From The Christian Science Board of Directors

IN KATRINA'S WAKE, LOVE'S FLOOD TIDES

The Christian Science Monitor

The lives of Hurricane Katrina's survivors have been dramatically changed; so many dwellings have been ruined and futures put on hold. Putting aside for a moment the legitimate questions and concerns swirling in the storm's aftermath, what the survivors desperately need is to feel God's love—and to feel the compassion and care for suffering humanity that spiritual instinct impels in each of us.

We are grateful to see the outpouring of affection and aid for the people of the Gulf Coast, from Americans and from people worldwide. In some cases, people who themselves have little are giving much to others who now have nothing. Such compassion fulfills the hopes of Puritan John Winthrop, whose words were quoted in Wednesday's editorial in this paper: "Every man must afford his help to another in every want and distress." Ultimately, evil's enormity is no match for the immensity of humanity's spiritual resources.

The challenges ahead are many, though. Prominent among them will be sustaining the flow of love— care, prayers, and helping-hand aid—as Gulf Coast residents find their own vision for a "new normal."

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