Hurricane Harvey and Human Selflessness
September 4, 2017 at 5:15 am Leave a comment
The news in the wake of Hurricane Harvey just seems to get worse. 18 counties in Texas have been declared federal disaster areas. Meteorologists are calling the flooding in Houston a 500-year event, though they admit that, by the time all is said and done, the effects of this storm may be closer to a 1,000-year event, or perhaps even bigger. In Beaumont, a toddler was found was shivering in the water, clinging to her drowned mother. Scenes and stories like this are simply heartbreaking.
Of course, for every heartbreaking story, there are hundreds of heartwarming stories. The picture below shows Cathy Pham, holding her sleeping baby, being carried to safety by a member of the Houston SWAT Team.

Credit: Louis DeLuca / Dallas News
Then there was Spiderman who took some time to visit some of the children who were sheltering at the George R. Brown Convention Center.

Credit: Hollywood Reporter
Images like these have made many people wonder out loud: Why can’t we always act this compassionately toward each other? Why can’t we put the differences that normally divide us aside and come together like the Coastal Bend, Houston, and the Golden Triangle have?
On the one hand, it’s important to remember that the selflessness we see demonstrated in tragedies like these is not quite as universal as it can first appear. Disasters bring out the best in many. But they also bring out the worst in some. From looters looking to pillage the possessions of displaced homeowners and damaged businesses to storm chasers who run from disaster zone to disaster zone trying to turn a quick profit off of beleaguered survivors by overcharging for a service and performing it poorly, or, sometimes, even not at all, there are still plenty of slick characters who will gladly trade the virtue of altruism for a windfall from opportunism.
In an article for Slate that has been widely criticized, Katy Waldman offers a somewhat cynical take on the staying power of human goodness, writing:
Humans may possess inherent goodness, but that goodness needs to be activated. Some signal has to disperse the cloud of moral Novocain around us. Some person, or fire, or flood, has got to say: now.
Ms. Waldman has serious doubts whether the goodness we see now in Texas can last beyond the storm. The selflessness we’ve seen, she says, has only been activated by the terrible trials people have had to endure. Once the trials pass, selflessness will ebb. Sadly, she might be right. But she doesn’t have to be.
One of the most compelling stories in the Bible is that of Job. Job was a man who had it all, and then lost it all – his house, his cattle, his children, and even his health. Job’s story recounts his struggle to come to terms with God’s faithfulness and providence in the midst of his suffering. Throughout his terrible ordeal, Job maintains that he has done nothing to deserve the calamities that have befallen him, even boldly demanding to speak with God to protest his circumstances: “I desire to speak to the Almighty and to argue my case with God” (Job 13:3). Throughout Jobs’ protestations, however, God remains silent – until He doesn’t.
At the end of the book, God speaks:
Then the LORD spoke to Job out of the storm. He said: “Who is this that obscures My plans with words without knowledge? Brace yourself like a man; I will question you, and you shall answer Me. Where were you when I laid the earth’s foundation? Tell Me, if you understand. Who marked off its dimensions? Surely you know! Who stretched a measuring line across it? On what were its footings set, or who laid its cornerstone – while the morning stars sang together and all the angels shouted for joy?” (Job 38:1-7)
God’s basic point to Job is that even when life feels unfair and God seems either absent or incompetent, He is neither. God really does know what He’s doing. He really does have a plan. And He really is quite competent at running the universe, for He put the universe together in the first place.
What is especially important for our purposes, however, is not only what God says to Job, but where God says it: “Then the LORD spoke to Job out of the storm” (Job 38:1). Job’s stringent sufferings have constituted a personal storm of epic proportions. But God has been there with him in the storm the whole time. Out of the storm, God speaks.
What was true of Job’s storm is true of Hurricane Harvey. With so much human suffering on display in the headlines and on our television screens, it can be tempting to think God is either absent or incompetent. But He is neither. God is in the storm. This is why, for all the suffering we see, we see even more selflessness. God is in the storm, leading people to help each other through the storm.
This is also why Ms. Waldman’s contention that when a storm subsides, selflessness wanes doesn’t have to ring true. Human selflessness in the midst of extraordinary suffering is not a result of suffering, but a gift from God. Suffering may be a vehicle through which God reveals human selflessness, but suffering itself is not the source of human selflessness. God in the storm – and not the storm itself – is the true source of our selflessness. And though God is in the storm, He is also beyond the storm. He will be there when the floods of Harvey have dried and the recovery and reconstruction projects have reached completion. Which means that the kind of selflessness that has been so beautifully on display in this storm can last long beyond this storm.
Hurricane Harvey has put on display the divine gift of human selflessness. And we have liked what we’ve seen. So let’s make sure this precious gift doesn’t go back into hiding once Harvey fades from our headlines. After all, if places like Houston can be wonderful because of people even when things are terrible because of weather, imagine what things could look like on a sunny day.
I’d love to see.
Entry filed under: Current Trends. Tags: Aransas Pass, Beaumont, Corpus Christi, Flooding, God, Goodness, Harvey, Houston, Hurricane, Job, Katy Waldman, Port Aransas, Port Arthur, Rockport, Selflessness, Slate, Storm, Suffering, Texas, Victoria.
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