It happened
again this year.
It’s
usually something which only the children notice. Every year, around the time
that the children break up from school, the weather suddenly gets worse. Often,
I’ve noticed, there are a few weeks, while the children are still at school,
when the weather is great. Warm, sunny and cheerful. But as soon as children
are free from school, the weather turns bad. I can’t explain it – but you could
probably test my theory next year (if you and I are still around). It’s an
irony. Murphy’s Law. It doesn’t make sense. I do feel that only the children
notice it.
God allows
it for purposes of his own. But, as I noted in my book Irony – what do
such things say about the character of God?
I had a
conversation with my brother about a topic similar to this. It went something
like this:
Ad:
“What about that hurricane in America – it’s looks pretty serious?”
Me:
“Yes, it looks bad – I think some people are going to die because of it.”
Ad: “Not
very nice of God, is it?”
Me (taking
the bait): “I don’t think you can blame God for the weather.”
Ad: “You
can’t blame God for the weather? Really? What can you blame him for then?”
Afterwards
I thought a little about what my brother had said. And I thought he had a
point. Global warming aside – there really is a sense in which God allows the
weather we experience.
Don’t get me wrong – I’m not a climate change denier – I really do think that
mankind has pretty much caused havoc to this ecosystem which we call the earth,
through lazy choices, lack of accountability and greed. But alongside that, I
do think that it’s a bit of an excessive responsibility for mankind to take the
blame for the effects of El NiƱo or the jet stream. Even if you were of
the opinion that modern man was to blame for these things, there would have
been a time in which we were not and maybe we are just in the grey area of only
being partly to blame for it all. It’s not all our fault. Besides, the devil
has a scorched earth policy.
That, of
course, doesn’t help the child who notices that as soon as the summer holidays
arrive it begins to rain heavily. And if God has allowed such things, then what
does that say about the character of God? Is this sun really shining
benevolently behind the rainclouds?
Check out
my summer holiday theory next year – this year it wasn’t so obvious because
there was a bit of rain before the holidays arrived. However, I did wake up on
the first day of the holidays and instantly knew that the children were off
school because it was such bad weather. I do think it proves Murphy’s Law
(which is a little more optimistic than Sod’s Law in that it states that ‘IF
anything can go wrong it will’ (implying that things can be prepared for),
whereas Sod’s Law states that ‘Whatever you do, everything will go wrong at
the worst possible time’). See, I’m really quite a positive person…
Of course,
if, next year, the summer holidays do begin with fine weather then it will
signify a kind of Sod’s Law now for me, but I will have also have single-handedly
changed the weather pattern with these very words.
If I were praying,
I might say: ‘Let the children have some decent weather, God. They are
already under a lot of pressure and get too many nightmares of too many kinds.
At least give them some half-decent weather.’
But I’m
not.
And that
wasn’t a prayer, it was me saying that if the Almighty wants praise, then he is
going to have to take his share of the blame as well. By virtue of having
greater responsibility due to having ultimate and absolute power.
Above these
storm clouds, the sun may still be shining benevolently. Don’t get me wrong,
that’s nice to think about.
But it’s not
very helpful when you’re in a storm is it?
How do you manage the differing end of school dates across the UK with your weather predictions?
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