domingo, 24 de janeiro de 2010

Haiti, o Terramoto e "deus" ou Between God and a Hard Place

A História dos homens é a História dos seus desentendimentos com deus, nem ele nos entende a nós, nem nós o entendemos a ele.

James Wood escreve sobre Deus e o terramoto no "New York Times" de hoje.Começa assim:

"In the 18th century, the genre of “earthquake sermon” was good business. Two small shocks in London, in 1750, sent the preachers to their pulpits and pamphlets. The bishop of London blamed Londoners’ lewd behavior; the bishop of Oxford argued that God had woven into his grand design certain incidents to alarm us and shake us out of our sin. In Bloomsbury, the Rev. Dr. William Stukeley preached that earthquakes are favored by God as the ultimate sign of his wrathful intervention.Five years later, when Lisbon was all but demolished by an enormous earthquake, the unholy refrain was heard again — one preacher even argued that the people of Lisbon had been relatively fortunate, for God had spared more people than he had killed. It was the Lisbon earthquake that prompted Voltaire to attack Leibniz’s metaphysical optimism, in which all is for the best in the best of all possible worlds. Theodicy, which is the justification of God’s good government of the world in the face of evil and pain, was suddenly harder to practice. But the preachers kept at it. “There is no divine visitation which is likely to have so general an influence upon sinners as an earthquake,” wrote the founder of Methodism, John Wesley, in 1777."
Ler o resto aqui http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/24/opinion/24wood.html?th&emc=th