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How To Dismantle An Idolized Bono

Editor’s Note: This article is an editorial by singer/songwriter Tara Leigh Cobble. It originally ran in the 850 WORDS OF RELEVANT newsletter. There has been some discrepancy over Bono's quote that is mentioned in the story. Many readers wrote in who attended shows on the same tour and said that they heard Bono say, "Jesus. Jew. Mohammed. It's true—all sons of Abraham."

I’m pretty sure I won’t get much opposition if I say that U2 is the greatest rock band of all time. When I scored two great seats to one of the shows at Madison Square Garden last month, I thought my life had reached its pinnacle.

It was a euphoric experience. During the first few songs, I stood, along with the rest of the stadium, as we pumped our fists into the air and sang along with every word. The energy in the air was emotionally overwhelming. And if you’ve never been to a U2 show, let me tell you that it was everything you’d ever expect it to be.

But it was also much, much more.

About five songs into their set, Bono stopped the show and strapped on a headband with writing on it. I stared up at the JumboTron to see that the handwritten lettering said: COEXIST.

Coexisting sounds like a great idea. I fully support the peaceful philanthropy that Bono has encouraged, and this seemed like another way that he was trying to spread the message.

Except, it started to feel like more than a political message. The “C” in “coexist” was the Islamic crescent moon, the “X” was the Star of David, and the “T” was the cross of Christ. Bono pointed at the symbols on his headband—first to the cross, then to the star, then to the crescent moon—and he began to repeat:

“Jesus, Jew, Mohammed—all true. Jesus, Jew, Mohammed—all true.”

He repeated the words like a mantra, and some people even began to repeat it with him. I suddenly wanted to crawl out of my skin. Was Bono, my supposed brother in Christ, preaching some kind of universalism? In just a few seconds, I went from agreeing with him about Christ-like “coexistence” to being creeped out by the ungodly, untrue thing he was saying. What’s going on here? What if he believes that all ways are the same, and he just thinks of Christianity as his particular way? Aren’t universalism and true Christianity mutually exclusive?

I’ve heard the urban legends of amazing things Bono has said about his faith, I’ve read the books, and I’ve peered deep into everything he’s said hoping to find something that makes his beliefs clear. For years, I’ve adored him and clung to the notion that he is believer, too. After all, he identifies himself with Christianity, doesn’t he?

When he stated that lie so boldly, it devastated me. It was, without question, the most disturbing experience of my life; I felt like I’d been covered in bile. As I looked around, I saw all the people standing and chanting with him—it was disgusting and beautiful all at once. Unity can be so enticing. It made me think of the one world religion and how that will probably look benign and beautiful from the outside, too. I even started to wonder if universalism just might be poised to be that religion. All these things were running through my head.

After the show, I ran into a friend who had been sitting in the back row of farthest. “What did you think of that headband thing?” I asked. “Well, I couldn’t hear what he was saying because it was bouncing off the wall behind me, and I couldn’t read the headband, because I wasn’t near a JumboTron. But honestly, I felt like I was witnessing an antichrist.” I stood frozen as she spoke. I’d had the same feeling.

Let me be clear: I’m not saying that Bono is the Antichrist. Perhaps he’s just guilty of being overzealous about his politics. But I hope that if he is a believer, the Holy Spirit will convict him that equating Christianity with other religions is false prophecy. II Timothy 3 tells us to avoid people who have a form of godliness but deny the true power of God. And I believe that the most deceptive thing of all is to identify yourself with the truth and preach a lie.

For a long time after the show, I couldn’t talk about it. And I still don’t know what to think because I don’t know Bono’s heart. All I know is what he said from that stage and how it shook my footing. God used that to show me something ugly in myself that needed to be fixed. It felt like He was saying, “If you’re looking to Bono, you’re looking to the wrong place.”

The reality is that Bono held too high a place in my heart. And I don’t think I’m alone there. I’ve wrongly held him up as the heroic ideal—the cool representative for Christianity; he may have been my “Christian idol,” but he was my idol nonetheless. And that’s not okay. Yes, it should bother me to think that Bono might not be a believer; but it should not bother me any more than if a random guy on the street does not believe.

I pray for Bono more lately, and I pray for the hearts of the millions of people that he impacts on a daily basis. He is, without question, the most influential person in the world, and he has an unparalleled opportunity to speak the truth to the lost world. This year alone, he was nominated to be the president of the World Bank, and he was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. And by the time the Vertigo Tour ends in April, it will have grossed twice as much as any political campaign anywhere, ever. If Bono has a saving faith in the one true God, I can only hope that he would speak the Truth without ambiguity. I pray that the name of Jesus would grace his lips, without being equated with Judaism or Islam or any other religion. And I’m praying that God will help me to put things in the right place in my heart.

25 Comments

81,183

Joel commented…

Were you there? Because I was! Apparently the author of this wasn't though, since she completely and totally misquoted him.

Go sit in judgment of yourselves for a change, will you?

81,183

reverseEngineering commented…

Someone shared this with me:

Warren Wiersbe: In
Matthew 6:22-23, Jesus used the illustration of the eye to teach us how
to have a spiritual outlook on life. We must not pass judgment on
others' motives. We should examine their actions and attitudes, but we
cannot judge their motivesfor only God can see their hearts. It is
possible for a person to do a good work with a bad motive. It is also
possible to fail in a task and yet be very sincerely motivated. When we
stand before Christ at the Judgment Seat, He will examine the secrets of
the heart and reward us accordingly (Rom. 2:16; Col. 3:22-25). Bible Exposition Commentary (BE Series) - New Testament - The Bible Exposition Commentary New Testament, Volume 1.
Warren Wiersbe on 1 Cor. 5:3-5
Judge the sin (vv. 3-5). While Christians are not to judge one another's motives (Matt. 7:1-5) or ministries (1 Cor. 4:5), we are certainly expected to be honest about each other's conduct.
In my own pastoral ministry, I have never enjoyed having to initiate
church discipline; but since it is commanded in the Scriptures, we must
obey God and set personal feelings aside. Bible Exposition Commentary (BE Series) - New Testament - The Bible Exposition Commentary New Testament, Volume 1.

We should evaluate Tara Leigh Cobble's conduct. From what I've gathered, since there is no audio suggesting Bono said "All True", then the conduct equates to False Witness. She may have thought she heard it, but if you're going to level a heretic charge against someone, that would warrant going back and listening to the concert again.

I agree with Wiersbe that we should stay away from judging motives. It is a slippery slope.

Tara Leigh Cobble, WHERE ARE YOU? Please find a recording of the concert. Please re-listen to the germane portion. And please apologize of bearing false witness...or.... please produce an audio clip of the accusation. If you wanted Bono to repent for what you thought he said during the concert (which again, no audio evidence has been produced), then please hold yourself to the same standard. (Matt 7:2b).

While
(thankfully) we live under the age of Grace and not OT law, Yahweh's
displeasure with false witness can be seen here (esp 18b-19).

Deuteronomy 19:16-21
(16) If a false witness testifies against another person and accuses him of a crime,
(17)
then both parties to the controversy must stand before the LORD, that
is, before the priests and judges who will be in office in those days.
(18) The judges will thoroughly investigate the matter, and if the witness should prove to be false and to have given false testimony against the accused,
(19) you must do to him what he had intended to do to the accused. In this way you will purge evil from among you.
(20) The rest of the people will hear and become afraid to keep doing such evil among you.
(21)
You must not show pity; the principle will be a life for a life, an eye
for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, a hand for a hand, and a foot for a
foot.

Luk_18:20 You know the commandments: 'DO NOT COMMIT ADULTERY,' 'DO NOT MURDER,' 'DO NOT STEAL,' 'DO NOT BEAR FALSE WITNESS,' 'HONOR YOUR FATHER AND YOUR MOTHER.' "

Rom_13:9 For the commandments, "YOU SHALL NOT COMMIT ADULTERY," "YOU SHALL NOT MURDER," "YOU SHALL NOT STEAL," "YOU SHALL NOT BEAR FALSE WITNESS,"
"YOU SHALL NOT COVET," and if there is any other commandment, are all
summed up in this saying, namely, "YOU SHALL LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR AS
YOURSELF."

81,183

reverseEngineering commented…

Genesis 16:15
(15) So Hagar gave birth to Abram's son, whom Abram named Ishmael.
Matthew 1:1
(1) This is the record of the genealogy of Jesus Christ, the son of David, the son of Abraham.

81,183

tkaione commented…

Thank you so much for sharing this. I also thank God that He showed you the truth! May many more in Christ see it and turn from their idols to keep their eyes on our Lord Jesus Christ only.

81,183

R2D3 commented…

U2; UNIVERSALISM, GRACE, AND THE 2005 CO-EXIST CONTROVERSY
by Steve Stockman

http://stocki.typepad.com/soul...

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