Scientists
and government officials around the world are now reporting that the
Earth's environment is changing in many dramatic and unexpected ways.
Global warming, climate change, acidification of the oceans and a growing
scarcity of water are some of the problems being discussed in the news.
For example, the BBC News' World
Edition recently posted a series of online articles about these phenomena.
Regarding climate change, the News' Science/Nature section for August
12, 2004 (
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/ science/nature/3559426.stm ) states
that last summer thousands of people died in a severe heat wave in France,
and similar conditions are predicted for Europe and North America in
coming years. In this article, a scientist from the National Center
for Atmospheric Research asserts, "It's the extreme weather and
climate events that will have some of the most severe impacts on human
society as the climate changes."
Researchers believe that global
warming - the heating up of the planet's atmosphere due to increased
levels of carbon dioxide in the air - is the cause of the current weather
problems. Whenever carbon is burned in the form of fossil fuels - coal,
oil and gas - carbon dioxide that was previously trapped in the earth
enters the atmosphere. Once in the air, the gas acts like the glass
windows of a greenhouse, trapping the sun's heat so that it cannot escape
back into space. The primary source of excess atmospheric carbon dioxide
is fuel burned for transportation and the making of electricity. Cutting
down the world's forests adds to the problem, as the harvested trees
can no longer take carbon dioxide from the air.
BBC's World Edition also discussed
the rising acidity of the world's oceans (
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/ nature/3571152.stm ), explaining
how the seas absorb excess carbon dioxide like a sponge. The BBC report
says that, according to the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission,
each day the oceans take in some 20-25 million tons of carbon dioxide,
which changes into carbonic acid when it enters the water. And because
fish breathe water like humans breathe air, slight changes in oceanic
acidity can have disastrous consequences for marine life. Corals, shellfish
and even plankton, the tiny plants that provide the basic food source
for fish, are strongly affected by this increasing acidity.
Meanwhile back on land, large-scale
waste and pollution continue to reduce the world's fresh water supplies,
and global warming is creating massive shifts in rainfall patterns,
resulting in more flooding in some areas and reduced rainfall in others.
Thus, generally speaking, fresh water is becoming scarce. And because
agriculture accounts for 70% of our fresh water use, and grain-fed animals
require far more water than do grain crops alone, meat eating may soon
be possible only if people in poor countries are denied the resources
to grow food.
According to the Stockholm International
Water Institute, (
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3559542.stm ) "It's
going to be almost impossible to feed future generations the kind of
diet we now have in Western Europe and North America." Thus, while
Quan Yin practitioners are vegetarians, many people in the world still
desire to eat animal flesh, and so meat's future scarcity will cause
suffering in rich and poor countries alike.
Why do the problems and disasters
mentioned above take place? Spiritual practitioners know that because
the entire universe is a harmonious interaction of its spiritual, emotional
and material elements, all physical events that affect us are the results
of karma. In the case of global warming and the wasting of resources,
we can see that our desires for personal physical comforts have led
us to ignore the well-being of other humans, of animals, of the forests,
of the air and of the water upon which all life depends. When we fail
to listen to God internally, Hes acts through natural catastrophes in
the external world to wake us up. Thus, through nature we must experience
retribution when we become arrogant, greedy or careless.
For example, we enjoy driving
cars, living in air-conditioned homes and working and playing in big
cities supplied with food, water and electricity, tending not to notice
the pollution we create through these activities. And we give only a
passing thought to where our resources come from. The engineers and
technocrats who design and manage our technology, and the corporate
and government officers who control it are often preoccupied with personal
or financial considerations, and fail to consider its impact on the
earth. However, now that scientists are bringing the problems resulting
from technological advancement to our attention, we must all modify
our behavior to get more in harmony with God and nature.
Enlightenment is the answer to
every problem; we know this from our individual experiences as Quan
Yin practitioners. But we have to become enlightened as a species as
well. Master Ching Hai says that to truly understand the workings of
the universe, we must become one with God.
Therefore, from God's perspective,
a natural holocaust that pushes humanity back to the Stone Age may be
better for us than a man-made nuclear war or genetic accident that destroys
all life on the planet. If we do not know how to use our technological
toys wisely, out of love Hes will take them away.
To sum up, there are almost six
billion human beings on the planet today. As a species, we are growing
up, but we will have to improve both our habits and our thinking if
we hope to manage the world properly in coming decades. As long as we
act without listening to God, we will bear the karmic consequences.
But if we can see God in nature and act accordingly, learning and growing
in the Golden Age will be blissful.