelter and
the basement crammed with row after row of dry grains and large
containers filled with backup water.
The truth is, survival
preparation is modestly affordable. Under most circumstances, the
ability for individuals to remain mobile for a few days to a week
or so by simply grabbing an inexpensive "survival bag"
and heading out is more important than silos filled with long term
storage foods.
Even when we envision
a worse case scenario – such as a terrorist nuke or ICBM exchange
– low-cost shelters, that can be built at home and combined with
a minimal amount of Potassium Iodide, would help keep as much as
99 percent of the population alive according to one synopsis by
the Department of Homeland Security. Designs for building such family
shelters are available free online at places like www.SurvivorMall.com.
While having to try to
endure radioactive fallout is a growing possibility, the fact is
that most people are more likely to face disaster as a result of
things like nature.
A few weeks ago a journalist
became lost in a snowstorm in Oregon and died from the exposure
to freezing temperatures. If his car had been equipped with a survival
kit, he would have had an excellent chance of survival.
During Hurricane Katrina,
one woman had an emergency supplies kit in her attic that kept her
and her two cats alive for days until help arrived. Another man,
a doctor who had read "Dare to Prepare" by Holly Deyo
and followed its instructions, was prepared with equipment and supplies.
His house became a gathering place for people displaced by the storm.
For reasons such as these,
my wife and I recently provided each of our children with a "walk
out" kit for the trunks of their cars. These emergency bags
contain enough food, water, shelter, first aid, lighting and communication
supplies to keep them alive for days in the case of a vehicle malfunction
or other situation where they would need to abandon their car.
Many of the items vital
for a good survival kit can be found at your local shopping center:
an inexpensive poncho, a basic first aid assortment, nylon cord,
canvas for temporary shelter, duck tape, a whistle. Other items
are a bit trickier to find and may need to be acquired from one
of many online emergency preparedness companies. These include five-year-shelf-life
food bars, five-year-shelf-life water boxes or pouches, paper-thin
thermal blankets designed by NASA to retain body heat, special hand-crank
combination flashlights with radios and emergency signals built
in, and so on. My personal favorite is the "Transformer 4 in
1 Radio Flashlight," which requires no maintenance, no batteries,
no bulb replacements, and can even power your cell phone.
Pre-made emergency kits
containing items such as those above can be acquired online at costs
from $30.00 and up, depending on the number of people and the number
of days they are designed to sustain.
Why then, given how affordable
disaster preparedness is, are so many people unprepared for an emergency?
Within "faith communities,"
part of the problem goes back to western dispensational fatalism
that fails to see God’s instructions about the future and the responsibility
He gives concerning preparation. Church authorities may speak of
the hidden shelter that God provides His followers during a storm,
yet often fail to see the believer’s responsibility cast throughout
the Bible where we are to care for our families and communities
by readying for the unknown.
Some teachers also erroneously
believe that emergency preparedness reflects a lack of faith in
God.
The opposite is true.
The Book of James measures faith by personal action, and Hebrews
11:7 describes true faith this way: "By faith Noah, being warned
of God of things not seen as yet, moved with fear and prepared an
ark to the saving of his house."
God told Noah that He
would destroy the earth by a flood. He gave Noah instructions on
how to be prepared so that he and his family could survive. Noah
didn’t know when the flood would come, only that it was prophesied,
and he prepared for it. When the Flood arrived, he was ready. His
faith in and obedience to God’s word, his survival instincts, and
ultimately his preparedness actions saved his family and preserved
the human race.
The parallel between
Noah and today is astounding. "As it was in the days of Noah,"
says Luke 17:26-27 concerning the last days. Noah's actions should
define the modern believer's responsibility, including the need
for spiritual and physical preparedness.
Of course there are other
places in the Bible that provide lessons about preparedness, including
principles in the Books of Psalms and Proverbs, the parable of the
faithful and evil servants (Matthew 24:45-51) and the parable of
the ten virgins (Matthew 25:1-13). But 1 Timothy 5:8 goes even further,
saying that a person who does not provide for the survival of their
relatives has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever.
Given these instructions
and the belief held by many today that we are living in "the
last days" or at a minimum a time of unusual earth changes,
leaders of religious institutions urgently need to educate their
followers about taking personal responsibility for preparedness
in an age of growing uncertainty. Dramatic lessons over the last
few years have proven that we cannot depend on government agencies
such as FEMA to save us if we need them. In fact, a report last
month found that five years after the Sept. 11 terror attacks, the
government still isn't fully prepared to respond to a major public
health emergency such as bioterrorism or a pandemic flu outbreak.
So what can one do to
help people with disaster preparedness?
This is the good news.
Hundreds of pages from reports and booklets on how to perform first
aid, prepare temporary shelters, build bomb shelters, defend against
terrorism and chemical contamination, shield against nuclear fallout,
survive earthquakes, storms, floods, and dozens of other emergency
situations are available free at places like www.SurvivorMall.com.
Spiritual leaders can
download these booklets and reports, print them out and place them
on a table in a church foyer, hand them to neighbors, give them
out during classes, or better yet teach a class on preparedness
and tie it in with the mandates of Scripture. If nothing else, everybody
can forward this article to the people they know with a recommendation
that they do what is right to protect themselves as well as those
God has placed under their care.
As a veteran of more
than 30 years of church ministry, I call on pastors and other religious
leaders to stand at the forefront of this issue and to make disaster
preparedness some part of their ministry. This doesn’t need to define
what you or your fellowship is about, but this can and must be part
of the wise counsel you offer those you have responsibility for.
You could literally save a believer’s life!
Deuteronomy 30:19 says,
"Today I have given you the choice between life and death,
between blessings and curses. I call on heaven and earth to witness
the choice you make. Oh, that you would choose life, that you and
your descendants might live!"
Together as
people of faith, we should face the future with confidence and take
the lead in disaster preparedness.
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Remember:
SPIRITUAL
PREPARATION FIRST
PHYSICAL
PREPARATION SECOND!
Both must be done if we are to be faithful (see Timothy 5:8)!