These so called biblical plagues from the Christian bible have been proved to be at least some sort of natural weather Phenomenon.
There's an explanation for that, and that's the direction I go, it is more than doubtful it was directed by some superior being.
In fact I am here as I believe everything has a natural explanation of some sort.
Was trying to type something else in here, but I'll let that up to replies.
Thanks For Reading, And I hope this is at the right place.
I agree with you that everything has a natural explanation; However when it comes to an analysis of scriptural or historical accounts of divine actions, most often the best natural explanation is "humans like to tell made up stories".
Maybe this story or that has some basis in real events; Maybe it's pure fiction, invented for entertainment, or as a metaphor for some aspect of the human condition.
Perhaps there simply never was a Captain Ahab who chased a white whale across the oceans of the world. Perhaps there never were a bunch of English school kids marooned on a remote island who ended up worshiping a pig's head on a stick. Perhaps there never were any biblical plagues.
It's impossible to say (in the last case), and it will likely be just as impossible to say in the first two, should those stories still be being told a couple of thousand years from now.
And in all three cases, it's not really important whether these are recountings of real events; Their value as stories is independent of their value as historical accounts of events that actually occurred.
IMO that's the biggest problem with modern Protestant Christianity; The insistence that their cultural myths need to also be factual historical accounts.
We need not explain how Santa Claus didn't in fact use supernatural means to get his reindeer to fly, and hypothesise that perhaps his reindeer were subjected to a natural phenomenon, such as clear air turbulence, that kept them aloft. All we need to do is say "nah, it's all just made up stories".
Unless and until someone produces evidence to the contrary.