| Bono
Waxes 'Prophetic'
Rock-star/activist
inspired by Leviticus and Isaiah.
Christianity
Today, February 06, 2006
Sheryl Henderson Blunt
While every celebrity
seems to have a cause, few stars get their inspiration from Scripture.
That is what sets lead U2 singer Bono apart. Sporting his trademark tinted
sunglasses, the rock star spoke to an audience of more than 3,000 at the
National Prayer Breakfast February 2, imploring them to respond to the
United States' urgent responsibility to help "the least of these."
Two passages drive his message, Bono says: the call in Leviticus 25 for
a Year of Jubilee and debt forgiveness, and the command in Isaiah 58 to
share with the hungry and provide for the poor.
"Thus sayeth the Lord: 'Bring the homeless poor into the house, when you
see the naked, cover him, then your light will break out like the dawn
and your recovery will speedily spring forth, then your Lord will be your
rear guard," Bono quoted from Isaiah 58:7-8.
"I appreciate the absurdity of being a rock star and quoting the Scriptures,"
Bono joked in his typical self-effacing style at a private meeting with
half a dozen journalists following his address.
Wearing jeans, a brown corduroy jacket, and a black, open-collared shirt,
the rocker was relaxed as he snacked on fruit and muffins while taking
questions from journalists. He expounded on his work in Africa, the role
of the church, and some of his favorite verses.
"It's absolutely the prophetic utterance of this moment in time," he exclaimed,
referring to Isaiah 58:7-8. "What it really suggests is that if we do
God's business, God will be more in ours. To use the colloquial, it's
God watching our back. It literally means God will watch your back!"
Reasons to Die
Bono said there are manifold problems when a religious nation ignores
God's business, particularly in light of growing anti-Americanism. "The
religiosity of this country is offensive to a lot of people in Europe
because they see hypocrisy in the heart of it," Bono said. "They see that
for all their talk, prayer breakfasts, and overt religiosity, these people
are giving the least to the least of these."
While crediting President Bush with a 0.5 percent increase in the nation's
foreign assistance budget since he took office, Bono said that according
to polls, "the reason why people don't want to increase foreign assistance
is they think it's already up to 15 or 20 percent. But it's actually a
tenth of even the lowest estimations."
The lack of greater foreign assistance and availability of life-saving
antiretroviral drugs "is not a good enough reason to die anymore," he
said.
Bono described a 2002 visit to Soweto, South Africa, where he talked with
a young widower trying to decide whether to keep his life-saving AIDS
drugs for himself or give them to the woman he had come to love. "He said,
'I can give her my drugs and my children can lose their last parent, or
we can share the drugs and both die slowly, or I can keep the drugs and
lose, for the second time, my love,' Bono recalled. "I stood there thinking,
This is barbaric. This is actually barbaric."
Not Missing This Issue
Fortunately, he said, the church is responding. "In the past, the church
has been behind on some issues, but the church hasn't missed this one,"
Bono said. "The church is leading. It's amazing. If I, 10 years ago, had
heard what I am saying [now], I wouldn't have believed me."
That is because 10 years ago, as Bono explained during his breakfast speech,
he didn't think much of the church, Christianity, or overt religion. "You
see, I avoided religious people most of my life," he said. "Maybe it had
something to do with having a father who was Protestant and a mother who
was Catholic in a country where the line between the two was, quite literally,
a battle line; where the line between church and state was...well, a little
blurry, and hard to see."
"I remember how my mother would bring us to chapel on Sundays...and my
father used to wait outside. One of the things that I picked up from my
father and my mother was the sense that religion often gets in the way
of God."
His faith, which he describes as "private," is largely influenced by the
words and actions of Jesus, the Beatitudes, and Old Testament Prophets.
Bono told the group of journalists that he enjoys reading The Message,
a modern Bible paraphrase "by the very gifted scholar and poet Eugene
Peterson." In contrast to some of the more popular "happy-clappy" Christian
music, the religious music that speaks to him most includes Charles Wesley's
hymns, Handel's Messiah, Jewish chanting, and songs that contain
"raw" emotion, he said.
Addressing how he hoped the United States would respond to his plea for
justice for Africa's poor and downtrodden, Bono appealed to Christian
and patriotic responsibility.
Imagine a so-called Christian society with the absolute capability to
save lives in Africa that fails to act, Bono said. "You can explain that
to the budget appropriators, but you can't explain it to God. He will
not accept that excuse, and history won't."
"I think growing a movement that defines itself by the way it treats these
issues, particularly at a time of conflict -- it's so poetic actually....This
is where you demonstrate the values of America."
© Christianity Today, 2006.
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