Soli Deo Gloria

Craig Burrows’ blog

ASCF Mango Tree House Move

Posted by QuietoftheLand on May 29, 2009

lane_ASCF Mango Tree House is moving, first thank you to all who have donated, too many to mention here today however a big THANK YOU must go to Lane, Asian Tigers who are moving us for free.

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Asian Tigers are very professional, very good service. Thank you Lane and all Lane staff! Friends, when you need to move these people know what they are doing. They also have a heart for charity and we cannot thank them enough!

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So you are probably wondering what you do with 35 children while moving house… you put them in a room and let them play games! Here they are in one part of the room just for a photo.

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Any move that is handled by Asian Tigers generates a contribution to the Tiger Action Fund. This Fund benefits the wild tigers in Asia and is administered by the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) and Save China’s Tigers (SCT). The Asian Tigers have contributed more than US$245,000 to the Tiger Action Fund… they also help small charities like ours and are major sponsors of charitable events.

http://www.asiantigers-philippines.com/

Sometimes it is good to have a Tiger behind you!

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Apple Scholars

Posted by QuietoftheLand on September 16, 2007

As written by our Apple Scholars:

“A friend is someone we turn to when our spirits need a lift,
A friend is someone we treasure,
For true friendship is a gift.
This is our treasure FRIENDSHIP.”

This is what we found at the end of our treasure hunting.
Last September 16, 2007 we have had our monthly activity in Papaya Academy. Our activity for the month was “treasure hunting”. The facilitators of the said activity were kuya Craig, kuya Raphael, kuya Nick, kuya Mark, ate Aafke and ate Josephine. First we were asked what our treasures in life by kuya Craig, the hunting starts after that. We were divided into team of threes. To get the treasure we have to undergo different activities to get our clues. These activities are: basketball (with no rules at all), find clues within the Papaya premises, buy something in the market, searching for something in the internet, sing, we even have to answer something from the facilitators. For the final task we have to dig the treasure located at the back to the Papaya building.

“I enjoyed this activity because we took a lot of tasks that really gives me sweat all over my body and we have to think very deeply and we have to understand the clues.” –Michael
“It was really exciting for me because it was my first time to do the treasure hunting. It really needs to have sharp mind to discover the next clue until we discovered the final treasure which is friendship.” –Shiela
“I enjoyed this very much and I found out that friendship is the real treasure. Friendship is happiness.” –Mona
“Treasure hunting is very interesting and very exciting. According to my experience the real treasure is the friendship.” –Nhel
“It is such a great experience for me and a great opportunity to have bonding with my co-scholars I really enjoy all the activities.” –Hazel
“I found it adventurous and exciting.” –Resty
“I enjoyed the activity very much because it is my first time to do the treasure hunting and in the final task I learned that the treasure hunting was interesting.” –Rosemarie
“The whole activity was fun. It is really great to be part of this activity. I’ve learned a lot of things like patience, perseverance, cooperation and just to have fun throughout the time. Having bonding with my co-scholars always made me happy because their like a sibling to me. This activity made me realize more that friendship is the only treasure that cannot be taken by anyone from someone. I’m looking forward to have another activity like this.” –Aubrey
“It was very fun, exciting and enjoyable activity. I will treasure this experience.” -Joanne

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The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins

Posted by QuietoftheLand on August 2, 2007

In The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins, on page 86 he says one of his desert island discs is Bach’s St Matthew’s Passion, then explaining you don’t have to be a believer to enjoy such music. Bach, who is the only composer I prize above U2, would turn in his grave to think that anyone could enjoy his faith-filled music without faith or spiritual belief. He did write some non-religious music, some of very high quality (Where Sheep May Safely Graze) but signed every piece SDG which means Soli Deo Gloria, or to God alone be the glory. His most well know choral piece is his Mass in B-Minor which could easily have fallen into obscurity as it was not really written for mankind’s ears. He wrote much of it towards the end of his life but made it unacceptable to the Protestant and Catholic traditions despite being a Protestant himself, knowing that this would probably make it unperformable given the religious animosity of the times he lived in. However he wrote it as homage to the Creator who he thanked with SDG (fitting then to make it unacceptable to all religious groups). Fortunately over 100 years after Bach’s death it was finally performed in full giving many atheists a pause to contemplate such faith. What living composer would compose music not intended for human ears but just to give glory to God?

Sorry Richard Dawkins you may enjoy the notes, even the tune but the spiritual melody is too complex for you to see the Creator it was written for.

“The aim and final end of all music should be none other than the glory of God and the refreshment of the soul.” – J. S. Bach

“The music that really turns me on is either running toward God or away from God. Both recognize the pivot that God is at the centre of the jaunt.”
— Bono

“Bach almost persuades me to be a Christian.”
— Roger Fry, quoted in Virginia Woolf, Roger Fry (1940)

“Why waste money on psychotherapy when you can listen to the Mass in B-Minor?”
— Michael Torke

“A man who is eating or lying with his wife or preparing to go to sleep in humility, thankfulness and temperance, is, by Christian standards, in an infinitely higher state than one who is listening to Bach or reading Plato in a state of pride.”
–C. S. Lewis

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Kind words

Posted by QuietoftheLand on February 5, 2007

We recently had a visit from a friend of a friend and he was kind enough to Blog a bit about us:

Blair Harvey’s Blog

Please follow the link to learn more about his travels but I am including all his impressions of the Philippines here as I think his impressions are worth repeating, we are near the end. Thank you Blair for your kind words.

“Things I Learnt In The Philippines

1. ‘Good’ comes from ‘bad’.

I fell several times when descending the Taal Volcano which lies on an island an hour and a half north of Manila. It’s possible to hike up the side of this still-active volcano and stand on the top rim looking down into the bubbling lake below whilst taking in the strong smell of sulphur. The majority of the other tourists (i.e. Koreans) chose to ride little horses to the top. I didn’t want to give a little horse a big heart attack so I went up by my own steam.

The journey up was fine. The journey down – not so fine. Volcanic ash can be tricky stuff to walk upon. I unceremoniously fell on my arse several times. Still, at least I can proudly tell people that, “I fell down a volcano.”

’Good’ comes from ‘bad’.

I also fell several times when visiting the awe-inspiring Cordillera rice terraces at Benaue in the far north of the country. These 2000 year old structures were built up the sides of mountains, often at angles of 70 degrees, by the indigenous Ifuego tribes-people. Each single terrace is about seven metres tall and sometimes the surface of a rice-field on a terrace is only 10 square metres. The terraces are still in use and have been placed on UNESCO’s World Heritage List.

My guide took me on a route where I was fortunate to walk along the edges of the terraces themselves. The pathway comprised of a little stone wall about one and a half feet wide. The water-filled rice terrace lay on one side and a drop of about seven metres, to the terrace below, lay on the other. I fell off the little pathway several times. Have a wild stab in the dark as to which side I fell.

Still at least I can proudly tell people that, “I fell into a rice terrace.”

’Good’ comes from ‘bad’.

2. Going to a folk club run by a co-operative of dwarves isn’t as wacky as it sounds.

’The Hobbits House’ club in Manila sounded like a tantalising opportunity to witness/participate in some totally off-the-wall experiences. Supposedly, according to our taxi driver on the way across, the club is especially popular with British tourists.

Alas, there were no wonderfully politically incorrect activities such as dwarf-throwing contests or dwarf mud-wrestling. It was simply a large bar run very efficiently by lots of little people (can you still call them that?) And, as folk music is extremely dull, we left.

3. The Koreans are very ‘optimistic’ people.

Do you remember the Taal Volcano which I wrote about earlier? Yes that’s right, the S-T-I-L-L A-C-T-I-V-E volcano that is closely monitored by scientists 24 hours a day 7 days a week. The volcano that will definitely erupt again at some point in the future? Yes.

Well, my guide informed me that a Korean company is in the process of constructing, on the volcanic island, a five star hotel and accompanying golf course for Korean tourists.

I pointed out to my guide that this was perhaps not the wisest undertaking in the world. I could detect a slight smile cross his face as he noted that, “If the Koreans want to give us their money we will take their money.”

4. It can be confusing when you’re ‘racially profiled’ in the Philippines.

The country has its own internal problem with extreme Islamist terrorists in the southern islands. These terrorists have a track record of kidnapping and killing tourists, have carried out cowardly bomb attacks against civilians across the country, and have also unsuccessfully attempted to carry out attacks in Manila.

Therefore, in the capital, many office buildings and shopping centres are staffed by security guards who will search you and your bags. Unless, of course, you’re white, in which case you’re waved through unhindered with a smile and a friendly “Hello, Sirrrr!”

I never thought I would see the day when as a man with a Belfast accent I would be the person who would be least suspected of carrying out a terrorist attack.

5. I am extremely fortunate to be the citizen of a country with a socialised health system.

As I was being driven to the Taal Volcano (the still active volcano, with the Korean golf course, that I fell down – remember?) my driver, Melchor, pointed out the various hospitals situated on our route out from greater Manila.

“And there, Sirrrr,” he announced, “Is a good hospital.”

According to Mel, a good hospital had well trained, competent doctors and managed more often than not, to save your life if your condition was critical. Of course, this costs lots of money for the average Filipino and therefore only the well-heeled can afford to go there for treatment.

“And there, Sirrrr,“ Mel pointed out, “Is a bad hospital.”

“But why do you say it’s a bad hospital, Mel?”

“If you have little money, you go there. The doctors are not very good and, if you are very sick, you will probably die.”

When I told Mel that the vast majority of medical treatment is free in the UK for all citizens, regardless of their economic condition, he was absolutely flabbergasted. This concept of social equality and fairness was so alien and outrageous to him that I thought the poor guy was going to have a heart attack and crash the car.

I wonder which hospital we would have ended up in.

6. Everyday I despair of the advertising industry a little bit more.

In the Philippines, and other Asian countries, television and billboard adverts abound informing women that “white is beautiful” and that their husbands or boyfriends will love them more if they are “whiter.” Therefore, women can buy ‘whitening creams’ in chemists or supermarkets.

And how many billions of pounds/ euros/ dollars do women spend in the West after being manipulated by the advertising industry into believing that a tanned skin is ‘beautiful’?

7. TV in the Philippines is utterly compelling

The most popular show is called ‘Wowowee’ which from what I can gather involves some kind of wacky happy game show fronted by an incredibly happy host and hostess who interact with an incredibly happy audience who are also entertained by an incredibly happy troupe of gorgeous dancers who all wear very short skirts.

The show’s contestants all either work together at the same place or have a similar hobby. In the past, they’ve included rock stars, armed security personnel (I don’t know if they brought their guns onto the show), singing cooks and waters, farmers, gay beauty queens, street cleaners and, last but not least, people who have hurt themselves while throwing fireworks on New Years Eve.

(Incidentally, I was in Manila over NYE and watched news footage of senior police officers putting tape over the barrel ends of their sub-ordinates’ guns. Supposedly this was to discourage the trigger-happy cops from firing off celebratory rounds when the clock struck midnight…)

Anyway, back to the wonderful ‘Wowowee’…

The show also features a number of annoying yet catchy songs, the best-known of which is called ‘Boom Tarat Tarat’. Other musical gems featured in the show include ‘Puppy Mo Aka’, ‘Beep Beep Beep’ (which I’m almost certain Leonard Cohen or Nick Cave covered at some stage), ‘Wow Wow Wow’, ‘Tanga Boogie Cha Cha’, and, of course, everybody’s favourite ‘Wankata’. (Honestly, I have not made these titles up.)

Oh, and when the contestants shout answers out the girls start to dance enthusiastically to their answers.

Pure entertainment gold.

Due to the language barrier I had no absolutely idea what was happening but I happily sat and watched it for hour upon hour.

The nightly TV news always includes at least one interview with an austere-looking Roman Catholic Bishop, two interviews with high-ranking politicians vowing to stamp out corruption (good luck, lads) and several camera shots, from different angles, of a blood-splattered bullet-ridden body. (They at least obscure the victim’s face … out of respect, I would suppose.)

Another very popular form of murder in the Philippines is called ‘chop-chop’ whereby a jealous or spurned lover will render their loved one’s body into many pieces. You’ll be pleased to know that this is one crime scene than even Filipino TV doesn’t feature on the evening news.

Intriguingly enough, the weatherman on the nightly national news wears a variety of brightly coloured polo shirts and accompanying bush-hats. I’ve no idea why he wears a hat in an indoors studio, even if the forecast is for rain.

8. People the world over share the same difficulties.

I’d just finished my breakfast in a small cafe in the remote northern mountain town of Sagada when the friendly owner came over to me for a chat. He found out that I was from the British Isles and remarked that he knew the region well because of several years spent working on luxury cruise ships.

“I talked to people from many different British cities and was able to understand them,“ he proudly announced.

“People from Liverpool I could understand. People from Portsmouth I could understand. People from Belfast I could understand. But the people from Newcastle … when they spoke to me I could not understand a word that they said. Their accents…”

As he said this a pained and confused expression spread across his face.

I gently placed a comforting hand on his arm and quietly assured him that everybody else in the UK experienced exactly the same problem…

9. The vast majority of Filipinos that I met were wonderful, friendly and incredibly courteous people.

I lost count of the times I would hear on a daily basis, the phrases “Hello, Sirrrr”, “Thank you, Sirrrr” “Can I help you, Sirrrr?” “Have a good day, Sirrrr.”

Even when I told various sales people that I didn’t want to purchase any of their goods they would thank me for not buying from them!

My journeys in the wild rugged mountainous north of the country reminded me of my happy days in Laos (ah, Laos…). Not only were the landscapes very similar but the people with their friendly laid-back ways evoked memories of the Laotians.

During one particularly uncomfortable two hour journey in a jeepney (the country’s main form of public transport; an elongated jeep where passengers sit on facing benches) I had to sit with my legs crushed and knees pressed very close to my body as the vehicle was packed full of people and rice sacks; my limbs were aching and my knees throbbed. (Jeepneys aren’t particularly suited for very tall Westerners.)

Suddenly there was a puncture and I loudly thanked God at this chance to hop out and stretch my suffering legs until the repair took place.

Twenty minutes later, I re-entered the vehicle full of dread about the remainder of the journey. Instead, as soon as I sat down, all of my fellow passengers (about twelve of them) worked together to reposition the rice sacks and moved their own legs so that I could fully stretch out.

And then they fed me coconut–flavoured sticky rice.

At that precise moment my faith in human beings was rekindled.

10. Millions of children the world over have to endure a hell on Earth… and there are many good people who work to help them.

My former work colleague in Sheffield, Sarah Marsden, had undertaken voluntary work several years ago with a Manila-based charity which works with orphaned and disadvantaged children and families. She strongly urged me to pay the charity a visit when I was in the Philippines.

So Carl, my host, and I went down one morning to see the work that they do and meet the Project’s Director Craig Burrows. The ASCT (Asian Students Christian Trust) has several projects around the city. One is a school built right beside the city’s main rubbish dump Payatas where every day hundreds of people forage through the city’s trash to try and find items that they can sell in order to survive.

However, the project that Carl and I visited was their residential home, Mango Tree House, where they provide accommodation for approximately 35 children and young people, between the ages of 5 and 20, whose poor families are either unable to or unwilling to look after them. A lot of the kids have no known relative.

Many of the children who live at the project have previously had to sleep rough in one of the city’s cemeteries (yes, that’s right – a cemetery) where they also had to beg, steal, or sell themselves in order to survive.

The residential project takes kids away from this highly destructive environment and provides a home and the stability which enables all of them to attend school or college. They stay at the project until they have completed their education, or decide that they want to move on.

When I walked into the project and met Craig and some of the kids who lived there I was immediately struck by how happy the place is. You know how it is when you walk into a room and you can immediately sense the atmosphere – call it your intuition, your gut feeling, whatever. Well, these kids are some of the happiest little human beings that I’ve ever met.

Craig stressed that the project is not run as an ‘institution’. It exists to give the kids a home where they are provided with stability, security and love.

It’s an inspiring place.

The charity is funded entirely from voluntary donations and receives no financial support from any agency…

You may wish to check out their website at: http://www.asct.org.uk

Finally, a big mention for my wonderful hosts in Manila, Carl and his fiance Maricel. They put a roof over my head, often fed me (a thankless task indeed) and were great company. Good guys indeed. Thanks as well to Ian and Joann; Ian kindly provided my ride for the trip from Manila to the Taal Volcano.

Next time: Western Australia: Hanging out with The Knights of Cydonia, walking across the tops of very tall trees, and the hours of pleasure that can be had by making fun of Germans.

Take care

Blair

P.S. Live in the moment… love one another… and don’t take your life situation too seriously. It’s not permanent.”

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Posted by QuietoftheLand on December 12, 2006

Well blogs often get abandoned but please be assured I am back and will be blogging more very soon. Today is my birthday, yet funnily enough I do not feel older.

A BIG thank you and quick hello to my new friends in Cebu specially the Ambassadors from South Western University, you guys are special and I miss you all. I will return…

Check out:

Southwestern University, Cebu

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Timothy

Posted by QuietoftheLand on September 20, 2006

After talking to Timothy’s parents and with their encouragement I have decided to post Timothy’s picture. This is the first picture that I have posted and I do so to share with you all the death of a boy who should never have died. Pharmaceutical companies need to start research into Dengue Fever (Hemorrhagic fever), I first heard of it as a small boy while watching M*A*S*H in an episode where Hawkeye discovers a way to treat an untreatable disease, sadly that was fiction and this is fact. Until now this disease claims so many lives yet I only know about rumours of herbal treatments. We need to get research started and stop others from dying needlessly. As Bono said “Where you live should not decide whether you live or whether you die”.

Timothy’s family are very poor and have not yet used the internet, Timothy had the opportunity to study and use the internet thanks to KLM who donated the computers and because of one of the kindest people I have ever met Janneke. Janneke runs Stichting Kalinga, here is a link to the Kalinga website: Kalinga

Here is the KLM Wings of Support website: Wings of Support

Timothy

Timothy we miss you and your wonderful smile.

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Timothy

Posted by QuietoftheLand on September 20, 2006

Yesterday we buried Timothy. Eleven years old, seven years of which we were responsible for educating him. We played with him, disciplined him, laughed with him and cried with him.

I will never forget the look on his mothers face as the coffin closed for the last time. As I write this my emotions are all over the place but I know that if the drug companies wanted Timothy and many other children would be alive today… sadly the profits are just not enough.

“Rage against the dying of the light”
“Kick the darkness till it bleeds daylight”
“Yet we stand alone tonight”

No answers just questions and an aching Timothy shaped hole in my soul.

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Liberal Evangelicals

Posted by QuietoftheLand on September 18, 2006

The Bible is an incredible book that I read on a daily basis for inspiration and motivation. While I prefer the New Testament and particularly the teachings of Jesus the Old Testament is also worthy of great respect and being studied. However while God does not change Jesus came to “complete” the law and we are saved by God’s grace clearly demonstrated in Jesus actions. However many of us are still too legalistic and have reduced our faith to black and white fundamental truths and rules.

Someone emailed me this, it has been around for sometime but I have no idea who wrote it:

Dear Pastor,

I need some advice regarding some of the Biblical laws and how best to follow them:

1. When I burn a bull on the altar as a sacrifice, I know it creates a pleasing odour for the Lord (Lev 1.9). The problem is my neighbours. They claim the odour is not pleasing to them. Should I smite them?

2. I would like to sell my daughter into slavery, as sanctioned in Exodus 21.7. In this day and age, what do you think would be a fair price for her?

3. I know that I am not allowed contact with a woman while she is in her period of menstrual uncleanliness (Lev 15. 19-24). The problem is, how do I tell? I have tried asking, but most women take offense.

4. Lev 25.44 states that I may possess slaves, both male and female, provided they are purchased from neighbouring nations. A friend of mine claims that this applies to Indonesians, but not to those from New Zealand. Can you clarify? Why can’t I own New Zealanders?

5. I have a neighbour who insists on working on the Sabbath. Exodus 35.2 clearly states that he should be put to death. Am I morally obligated to kill him myself?

6. Lev 21.20 states that I may not approach the altar of God if I have a defect in my sight. I have to admit that I wear reading glasses. Does my vision have to be 20/20, or is there some wiggle room here?

7. Most of my male friends get their hair trimmed, including the hair around their temples. This is expressly forbidden by Lev 19.27. How should they die?

8. I know from Lev 11. 6-8 that touching the skin of a dead pig makes me unclean, but may I still play football if I wear gloves?

9. My uncle has a farm. He violates Lev 19.19 by planting two different crops in the same field, as does my auntie by wearing garments made of two different kinds of thread (cotton/polyester blend). He also tends to curse and blaspheme a lot. Is it necessary for us to go to get the whole town together to stone them? (Lev 24. 10-16). Couldn’t we just have a private family stoning?

Thank you again for reminding us that God’s Word in scripture is eternal and unchanging.

Joe Parishioner.

It might be easy for those of us who own the name of Christ to have a knee-jerk reaction against this document but I believe that it strikes to the heart of a serious problem with us Evangelicals. The problem is that some of us who go by the name of Evangelical are actually Liberal. What do I mean? Evangelicals are supposed to take the Bible literally and teach that all Scripture is God breathed, I believe it is. However we do not preach the Love of God but have preferred to set ourselves and our evangelical culture up in judgment (legalism) and thus we have taken it upon ourselves to stand in judgment of sinners. In this way we have also made the New Testament and particularly the Sermon on the Mount a legalistic document rather than a living and vibrant sermon to the lost and abused. It is time for us to get Evangelical about Gods love and passionate about the Creators grace, it is only by grace that we can own the name of Christians and God has clearly demanded that we “do not judge” yet time and time again some of us have pointed the finger outward away from the church and towards those outside the church in judgment thus alienating those for whom the church exists. We have also supported our countries to inflict violence even “in the name of God” while God has commanded us to “love our enemies”.

Time for us to repent and start preaching the full gospel. We are not called to be judgmental but to love, we are not called to convict of sin (that is God’s role) we are called to care for the lost and embrace the outcasts. We are called to preach the full Gospel.

“Love your enemy” Matthew 5:44 (Hmm now let the “Christian” nations try that in the Middle East). Jesus demonstrated that love is the most powerful weapon on the cross.

“Do not resist an evil man” Matthew 5:39 (How come Christian’s resist so hard on moral issues when they are commanded to love?)

“Do not judge” Matthew 7:1 (So many “Christians” seem to HATE homosexuals, I think that might be a little judgmental…)

I struggle with these commands myself so please do not think I am suggesting the message of Jesus the Christ is easy. As the man himself asked “When the Son of Man comes will he find faith on earth?” Luke 18:8. However I do think many of us Evangelicals who own the name of Christ have become liberal and have rejected in legalism some of the central teachings of Jesus.

Jesus came that we might have life and more abundant life! John 10:10. Time to live it.

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Timothy

Posted by QuietoftheLand on September 16, 2006

We have just been in Singapore for an excellent week of fellowship and teaching, hopefully I will have time to Blog (Blot… sorry inside joke) more about that soon.

Sadly the end of the conference was over shadowed by the death of one of our students, this is rainy season which means Dengue Fever season (Hemorrhagic Fever), and this disease kills many every year and so far is untreatable. The student was 11 years old and had studied with us for seven years, a lad who was full of life and seemed to have so much to live for. I do not want to end this with platitudes, religious or otherwise. But I would ask you to pray for the family and for the other students in the school all grieving this great loss.

What this does highlight is the massive disparity in drug companies of the allocation of Research and Development (R & D) budgets. Because of the profits, until very recently R & D went into tackling heart disease, cancer and obesity however this has been changing of late with the Gates Foundation committing funding for R & D into illnesses that are endemic in the undeveloped and developing world. This will not bring Timothy back and as I write this we are in the car on our way to see his parents. I do not have the right words to say, only the tears to blend with theirs.

Timothy we miss you.

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Bono’s Prophetic Vox

Posted by QuietoftheLand on September 12, 2006

Please check out: http://www.atu2.com

As a taster here is an article from them:

The Message Author Says U2’s Message is Refreshing, Faithful, and Honest

Eugene Peterson has never been to a U2 concert and he says he isn’t particularly interested in going to one. Once, he was invited to Chicago to spend a day with the band but because he had work to do, he declined the invitation. Peterson enjoys classical music, specifically Baroque, and the folk singers of the 20th century. “U2’s music is just not a part of my life,” Peterson admits, but when it comes to U2’s message, he’s a Bono-fide fan.

Outside the U2-fan world, Peterson is known as a retired pastor of 35 years, Professor Emeritus at Regent College, author of over thirty books written primarily for pastors and, most famously, the author of The Message. Peterson labored for a decade on his English paraphrase of the Bible to capture the earthy, dynamic language present in the original writings of Scripture. In the 1990s, he published the Psalms and Proverbs and then the New Testament. In 2002, he completed the rest of the Old Testament and the entire Message Bible was published. Then began his unlikely journey from Baroque to Bono.

To U2 fans, Peterson is known first and foremost as the guy whose Bible Bono likes. After the National Prayer Breakfast on February 2, Bono shared with reporters that he gets inspiration from reading The Message “by the very gifted scholar and poet Eugene Peterson.” During the Elevation Tour, Bono recited from The Message a portion of Psalm 116 as the introduction to “Where the Streets Have No Name.” When his father was near death, Bono said he would sit at his bedside and read aloud from Peterson’s translation. (@U2’s Angela Pancella’s reported on the U2-Peterson connection in 2002.) Bono sent Peterson a video thank-you when he finished work on the whole Bible, to share

“…my thanks, and our thanks in the band, for this remarkable work you’ve done translating the Scriptures. Really, really a remarkable work….There have been some great translations, some very literary translations, but no translation that I’ve read that speaks to me in my own language. So I want to thank you for that.”
The appreciation goes both ways, Peterson said. He’s thankful for U2’s remarkable work of spreading a message, calling people to forsake lives of selfish pursuits fueled by destructive delusions. In U2’s songs, he hears the sound of truth and love. Peterson can hear, when Bono sings, the voice of the prophet in pop culture.

In the foreword to Raewynne J. Whiteley and Beth Maynard’s, Get Up Off Your Knees, Preaching the U2 Catalog, Peterson wrote:

“Is U2 a prophetic voice? I rather think so. And many of my friends think so. If they do not explicitly proclaim the Kingdom, they certainly prepare the way for that proclamation in much the same way that John the Baptist prepared the way for the kerygma of Jesus…Amos crafted poems, Jeremiah wept sermons, Isaiah alternately rebuked and comforted, Ezekiel did street theater. U2 writes songs and goes on tour, singing them.”
I asked Peterson if he would take some time to listen to songs from U2’s recent albums, All That You Can’t Leave Behind and How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb, and then talk with me about why he thinks U2 is doing the work of a prophet. Though still hard at work at 73 — Peterson is writing a five-volume series on what he calls “theology-lived,” of which the second volume, Eat This Book: A Conversation in the Art of Spiritual Reading, was published last month — he graciously accepted my request.

I.

Would you call yourself a fan of U2?

It would be not accurate to say I’m a fan of their music; I’m a fan of them. I’ve heard about U2 from my students, actually. They are the ones who introduced me to their songs and a little bit about them. I heard my first Bono song in Munich. I was there visiting a former student and she took me and my wife into her apartment and said, “You’ve got to listen to this.” I think it was “Grace.”

What did you think of it?

I loved it. That was my first U2 song. She played it three or four times, actually, and her appreciation evoked my appreciation. I heard things that I probably wouldn’t have heard on my own. That was my first introduction.

If it’s not their music, then what do you like about U2?

I guess what really impresses me about U2 — what I like, what I respond to — is the way they have used their position in the world. They seem to me a very ingenuous group of people, without pretension or pose, who live out their convictions in a way which has nothing to do with their fame.

How so? How are they acting without regard for fame?

Well, I don’t know the world of rock and roll music at all, but songs like “Peace on Earth” and “Yahweh,” I can’t believe they could anticipate that people would like those songs. [The lyrics] are words that I use in the pulpit and classroom, not the common vocabulary of the extra-church crowd. But they are used in such a way, said and sung, so that their meaning is conveyed in a way that reveals their truth: they commune and not just communicate, they evoke a responsive intimacy that can’t be extracted from a dictionary. This is what art does, it gets beneath or within essential aspects of our lives.

Why do you call them prophets?

U2 doesn’t seem to be calculated in what they are doing. It just comes out of who they are, and maybe that’s why people respond to them, because they are so unconventional in the rock music world. And then there is the social passion they have evidenced in the African world, and the effort that they go to to speak to people of influence in order to try to convince them that pain and suffering and impoverishment are the responsibility of those who are in positions of influence and power — such people are not to just make war and do public relations and win elections and develop strategies to get people to be better consumers.

So I’ve used the word prophet for them. Walter Brueggemann describes prophets as uncredentialed spokesmen for God. Well, I think that fits them pretty well. They don’t have any authority in the world of faith.

But many people of faith respect U2. What do you mean “they have no authority”?

In the professional world of faith; in the conventional, established world of faith. They say unconventional things and use unconventional language. When the Rolling Stone interview came out (People of the Year: Bono, November 2001), one of my former students sent it to me. My friend told me I was in there someplace, so I read it through and I was hoping that when he got to me, he wouldn’t use the f-word on The Message.[Laughs.] My daughter was reading it too, and she said, “I thought they were Christians?” and I said, “Well, I think that’s the way Irish Christians talk.”

That’s funny, but you know that is a question which in one way or another has followed them their whole career: Are they capital “C” Christians or not? Do you think that’s even a valid question to ask?

No I don’t. I don’t think it is.

What is the right question to ask?

Maybe we shouldn’t even be asking prophets questions. They are asking questions of us. Maybe the question we ask should be, “Is God using these words, this stance, to say something to me, to my society, to my neighborhood?”

A prophet, almost by definition, doesn’t fit into the categories you expect, which is what gives them bite, and clarity, and the sense of grabbing us by the scruff of our neck, and saying, “Listen to this: this is truth, this is what’s going on.” The whole authority of prophets comes not from what people say about them or the credentials that they have, it’s from the truth of what they are saying. This is true of the Biblical prophets and of prophetic voices all through history. Often prophets use the name God but sometimes they don’t.

It is interesting to reflect that no Hebrew prophet ever was referred to as “messiah,” but the pagan Persian king Cyrus was. God used him in what I would refer to as a prophetic way to free the Hebrews from their exile and return them to their homeland, but Cyrus had no idea that he was issuing edicts under the sovereignty of God.

It is my job as a pastor and professor to speak the name of Jesus and proclaim the news of the gospel into whatever reality the prophets expose and call attention to. If they also do it, that’s fine, but if they don’t that doesn’t mean that they aren’t speaking/acting on God’s behalf.

Have any popular musicians acted as prophets in your life?

Probably the most pervasive one in my life is Pete Seeger. I think he’s a prophet. I very much doubt whether he would call himself a Christian, but he spoke truth and called attention to the things the Christian faith is committed to in a way that nobody else could do during his time.

What was Seeger calling your attention to?

Social justice issues, economic things, racial issues, peace….But he was doing this, and continues to do it — he’s done it all his life — not in ways that the Christian church wasn’t doing it, but he was getting the ear of people who would never go to church, and maybe of a lot of those who do go to church because they hadn’t heard it from their own pulpits. I guess that’s all I’m saying….I was a little offended, to tell you the truth, in the Christianity Today article on Bono there was an editorial and they complained that he didn’t go to church! [“Bono’s Thin Ecclesiology,” March, 2003]

Yes, I remember that piece.

And I thought, “Oh, c’mon now. That’s not what prophets do.” Sometimes they sneak in, but they get out so they won’t be recognized. I guess one of the prophetic voices that I think is very strong and has meant a lot to me is Wendell Berry. But as far as I know he doesn’t go to church either.

Do you think a prophet loses something if he or she were to become “churchified” in some way?

Yes, I think so. I guess he’d lose the edge of surprise. I’ve been a part of the institution of religion all my life and have been quite happy doing it. I felt that’s what I was called to do. But I depend for a lot of my insights and language on people who are outside the Church. That doesn’t mean they are outside of Christ, but they are outside of the conventional expectations. I need that. If I’m just around people who talk the way I do, I lose perceptive accuracy, sharpness. And I think Bono is doing that for many.

You think he’s helping people keep their perspective in focus?

Yes. To be honest with you, he doesn’t do it for me. I loved David Dark’s The Gospel According to America and I learned a lot from it, but in all his sections on music I didn’t know what he was talking about. My children love contemporary music and they could pick out the artists who were saying something that had to do with how to live our lives — I would say in Christ. They noticed it and they heard those things, then they brought my attention to it.

I noticed you were careful to say the prophet may be outside of the Church but not outside of Christ.

Right.

Can you explain how the prophet may be connected to Christ while at the same time be outside the Church?

Um…that’s a complex question!

Well, I’m interested because Christians often are trained to think that life outside of the church is a life of drifting away, of going away from Christ.

Prophets don’t have anything that Christ hasn’t given them. Some of them find a vocation that is apart from the visible Church, maybe by accident or maybe deliberately or maybe not intentionally. But they are following the Spirit in some unarticulated way.

Sometimes I think God has to find a person who isn’t carrying a lot of baggage or bad religion with them. John the Baptist, for example, where did he come from? He didn’t fit the categories of the first century. And that happens over and over and over again. Simone Weil, the French woman who sometimes called herself an atheist, was a very prophetic voice in a time when prophetic voices were very rare in France.

These people come up here and there, and also in the Church — there are plenty of strong, clear voices in the Church. But I think we are always a little surprised, those of us who make our home in the Church. We say, “Oh! Here’s somebody. I wish I had thought of that. I wish I could say it that way.” But they are getting the ear of people who wouldn’t listen to us or wouldn’t come to our churches.

Do you think U2 didn’t have any bad religion? Was that why God took notice of them?

I wouldn’t say they don’t have any “bad religion.” It’s pretty hard to get through life without picking up at least some of it. I’m a pastor and pastors learn soon enough not to have illusions about anyone, in or out of “religion.”

From what you know of U2’s background, do you see anything that would indicate they were “prophets in the making”?

No, to tell you the truth, I think they started out pretty confused and were kind of just messing around. I think they must be as surprised about this — that people like me are calling them prophets — as maybe as I am. But doesn’t that happen a lot? When we’re living with any kind of authenticity, we don’t know what we are doing until, suddenly, moments come of clarification — catalytic moments — and we see suddenly this is what I am, this is what I’m doing. But in the spiritual life, calculation doesn’t work.

Why not?

Well it’s because most of it is about the Holy Spirit, not our spirits, and we’re in on something much, much bigger than we have any idea of. If we try to contain it, or try to work with boundaries or containers that we understand, we miss 98 percent of it.

II.

What do you like about the U2 songs you’ve heard?

Bono’s a good poet. He uses words in fresh ways and juxtaposes metaphors in ways that help you see things that you hadn’t seen before. The songs all seem to be very expressive in collecting images and metaphors that are out of our lives.

Do you find them compelling or stirring songs to listen to?

I guess the thing that makes them compelling is they don’t use religious language. But you don’t listen to them for very long before you realize we’re working in the realm of God and relationships, of goodness and evil, and so suddenly he gets through our defenses and we’re listening to something that is very, very important to us but that we’ve insulated or inoculated ourselves against.

What’s in a U2 song that you think we have insulated ourselves from hearing in the day-to-day world?

I think I would say it a little differently. I think the non-church crowd, through Bono’s music, find things which they had either idealized or dismissed as unwelcome intrusions now raised to a new level in which they can be perceived as included in the operations of (what I would call) salvation: grace, peace, etc.

For example, in the song “Peace on Earth”: “Jesus sing a song you wrote, the words are sticking in my throat.” Well, I start paying attention to that. And I love this line: “But hope and history won’t rhyme.” They are saying to me that I can’t separate life into religious and secular, spiritual and ordinary: the dissonance between hope and history are the context in which we live life honestly and courageously, not by eliminating one or the other but by feeling or hearing that dissonance and living in a way that bring them into harmony.

What do you think motivates someone to sit down and write such a song, or any song? As a pastor and teacher, when someone came to you expressing what they had been thinking or feeling about God, were you able to see what was going on inside that person?

Well, yes, I think so. One of the ways we use language most accurately is when we are in some kind of broken, or uncomfortable, or confusing relationship, because the conventional words aren’t working. People often use language very colorfully and very accurately when they don’t know what they are talking about, when they are trying to tell the truth and reveal who they are. Pastors are really in a very fortunate position in that we are with people in those times a lot, and so we hear a lot of poetry from people who would be embarrassed to be called poets. I never would take notes when I was with people, but afterwards I would write down these phrases and sometimes would remind them of what they said.

Now, it seems to me that the gift of people like Bono is that they hear those phrases, or the phrases occur to them, and they can make art out of them. They can make a song and get them into our imagination and our way of life so that we start seeing what is going on around us with fresh eyes and fresh ears.

Bono’s put two things together with “Hope and history won’t rhyme” which we usually keep apart, and they start working on each other, don’t they? That’s what poets do and what musicians do and that’s why we need them. And if they come from outer space like Bono and U2, then you take notice and appreciate it and thank God.

As a Bible scholar and translator, do you think Bono has run afoul of Hebraic tradition by singing the song “Yahweh”?

The only people I think who would be offended by that are the Orthodox Jews, because they normally don’t use the name, out of reverence. But I think that now, because the word has been used much more by scholars, preachers, and others, I don’t think it’s surprising. Outside the Church it might be a surprising word because people haven’t heard it. The way he uses it is as an invocation. The genus of the name, Yahweh, is that it is not a noun, it’s a verb, and so you can’t objectify a verb and therefore you can’t make an idol out of it. It is most naturally understood in the vocative, as an address. A name is that way, as an address. The Bible has a lot of metaphors for God but Yahweh is the unique Biblical word for the Presence — the One who is present to us and we have to be present to Him. I thought the song “Yahweh” uses the word in a way that partakes of its genius, its uniqueness. It’s a personal address: “Yahweh, Yahweh.” He’s not talking about God, he’s talking to God, or calling out to God.

III.

Are you surprised by U2’s enormous success?

Yes, I am.

Why? Because of what you said earlier, about them acting with conviction and not calculation?

I don’t have a whole lot of respect for popular culture — too much of it seems to me to be reductive, escapist, and trivial. But none of those adjectives fit Bono and U2 as far as I know. And by this time, they have proven that they are not a fad — they have staying power. That surprises me, and pleases me.

I couldn’t appreciate Peter Seeger’s fame when he was at the peak of his popularity, but does U2 seem to transcend the level of fame the folk singers of your generation had?

I think they do, yes, but it’s a different world sociologically. The youth culture today is so huge and has such a mystique about it. They inhabit a common world, it seems to me: They all know the same music, they dress the same way….You, know, friends of mine, and not just young people but 40- and 50-year olds, go to U2 concerts and they talk of this as religious experiences.

You’ve heard that before? They tell you that?

I have, a lot, yeah. They say it’s like church.

What do you make of that?

I think there’s a deep commonality of spirit when people are open to the beauty and the truth and the goodness of God that communicates itself to us. And if it’s the genuine thing you can put a name to it: it’s religious, it’s spiritual, it’s God. Not everybody puts the name to it but it doesn’t mean they don’t participate in it someway or other.

Have you had religious experiences while watching the kind of shows you enjoy?

Oh yes, I’ve had it in the live theater, and we used to go regularly to concerts in Baltimore, where we lived for 30 years. I’ve seen Itzhak Perlman in concert several times. It’s an awesome thing, it really is. Yes, I’ve had that kind of experience quite a lot, but for me it’s mostly in the concert theater or live theater. Not so much with movies; I like them and appreciate them but I can’t say they’ve ever shaped my life.

When your friends describe their U2 concert experiences to you, a declared non-fan, how do they try to get it across?

[Laughing] They say, “You’d love it, you’e got to come! I’ll get you tickets.” But I live in Montana and I’m a long ways away from them…

Would you ever want to go to a concert?

I don’t know…I don’t think so. I don’t think I would.

Why not?

They sing out of and into a world that I am not immersed in. I celebrate and honor what they are doing and the way they are doing it, but I have been given a different assignment.

Have you met Bono?

No. I spoke with his chaplain once. I had a lovely conversation with him.

It’s odd, don’t you think, that a rock band has a chaplain?

Isn’t that wonderful!

He invited you to Chicago once, right, when U2 were in town?

Right, it was to come and spend a day with them. At the time, I was finishing up The Message and I was behind and trying to keep deadlines. I just didn’t see how I could do that, so I said no.

Do you recall what you spoke about with their chaplain?

Not really, I can’t remember. He just told me that he had been with them since they were young and had kind of been their pastor all of their musical lives, and he said how much he respected him.

Bono has said he often read aloud from The Message at the bedside of his dying father. You know he is really fond of your work — he’s called you a poet and a scholar, and he quoted from your translation of Psalm 116 in concert on their Elevation Tour. What does that mean to you, either when you hear that something you made is being shared in an intimate setting between two people, or being shared with 20,000 people at a rock ‘n’ roll show?

Yeah, how did I get that pulpit, huh? [Laughing.] Well, it pleases me. I was hoping when I was doing The Message that I was going to return the Bible to its basic orality, which is how it started out — as a story-like thing, with the poetry of it — which has gotten kind of smothered in a lot of academic work and in overly pious contexts. So, it pleases me immensely. I had hoped that something like that would happen and I would get it read outside of church.

I guess that thing that surprised me most is that The Message has had so much acceptance within churches. I wasn’t thinking about churches, I was thinking about people on the street. I was lucky in a way because I had a congregation of misfits — a lot of recovering drug addicts and alcoholics — they didn’t fit in church and somehow found their way into my congregation. Those are the people I was doing translation for.

So, when somebody like Bono responds and a lot of other people like him — I get a lot of letters from prison — I think, “O, thank you Lord, this is where I wanted it to get read and listened to.” And when Bono read it to his father I felt very honored to be in on that.

In 2002, Bono sent you his thanks and congratulations on the completion of The Message. If you were sending a greeting to U2, what would you say?

“Thank you for preaching to all the people who will never listen to me or read anything that I write! And for doing it with such integrity.” I think that’s what I feel, I just feel grateful to them for being obedient to the gifts that God has given them.

“Being obedient” is an unlikely compliment for a rock band. Would you say that by using their gifts, they have been obedient to God?

Well, I think I’d put it a little differently. This is true of virtually everybody: when you listen to what they’re singing and you are watching them perform, what you are seeing and hearing is the product of a long process of growth. That doesn’t just happen and you don’t make it up. You don’t say, “I’m going to be a rock star,” and then start figuring out how to do it. In fact, one of the engaging things about U2’s story is how they didn’t know what they were doing for a long time. They weren’t very good at it either, from what I read. But there’s a certain authenticity of sticking at this.

You know, none of us are very good at what we’re doing when we start out. The difference is, some of us keep doing it and finally everyone gets tired of saying “no” to you and they start listening.[Laughing.] I love to delight in finding companions who develop focus and consistency that carries through the years. It is easy to be heroic in a crisis or be a celebrity for a season. They have been in this for the long haul.

Would you expect that if U2 had not been interested in God and still wrote songs about grace, peace, or Yahweh, they would have been very different songs?

It would be interesting to have somebody study their lives and follow the spiritual development in their lives. But you just know there’s a lot of soil that has been nurtured and worked on, and other people have contributed to, and other influences of family and friends have all worked into that. But they have been the ones that have said yes. I used the word obedient, but maybe faithful is a better synonym. They stuck at it and stayed with this one thing that has become defining for their lives. I don’t know if I’m still with the thread you started out on or not….

Yes, that makes sense. You don’t just stumble upon writing lyrics like those lyrics. That’s what you’re saying, right?

Right, they come out of something lived.

Let me just throw in one more thing. When I was listening to the music you sent me, I thought that with some of the music I grew up on — Frank Sinatra, Bing Crosby, all those people — when I compare Bono and U2 — the way they’re singing and the lyrics — it seems so much more honest. All that Frank Sinatra crowd, they weren’t telling the truth, they were just spinning fantasies. There’s something very refreshing about U2. It’s honest music. There’s an honesty and that’s why I think the word prophetic is accurate for them. They are not saying things that people want to hear to make them escape from their ordinary lives. They push us back into the conditions in which we have to live.

© @U2/Calhoun, 2006.

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