On the Move [Bono]
On the Move by Bono ***
The content of this short book is actually a speech Bono gave at the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, D.C. in 2006. Bono makes his case for justice for Africa, outlining his own personal story, the religious motivation for giving, and what he ultimately desires out of the politicians he is addressing - a commitment to devote 1% of the fiscal budget to Africa.
The pictures in this book are beautifully provocative and captivating. The words can be so, too. But don’t be too quick to embrace Bono’s point of view. This is social gospel to the core. Bono combines tidbits from Islam, Judaism, Christianity… whatever fits the bill, really… to advocate for the poorest of the poor. And while so much of his message about poverty is true (e.g. “There’s a gigantic chasm between the scale of the emergency and the scale of the response”) the basis and the context are all wrong.
I’m still figuring out what it means to live as a privileged young American in a world that is full of suffering and poverty and need. And I can only admire Bono for his Africa advocacy. I am so thankful that light is being shed on those who need our help. And I am confident that God can and does work through all of this. I don’t even have a problem with Christians aligning themselves with the ONE campaign, because it stands for what we should be standing for - justice and generosity and love.
But that ends with doctrine and theology. I think Bono is preaching a shallow gospel, a cheap gospel, based on the pluralistic gods of this age. He is not preaching Christ crucified. He is preaching God in the slums. And while that is a valuable message, it doesn’t compare to the most explosive message of all - Christ Jesus came to this earth to save sinners, of whom I am the very worst.
Recommended age level: 13+. But I think it would be important for a younger teenager to have explained to them the ramifications and undertones of what Bono is saying.
Sub-Pages
- A Proper Pursuit [Lynn Austin]
- A Return to Modesty [Wendy Shalit]
- A Thousand Splendid Suns [Khaled Hosseini]
- After the Leaves Fall [Nicole Baart]
- Anne of the Island [L.M. Montgomery]
- Betsy and Tacy Go Downtown [Maud Hart Lovelace]
- Betsy and the Great World [Maud Hart Lovelace]
- Bird by Bird [Anne Lamott]
- Blink [Ted Dekker]
- Days and Hours [Susan Meissner]
- Doing Things Right in Matters of the Heart [John Ensor]
- Dwelling Places [Vinita Hampton Wright]
- Emily of New Moon [L.M. Montgomery]
- Every Secret Thing [Ann Tatlock]
- Farmer Boy [Laura Ingalls Wilder]
- Feeling for Bones [Bethany Pierce]
- Finding Marie [Susan Page Davis]
- Flies on the Butter [Denise Hildreth]
- Girl Talk [Carolyn Mahaney and Nicole Whitacre]
- Girls Gone Mild [Wendy Shalit]
- God’s Guidance [Elisabeth Elliot]
- Grace at Low Tide [Beth Webb Hart]
- Journey to America [Sonia Levitin]
- Middlemarch [George Eliot]
- Moon Over Tokyo [Siri L. Mitchell]
- Mudhouse Sabbath [Lauren Winner]
- My Hands Came Away Red [Lisa McKay]
- My Name Is Asher Lev [Chaim Potok]
- Off the Record [Elizabeth White]
- On the Move [Bono]
- Passion and Purity [Elisabeth Elliot]
- Persuasion [Jane Austen]
- Polishing God’s Monuments [Jim Andrews]
- Queechy [Susan Warner]
- Reading Lolita in Tehran [Azar Nafisi]
- Split Ends [Kristin Billerbeck]
- Sticks and Stones [Susan Meissner]
- Summer Snow [Nicole Baart]
- The Diary of a Young Girl [Anne Frank]
- The Garden Party and Other Stories [Katherine Mansfield]
- The Gift of Asher Lev [Chaim Potok]
- The Parting [Beverly Lewis]
- The True Woman [Susan Hunt]
- The Truth Seeker [Dee Henderson]
- The Will of Wisteria [Denise Hildreth]
- The Writing Life [Annie Dillard]
- To Kill a Mockingbird [Harper Lee]
- Why and How I Review
- Widows and Orphans [Susan Meissner]
- Winter Birds [Jamie Langston Turner]
- Written on Silk [Linda Lee Chaikin]

