Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Bono's Christmas Story

This is one of the most brilliant points in Bono's interview book, In Conversation.

I remember coming back from a very long tour. I hadn't been at home. Got home
for Christmas, very excited of being in Dublin. Dublin at Christmas is cold, but
it's lit up, it's like Carnival in the cold. On Christmas Eve, I went to St.
Patrick's Cathedral. I went to this place, sat. I was given a really bad seat,
behind one of the huge pillars. I couldn't see anything. I was sitting there,
having come back from Tokyo, or something like that. I went for the singing,
because I love choral singing. Community arts, a specialty! But I was falling
asleep, being up for a few days, traveling, because it was a bit boring, the
service, and I just started nodding off, I couldn't see a thing. Then I started
to try and keep myself awake studying what was on the page. It dawned on me for
the first time, really. It had dawned on me before, but it really sank in: the
Christmas story. The idea that God, if there is a force of Love and Logic in the
universe, that it would seek to explain itself is amazing enough. That it would
seek to explain itself and describe itself by becoming a child born in straw
poverty, in shit and straw ... a child ... I just thought "Wow!" Just the poetry
... Unknowable love, unknowable power, describes itself as the most vulnerable.
There it was. I was sitting there, and it's not that it hadn't struck me before,
but tears came down my face, and I saw the genius of this, utter genius of
picking a particular point in time and deciding to turn on this: love needs to
find form, intimacy needs to be whispered. To me, it makes sense. It's pure
logic. Essence has to manifest itself. It's inevitable. Love has to become an
action or something concrete. It would have to happen. There must be an
incarnation. Love must be made flesh.


It's Christmas time and it's time to celebrate the blessings that God has given us, the redemption that He's offered us and the example He portrayed for us. It is overwhelming, the thought that the God of creation, the One who is in and of Himself, the all powerful Being humbled Himself to the most frail and dependent of forms to start the redemption journey. This sets the tone for all of human existence. The promised Messiah has come to bring God's kingdom to earth.

Merry Christmas.

3 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

That's an awesome story. Thanks for reminding me of it.

12:59 PM  
Blogger The Barretts said...

That's very cool. It's always good to be refreshed with the reminder of God's love come to Earth. I watched the Chronicles of Narnia the other night and it reminded me of the sacrifice Christ made for me. Wow...

Merry Christmas

8:50 AM  
Blogger Kerry said...

Whattup, B-Fresh? Why don't you look and chortle at my blog, eh.

10:45 PM  

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