On Hurricanes and Cyclones
"For  when your faith is tested, your endurance has a chance to grow. So let it grow,  for when your endurance is fully developed, you will be strong in character and  ready for anything."1
    
  I happened to grow up in a part of Australia that was subject to  cyclones (the Southern Hemisphere equivalent of hurricanes). I once saw the  roof of a neighboring house ripped off by the ferocious winds and pieces thrown  high up into the air. But I never experienced the velocity of hurricanes that  have plagued Florida and the Caribbean. 
  
  King Duncan reported how he had always thought of hurricanes as something  mankind could do without. "But," said Duncan, "recently I learned that they  are necessary to maintain a balance in nature. These tropical storms, with  winds up to 150 miles an hour and accompanied by torrential rains, glaring  lightning, and rumbling thunder, can be devastating. Yet scientists tell us  they are tremendously valuable. They dissipate a large percentage of the  oppressive heat which builds up at the equator, and they are indirectly  responsible for much of the rainfall in North and South   America. Meteorologists therefore no longer use cloud-seeding  techniques to prevent them from being formed. They are convinced that  hurricanes actually do more good than harm."2
  
  Forest fires are also necessary for the health  of forests. And often we need hard times in our lives, even though they bring  temporary distress, as God allows them to help us grow and become stronger  Christians—"strong in character and ready for anything."
  
  Suggested prayer: "Dear God, when trials and tribulations seem more than I  can bear, please help me to learn the lesson you are seeking to teach me, and  through these afflicting circumstances help me to grow and become strong in  character and ready for anything. Thank you for hearing and answering my  prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus' name, amen." 
  
  1. James  1:3-4 (NLT).
  2. King Duncan of http://www.sermons.com/. 
  
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All articles on this website are written by 
            Richard (Dick) Innes unless otherwise stated.