U2: Beautiful Day (theological reflections)
Beautiful Day
The heart is a bloom, shoots up through stony ground
But there's no room, no space to rent in this town
You're out of luck and the reason that you had to care,
The traffic is stuck and you're not moving anywhere.
You thought you’d found a friend
to take you out of this place
Someone you could lend a hand in return for grace
It's a beautiful day, the sky falls
And you feel like it's a beautiful day
It’s a beautiful day
Don’t let it get away
You’re on the road but you’ve got no destination
You’re in the mud, in the maze of her imagination
You love this town Even if it doesn’t ring true
You’ve been all over and it’s been all over you
It's a beautiful day Don’t let it get away
It's a beautiful day Don’t let it get away
Touch me, take me to that other place
Teach me, I know I’m not a hopeless case
See the world in green and blue
See China right in front of you
See the canyons broken by cloud
See the tuna fleets clearing the sea out
See the bedouin fires at night
See the oil fields at first light
See the bird with a leaf in her mouth
After the flood all the colours came out
It was a beautiful day A beautiful day
Don’t let it get away
Touch me, take me to that other place
Reach me, I know Iím not a hopeless case
What you don’t have you don’t need it now
What you don’t know you can feel it somehow
What you don’t have you don’t need it now
You don’t need it now, you don’t need it now
Beautiful day
As in Jeremiah 33, which we've been discussing, this song of hope and promise is set amid sorrow and shadow. For a lot of people in this Advent world of bullying and hoarding, there is "no space to rent," "no room," no more "luck."
Yet, it truly is a beautiful day. The world is far from totally dark. From Heaven, you can see green and blue, and canyons in all their beauty. The problems are there, such as tuna fleets clearing the sea out, but the world is full of ambiguity and promise.
Noah's bird bears "a leaf in her mouth" symbolizing hope after the flood. Jeremiah 33 similarly points to this hope after Jerusalem's world came crashing down in 586 BCE.
In the midst of the darkness and ambiguity we face in the here and now, we've got to keep focused and oriented on how "after the flood all the colors came out; It was a beautiful day." A shoot is pushing up through the stony ground. It is Advent, and God's messiah is on the move to usher in "that other place," viz. that righteousness within community spoken of by Jeremiah 33.
In the new Jerusalem (Jer 33:16), bullying and hoarding will vanish. People will realize that King Josiah had it right in Jer 22:15. He got along just fine, had plenty to eat and drink (NLT), and was blessed besides, because he didn't orient his life around an abundance of possessions. What he did not have, he did not need, just as U2 sings.
5 Comments:
Steve,
This is just great. I am reminded of yesterday's Christ the King Sunday, and the ways that God's reign will be something radically different than the reigns of kings in this world. "He got along just fine, had plenty to eat and drink, and was blessed besides, because he didn't orient his life around an abundance of possessions." This is a profound statement, and one that is full of the radical joy that should move us toward God's reign and free us from the chains of individualism and consumption of our lives.
I am also quite taken with your discussion of "righteousness within community" ... that is a key quality of the reign of the messiah who is on the move. The work of God is done here in the midst of community, the midst of communion - not removing our personhood in our personalities, or our own gifts, but making them whole. God is with us...Emmanuel.
Thanks for this reflection...very helpful for my mind and my soul as we move toward Advent...
Have a Beautiful Day.
Thanks so much, Peter. Yes, this idiom of "contentment" in Jer 22:15 is striking, and it resonates with Sinai-oriented theology elsewhere in Scripture. For there to be shalom on earth, each group must come to a place where they can be content with thier own simple "vines and fig trees" (mic 4.4). ---S.
You may already be aware of this, but since you didn't mention it explicitly... speaking of the 33rd chapter of Jeremiah, the cover of the CD from which the song comes was altered by the band to include a visual reference to Jer 33:3.
Thanks Beth! Yes, you can clearly see J-33-3 in the center of the left margin of the album cover. Check it out at: http://jaquetteworld.chez-alice.fr/images/cd_audio/U2_-_All_That_You_Cant_Leave_Behind-front.jpg
Note to readers: I do believe that Beth is none other than Beth Maynard, an international expert on U2 and theology. Check out her U2 blog at: http://u2sermons.blogspot.com/
Gee, I don't think I've ever been called an international expert before. ;-) Thanks for your confidence!
I had actually marked your "Streets" post from awhile back to link, and then somehow lost track of it. I think I'll do a combined post with this and that sometime this week.
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