"This story has many morals" Maathai writes: "None of us can expect God to sit back and do it all for us," Margaret Erickson, a
Ventura County, California,
supervisor, said after retelling the parable while testifying in 1990 before the
U. S. House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure's subcommittee on investigation and oversight.
Seventh-day Adventist Richard O'Ffill, who warns Christians against so broadly applying that principle, since it eliminates the need for prayer, finds the parable useful in chastising the other extreme: Christians who pray with the hope that God will respond with a "magic wand". "Have you ever considered that what we call the laws of nature, or natural law, or Mother Nature are all really the laws of God?" he writes, addressing those people directly. "These laws that work from cause to effect have been established by God as the way that things will be." Some writers focus on the difficulty a person might have in accepting help when it is offered. "Many people have trouble recognizing help when it is being offered," say Chip Sawicki and Vernon Roberts in their 2011 book
The Gift of Success. "If you continue to refuse it, though, eventually people will stop offering." Per Allen, other commentators have seen the parable as essential to reconciling faith and science. "Science produced those boats and designed that helicopter is turning away from the natural law of the Puritans—our ability to reason", writes
Shawn Lawrence Otto in his 2011 book
Fool Me Twice: Fighting the War On Science in America. He quotes The Rev. Peg Chemberlin, then president of the
National Council of Churches, to the effect that a proper understanding of science can make possible a better understanding of Scripture. Similarly,
Richard H. Schwartz has written that "Jews are not supposed to rely on miracles", in response to the story. Randall Smith, writing for
Robert Royal's website
The Catholic Thing, finds this approach dovetails with Church teachings. He writes that he uses the parable to illuminate
St. Thomas Aquinas's understanding of the
metaphysics of creation, that for God creation is a continuous act, for his students. "So too with God's actions in the world: God can and usually does work in and through natural causes. Natural causality in the universe and God's divine causality are not mutually exclusive." Even
atheists have found the story useful. A guest poster on
Hemant Mehta's blog,
Friendly Atheist, recounted it in 2011 and after noting the usual message that one should take action to solve one's own problems rather than leaving it all up to God, called believers "delusional" when they attribute all their successes to God. "We're capable of overcoming just about any tough situation" they wrote. "It requires perseverance and loved ones. God is nowhere in the equation." The parable has also been invoked in secular contexts.
Jay Conrad Levinson, the developer of
guerilla marketing, told the story in his 1999 book
Mastering Guerilla Marketing. "Your boats and your helicopter are in this book and in your heart", he counseled readers. "You must believe in your product so much that your hallmark is passion."
Workplace safety consultant Michael Manning retells the story to reinforce the importance of training employees in safety standards to the fullest extent: "Safety training requires doing all you reasonably can to help others help themselves." ==Analyses==