Biblically, God has a pattern of disrupting the lives and activities of sinful people. He disrupted and dispelled Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden after they’d sinned (Gen 3:1:24). He quarantined Noah and His family in the Ark and then disrupted the world by means of a universal flood (Gen 6:1—8:22). He confused the languages of those building the Tower of Babel, disrupting the activity and scattering them geographically (Gen 11:1-9). He disrupted Egypt by sending severe plagues that resulted in His people, Israel, being expelled in a great exodus (Ex 5:1—14:31). God’s greatest disruption so far occurred when He sent His Son into the world, into Satan’s hostile kingdom of darkness, to be the Light of the world and to provide salvation to those enslaved to sin (John 1:5-9; 3:19-21). Jesus declared “I am the Light of the world; he who follows Me will not walk in the darkness, but will have the Light of life” (John 812). By presenting divine viewpoint, Jesus caused division among people (John 7:43; 9:16; 10:19), even among His disciples (John 6:66), as well as family members in the same household (Luke 12:51-53).