I like U2.
I don’t looove
them, but I like them. As a music lover, I’d be crazy not to have a lot of
respect for the band. On top of that, I have always liked Bono. Despite being
the world renowned front man, he seems to be a good guy, he does a lot of good
things, he seems to have a good understanding of the human condition, and he
says a lot of smart things – I dig that.
Bono is one of those people that in Christian circles, is
sort of quietly adopted. Some Christians would agree with me that Bono is a good man
who does a lot of good things, but they might believe that a rock star such as he could not
be a Christian himself because Christians just aren’t rock stars. Others happily welcome Bono into the Family
of God and utilize him as an excuse for saying curse words and spending a lot
of money on sunglasses [I’m not
condemning, just sayin’].
Me?
I don’t know how you can listen to this and believe that
Bono doesn’t get it.
I read an article earlier this week that was a spliced
interview with Bono. If I didn’t have
respect and admiration for the man prior to reading this article, I certainly
do now. With great insight, he explains
the gospel – and the transforming Truth that Christianity is founded on [and unfortunately, poorly exhibiting these
days]. The article had so many wonderful quotes from Bono, I was tempted to
blow up my twitter feed with them [darn
140 characters]. Overall, there were a few key points that I will never,
ever forget [and I fully intend to steal
these points and incorporate them into my own poorly stated credo. The Theology
of Bono, right?].
Bono points out that the belief in karma exists in pretty
much every major world religion. To the same extent, Christianity holds the
belief that what you receive in your life is directly tied to what you put in
to it [you reap what you sow].
“There’s nothing hippie about my picture of Christ.” [I love that.] Whether the Old or New
Testament, God reveals Himself as the Almighty, and there is nothing passive
about that. It’s in His ferocious nature (whether through demonstrations (God
in OT) or in love (Jesus in NT)) that He pursues us. As Bono simply pointed
out, it’s there that we see the juxtaposition of the Cross.
The simplicity of Scripture – of God Himself – is made known
to us through Jesus. There wasn’t anything complicated or convoluted about
Jesus. He did [does] what he said he
would, he meant [means] what he said,
and he didn’t [doesn’t] play mind
games. And that example is for us, the basis of how we live. We study God >
we see that He is love > we are transformed by that love > we act in that
love. [duh.]
This is the part that rocked me. When looking at the world’s
view of karma, and therefore, ultimately, the world’s view of forgiveness –
Jesus was the most rogue of rogue-ers. And, the loving grace that is given
through the Cross is so transcendent & powerful that reaping what I sow
doesn’t even stand a chance! Here’s what I mean: [Bono said it best] “Grace defies reason and logic. Love interrupts,
if you like, the consequences of your actions… I’d be in big trouble if karma
was going to finally be my judge... it doesn’t excuse my mistakes, but I’m
holding out for Grace. I’m holding out that Jesus took my sins onto the Cross,
because I know who I am, I hope I don’t have to depend on my own religiosity.”
Having grown up in the church, and mostly big, southern
churches, I really appreciated Bono’s insight on Pharisee-like living –
following all the right rules without heart transformation. He credits that
mentality to a lack of God in the church: “A list of instruction where there
was once conviction; dogma where once people just did it; a congregation led by
a man where once they were led by the Holy Spirit. Discipline replacing
discipleship.” Sounds familiar to ya, huh? What I appreciated most about Bono’s
perspective is that he maintains respect for the Church by pointing out, again,
the simplicity of her beauty. “…the
older I get, the more comfort I find there. The physical experience of being in
a crowd of largely humble people, heads bowed, murmuring prayers, stories told
in stained glass windows…”
I’m not entirely sure why this article struck such a chord
in me. Maybe because such theological depth was surprising from Bono [I know, I know. that was not a fair
assumption. lesson learned]. Maybe it’s because this world has convinced me
that it’s nearly impossible to be a musician of depth as well as a person of
depth. Regardless, I haven’t been able to shake the feelings of pure impression.
And while none of the points above are new facets of my beliefs, it’s nice to
know that someone way more cool and far more articulate than I, holds the same
to be true.
Rock on, friends.
3 comments:
loved your thoughts on Bono and concur. I went to a U2 concert in 2009 and was overwhelmed at how much it pointed lost people and Christians alike to the cross. It was almost like a worship service. you should read "Walk On: The Spiritual Journey of U2". so great.
I've been really wanting to read that! Thanks for the recommendation!
Woah! I'm a fan of Bono too and more of U2 :)
Loved reading all your posts. And thoroghly enjoyed this post particularly! :)
Do visit my blog sometime!
Love & Light to you! :)
Jen
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