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Bono


I’ve always been intrigued by others’ interest in Bono, both by Christians and secular acquaintances. I’m just enough older than those people to never have hitched a ride on the Bono train. My only connection to Bono is when my son says my sunglasses make me look like Bono; I’m hip enough to suspect that probably isn’t a good thing. He also says my glasses look like John Lennon - I just bought new ones because of that (I also needed new ones anyway). I digress…

One reason I never “got” Bono was that he came to be during a time when I fundamentally rejected any celebrity, acquaintance or writer who didn’t boldly profess to be a born-again Christian. Thankfully, as I have aged I have come to see that God gives gifts to all regardless of how those gifts are used and credited. There is a great value in listening to the thoughts, fears and hopes of most people as they cry out to God - knowingly or not- with their gifts. I have also learned that some people change over time and the person you foolishly or lazily reject for not being a Christian might one day sit down next to you in worship. In a recent Christianity Today article, a book, Bono: In Conversation with Michka Assayas (Riverhead Books), a French man who does not claim to be a Christian interviews Bono producing some very intriguing conversation:

Assayas: I think I am beginning to understand religion because I have started acting and thinking like a father. What do you make of that?

Bono: Yes, I think that’s normal. It’s a mind-blowing concept that the God who created the universe might be looking for company, a real relationship with people, but the thing that keeps me on my knees is the difference between Grace and Karma.

Assayas: I haven’t heard you talk about that.

Bono: I really believe we’ve moved out of the realm of Karma into one of Grace.

Assayas: Well, that doesn’t make it clearer for me.

Bono: You see, at the center of all religions is the idea of Karma. You know, what you put out comes back to you: an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, or in physics—in physical laws—every action is met by an equal or an opposite one. It’s clear to me that Karma is at the very heart of the universe. I’m absolutely sure of it. And yet, along comes this idea called Grace to upend all that “as you reap, so you will sow” stuff. Grace defies reason and logic. Love interrupts, if you like, the consequences of your actions, which in my case is very good news indeed, because I’ve done a lot of stupid stuff.

Assayas: I’d be interested to hear that.

Bono: That’s between me and God. But I’d be in big trouble if Karma was going to finally be my judge. I’d be in deep s—. It doesn’t excuse my mistakes, but I’m holding out for Grace. I’m holding out that Jesus took my sins onto the Cross, because I know who I am, and I hope I don’t have to depend on my own religiosity.

Assayas: The Son of God who takes away the sins of the world. I wish I could believe in that.

Bono: But I love the idea of the Sacrificial Lamb. I love the idea that God says: Look, you cretins, there are certain results to the way we are, to selfishness, and there’s a mortality as part of your very sinful nature, and, let’s face it, you’re not living a very good life, are you? There are consequences to actions. The point of the death of Christ is that Christ took on the sins of the world, so that what we put out did not come back to us, and that our sinful nature does not reap the obvious death. That’s the point. It should keep us humbled… . It’s not our own good works that get us through the gates of heaven.

Assayas: That’s a great idea, no denying it. Such great hope is wonderful, even though it’s close to lunacy, in my view. Christ has his rank among the world’s great thinkers. But Son of God, isn’t that farfetched?

Bono: No, it’s not farfetched to me. Look, the secular response to the Christ story always goes like this: he was a great prophet, obviously a very interesting guy, had a lot to say along the lines of other great prophets, be they Elijah, Muhammad, Buddha, or Confucius. But actually Christ doesn’t allow you that. He doesn’t let you off that hook. Christ says: No. I’m not saying I’m a teacher, don’t call me teacher. I’m not saying I’m a prophet. I’m saying: “I’m the Messiah.” I’m saying: “I am God incarnate.” And people say: No, no, please, just be a prophet. A prophet, we can take. You’re a bit eccentric. We’ve had John the Baptist eating locusts and wild honey, we can handle that. But don’t mention the “M” word! Because, you know, we’re gonna have to crucify you. And he goes: No, no. I know you’re expecting me to come back with an army, and set you free from these creeps, but actually I am the Messiah. At this point, everyone starts staring at their shoes, and says: Oh, my God, he’s gonna keep saying this. So what you’re left with is: either Christ was who He said He was—the Messiah—or a complete nutcase. I mean, we’re talking nutcase on the level of Charles Manson. This man was like some of the people we’ve been talking about earlier. This man was strapping himself to a bomb, and had “King of the Jews” on his head, and, as they were putting him up on the Cross, was going: OK, martyrdom, here we go. Bring on the pain! I can take it. I’m not joking here. The idea that the entire course of civilization for over half of the globe could have its fate changed and turned upside-down by a nutcase, for me, that’s farfetched …

I am usually intrigued by any celebrity who is able to produce complete sentences, independently, on topics of interest to me, particularly when they speak about their Christian faith, and so my interest in Bono. Many, many in the Lutheran Blogosphere comment on the evidence of Bono’s Christian faith. I have collected the posts that have caught my eye:

Burr in the Burgh:Bono, Celebrities, and Stuff of Substance

Looking Closer Journal: For those still telling me Bono isn’t a Christian…

I know many have posted on Bono. I’d like to read more commentary - please add your own link below.

Thoughts on a Soldier’s Mom

Cindy Sheehan

As we were driving north to spend a few days on a lake, I heard a live interview with Cindy Sheehan on the Jack Rice show on WCCO radio. I had read about her protest earlier in the week and had my usual kneejerk pity response to parents of dead soldiers. To listen to this mom live on the radio was painful at first, especially considering that my own very much alive teenage son was seated behind me as we drove along. I always feel a little guilty to be enjoying my own children when hearing the pain of parents who’ve lost children. Both of my teenagers, coming soon into enlistment age, were held captive to their parents’ radio choice and listened to her comments.

As Army Specialist Casey Sheehan’s mom continued, it was apparent to all of us that she had made the leap somewhere from grieving mom to vengeful citizen. Please know that I am not “pro-war”. War is horrible and it is the sometimes necessary result of living in our fallen world. She made personal attacks against our president and spoke in a way that seemed detached from reality. Did her grief drive her to that place of detachment? I don’t think so. She didn’t speak in a sad or tearful way at all. The statements she made were canned, unreasonable and irresponsible. I don’t have a transcript, but she repeated the same lines she’s been using for the past several days: the President killed my son, the troops must be ordered home right now, etc. She then switched geared to claim that the recruiter lied to her son. Even my 13 year young son commented that her argument should be with the Army recruiter and not the President. It is no wonder that the President has wisely decided not to participate in her performance. A great illustration of her current state of mind is in a recent Time Magazine online article posted on 8-14-05:

Cindy Sheehan, 48, is not a natural-born revolutionary. She speaks in a high, almost childlike voice. She says like as often as any teenager, as in, “This whole thing was like so freaking spur of the moment.” When her supporters gather to discuss strategy, Sheehan is not to be found in the circle of beach chairs; she is 50 yards up the road, doing yet another interview, hugging yet another stranger. But here she is, the mother of Casey, 24, who died in Iraq last year, and now the central character in the strange, swirling protest she initiated two miles down the road from President Bush’s ranch in Crawford, Texas.

Sheehan is unflinching about why she’s here. She says George W. Bush killed her son. She demands that U.S. troops come home now, and she insists on telling that to Bush personally. She speaks without caveat. “I’m not afraid of anything since my son was killed,” she says. But she has never been one to move quietly through life. Father Michael McFadden, a priest she once worked for, calls her “very defiant, very stubborn, very strong willed” when dealing with authority. When a soldier from the local base comes by to argue with her, she asks him to go for a walk. She puts her arm around him. Soon they are hugging. Her friends call her Attila the Honey.

Back home in California, her family is imploding under its grief. Sheehan lost her job at Napa County Health and Human Services because of all her absences, she says. Husband Pat, 52, couldn’t bear having Casey’s things at home and put most of them in storage. “We grieved in totally different ways,” Cindy says. “He wanted to grieve by distracting himself. I wanted to immerse myself.” A car tinkerer, he added two 1969 VW Bugs to his collection recently and diverted some of his sorrow into them. The couple separated in June.

Daughter Carly, 24, wrote a poem that begins, “Have you ever heard the sound of a mother screaming for her son?” Surviving son Andy, 21, supports his mother in principle but recently sent her a long e-mail imploring her “to come home because you need to support us at home,” he says. Casey’s aunt Cherie Quartarolo e-mailed a California radio station last week to rebuke Cindy, writing, “She appears to be promoting her own personal agenda at the expense of her son’s good name.” (short excerpt)

Army Specialist Casey Sheehan

Please also read Terrie Rosas’ excellent post, Forgive the Mother, But Don’t Forget the Son at EVERYONE IS ENTITLED TO MY OPINION blog She writes:

Cindy Sheehan has personalized her grief in the most politically punitive way. She is using her grief in a calculated effort to take down the Commander-in-Chief, without any apparent regard for the effects of her increasingly inflammatory rhetoric on the sons and daughters of America still serving in Iraq. During the 2004 presidential campaign, Mrs. Sheehan made a tearful anti-war commercial against President Bush. Recently she changed her version of the meeting she had with the President last year.

I have seen a mother’s grief at close range, but I cannot testify to it. I cannot and will not second-guess Cindy Sheehan’s grief, which is compounded by the sudden loss of her son at a great distance away and in a cause with which she passionately disagreed even before his tragic death. But I do not accept that every political action she consciously decides to take springs naturally and purely from her grief.

Read on…

The Sheehan family in happier times

Scottius Maximus: Star Trek Phones

Scottius Maximus responds to my Star Trek posts with a post on Star Trek Phones: Scottius Maximus: Star Trek Phones

I am feeling truly like Ohura because of my new Motorola bluetooth headset. Sometimes, I forget I have it on and people stare at my blinking blue light, but mostly I remember I have it on because it tends to give me an earache.

Intriguing tips #15 from Evangelical Outpost

Thanks to Intolerant Elle for introducing me to the Yak Shaving Razor series of tips by Joe Carter. I am simulataneously intrigued and scared to try some of these tricks and tips. The elevator hack would be useful, but I am, indeed, afraid of plunging the elevator. Joe Carter of Evangelical Outpost blog writes in his Yak Shaving Razor #15

#130 Google Hack — You can perform basic Google searches from your cell phone by sending text-message queries to 46645 (GOOGL). To search for general services in your vicinity, type a word of description followed by a period and your city/state or ZIP code (sushi.10018). To get the weather, use the same format preceded by the word “weather,” or for addresses and phone numbers, by the name of the business. You can even get driving directions by typing from followed by the ZIP code of your starting point and to followed by your destination’s ZIP code - for instance, from 10016 to 10018. You’ll receive text-message responses free of charge (depending on your carrier’s text-messaging plan) within seconds. (HT: Computer Shopper)

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#131 Microsoft HackThe Magical Jelly Bean Keyfinder is a free Windows utility that will display the CD key of your PC’s currently installed version of Microsoft Windows and Microsoft Office. If you need to reinstall the software from scratch and you’ve lost your CDs or the Windows sticker has been scratched off your computer case, you can use the Magical Jelly Bean Finder to back up your license for possible reinstallations. This utility also lets you change your Windows activation key. (HT: Lifehacker)

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#132 Elevator Hack — Although YSR Labs has not tested this hack, it is claimed that lots of elevators have an express mode that lets you override everyone else’s selections and go straight to the floor you’re going to. Simply press “Door Close” and the button for your floor at the same time. This hack should work on most Otis elevators and some older models. (Disclaimer: EO does not condone the use of unethical elevator snubbing. Also, if this hack causes the cable to snap and you plunge to your death don’t blame YSR labs.) (HT:Endgadget)

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#133 Know Your FallaciesAppeal to Authority — While sometimes it may be appropriate to cite an authority to support a point, often it is not. In particular, an appeal to authority is inappropriate if: (i) the person is not qualified to have an expert opinion on the subject, (ii) experts in the field disagree on this issue; (iii) the authority was making a joke, drunk, or otherwise not being serious. (Ex: Economist John Kenneth Galbraith argues that a tight money policy s the best cure for a recession. (Although Galbraith is an expert, not all economists agree on this point.))

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#134 PDF OrigamiYamaha has some incredible downloadable PDF patterns for making paper models of creatures and machines. You can download patterns and instructions for making realistic animals, motorcycles, or seasonal items (i.e., Jack-O-Lanterns).

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#135 HowTo — Make a better grilled cheese sandwich:

Before making a grilled cheese sandwich (or any sandwich that contains cheese), heat both pieces of bread in the pan and then assemble the sandwich with the heated sides of the bread on the inside. This ensures that the cheese will be fully melted when the sandwich is done.

(HT: Tricks of the Trade)

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#136 Creativity Techniques — Use Problem Reversal to see a situation from a different perspective:

1. Make the statement negative — For example, if you are dealing with customer service issues, list all the ways you could make customer service bad. You will be pleasantly surprised at some of the ideas you will come up with.
2. Doing what everybody else doesn’t — For example, Apple Computer did what IBM didn’t, Japan made small, fuel-efficient cars.
3. The “What-If Compass” - list pairs of opposing actions which can be applied to the problem. Just ask yourself “What if I ……..” and plug in each one of the opposites. For example: Stretch it/Shrink It; Freeze it/Melt it; Personalise it/De-personalise it
4. Change the direction or location of your perspective — Physical change of perspective, Manage by Walking around or doing something different.
5. Flip-flop results– If you want to increase sales, think about decreasing them. What would you have to do?
6. Turn defeat into victory or victory into defeat — If something turns out bad, think about the positive aspects of the situation.

(HT: Crinnology)

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#137 SoYouWannaBe a Socially Responsible Investor

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#138 Math Hack — Square 2 Digit Number: UP-DOWN Method

Square a 2 Digit Number, for this example 37:

* Look for the nearest 10 boundary

* In this case up 3 from 37 to 40.

* Since you went UP 3 to 40 go DOWN 3 from 37 to 34.

* Now mentally multiply 34×40

* The way I do it is 34×10=340;

* Double it mentally to 680

* Double it again mentally to 1360

* This 1360 is the FIRST interim answer.

* 37 is “3″ away from the 10 boundary 40.

* Square this “3″ distance from 10 boundary.

* 3×3=9 which is the SECOND interim answer.

* Add the two interim answers to get the final answer.

* Answer: 1360 + 9 = 1369

With practice this can easily be done in your head. (HT: Fantastic Math Tricks)

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#139 Writer’s Toolkit#6: Play with Words

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See also: The Yak Shaving Razor Archives

Have a useful recommendation for making life more pleasant? Send them to me at jpcarter[at]evangelicaloutpost.com.

Chicago is my kind of town…


I never liked that song, but the words are true:

Chicago is my kind of town, Chicago is my kind of town…

Soon we will head to Chicago. We have tickets to two White Sox games - Twins and Yankees - and are failing at obtaining tickets to the 8/22 Cubs v. Braves wild card game at Wrigley. We will bike along Lake Michigan, visit Navy Pier, browse the Art Institute and the Museum of Science and Industry, walk along the Magnificent Mile and go to the top of the Hancock Building. I also want to see the Wrigley Building, Marshall Fields downtown store, Millenium Park and….the list grows. I would love any tips or ideas.

Temporarily relocated to…


We have temporarily relocated to this beautiful spot in Nisswa on Gull Lake. I will check in once in a while, especially since the weather has turned cool. I tried to stay up late to watch the meteor showers, but didn’t. Hopefully tonight the heavens will continue the show. There is a huge bingo game in the lodge tonight and we are hoping to win some big money; jackpot is usually around $100, but gets split by the number of winners. Last year my nephew won $100.00 - pretty good for ten years old! We are also hoping to get a family game of Texas Hold Em going. I’d love to hear about anyone else’s vacation plans…

Dinner tonight…


I am eating at a fine downtown restaurant tonight. This is their mascot. (Nice bull…a fine specimen animal. I always wanted a good picture of a bull.) Their motto is: “Life is good at the top of the food chain. We serve only USDA-certified dry-aged, center-cut beef. No Bull. “What should I order? hmmm…

Favorite vacation tunes…

What’s your favorite tune to blast as you are packing for vacation or sailing down the freeway toward your favorite August destination? Hotwire just released a survey, Americans’ Favorite Vacation Theme Songs. Is your favorite on the list? Can you guess which one is mine?

Here’s the list:

  • Otis Redding – “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay” (26 percent)
  • Jimmy Buffett – “Margaritaville” (21 percent)
  • The Beach Boys – “Kokomo” (13 percent)
  • The Go Go’s – “Vacation” (10 percent)
  • Lenny Kravitz – “Fly Away” (10 percent)
  • Madonna – “Holiday” (8 percent)
  • Styx – “Come Sail Away” (8 percent)
  • Will Smith – “Miami” (5 percent)

We headed here very soon:

I plan to do lots of this:

Hat tip to Ian and Margery Punnett of FM107’s fabulous Balanced Breakfast radio show

To set matters straight, this is Nurse Chapel

To settle the controversy once and for all, this is Nurse Christine Chapel. She was Dr. McCoy’s nurse. Yeoman Janice Rand was NOT a nurse, but she was briefly Captain Kirk’s love interest. Note to self: read this in ten years, so you don’t mess it up again.

Hat tip to fellow trekkie-wannabe Scottius Maximus!

Scottius Maximus is not hallucinating…

Here she is! Yeoman Janice Rand. I thought she was a nurse, but she wasn’t. She was a YEOMAN, whatever that means. Her real name is Grace Lee Whitney. IMDB has a little blurb on her here. Curt Danhouser’s Guide to Star Trek also has a bio of her Star Trek persona.

Hat tip to MOB’er Tracy at Anti-Strib blog!