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David Bowie – The Hysteria, the Sorrow, the Frustration and the Hope

This is my article on David Bowie in Christian Today   – it is slightly amended because I wanted to tidy up a couple of things.  The article came as a result of a conversation with my wife, Annabel, as she gave me a lift down to the church.  And then all these ideas just popped into my head, so I wrote them down and quite surprizingly it has gone, as they say, ‘viral’.  There are so many ‘Bowies’ out there – who need to hear the Good News!  As always comments appreciated.

Its great that The Scotsman has put much of this on their website!

And The Herald

David Bowie’s death, grief, and the frustration of a society that has nothing to offer the lonely

It was a shock. Of course it was. Make your coffee, switch on the radio and you hear Life on Mars on Radio 4. What had happened? Had Bowie died? Indeed he had. An unconventional celebrity life, with an unconventional celebrity death. In this age of social media, gossip columns and photographers desperate for that one image, it is astonishing that David Bowie had cancer for 18 months and it never once got into the media. No one – apart from close friends and family – knew. He did something really unusual for a modern celebrity. He died privately.

Bowie Bingo

 But now everyone wants to have their say. I played Twitter Bingo that morning. David Cameron – check. Nicola Sturgeon – check. Media stars – check. Church leaders – check. It wasn’t long before I had a full house. Even the Vatican got in on the act – its newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, paid tribute. “One might even say that, beyond the apparent excesses, the legacy of David Bowie… is enclosed in its own sort of personal sobriety, expressed even in the lean physique, almost threadlike.”

I’m sure that many people were genuine in their tributes and did feel a real sorrow. Others may just have been playing the game; saying something for the sake of being seen to say something and show that they ‘cared’. God alone knows. I suspect the wall-to-wall coverage combined with the political, religious and cultural leaders’ interest was largely because those who are now in charge grew up with David Bowie as part of the soundtrack of their life. And to lose that is a sorrow.

Heaven 

But what really interested and saddened me was the number of spokespeople who made comments about him being in heaven. I hadn’t realised that so many of the great and good believed in heaven – and surely they would not be lying to us? Or just using heaven as an excuse to make a corny pun about ‘starman’ now looking down on us? And that set me thinking – what do we really think about heaven? I thought that in this naturalistic, materialist world we could be all grown up and just say, “He’s gone, he had a good life, did a lot of daft things, did a lot of good things, we will miss him, but he’s gone”. I haven’t checked but I almost expected Richard Dawkins to tweet, “He’s gone. There is nothing left of him but his music and family. He’s not in heaven”. But it appears that in popular culture, we still cannot face up to the nihilist existentialism of atheistic naturalism. It seems that the Bible was right about eternity being in our hearts. “I have seen the burden God has laid on men. He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the hearts of men; yet they cannot fathom what God has done from beginning to end”(Ecclesiastes 3:10-11).

So those who were happily singing “Imagine there’s no heaven” a few months ago are now telling everyone that David Bowie is in this heaven that they imagine does not exist? And those who want to say something nice and believe that everyone goes to heaven, think that Bowie is up there along with Lemmy, Hendrix and of course Stalin, Hitler and Jack the Ripper. That is, after all, the logic of their position. And again I have not looked, but I am sure that in the bloggersphere somewhere, there are some ‘Christians’ who are taking the opportunity to tell everyone he is in hell and how as a bisexual rock star drug addict he is a warning to us all. And there will be those who are writing about how he was converted on his deathbed and they can tell this because of a) something Bowie said, b) a dream they had or c) a very reliable source, a friend of a friend, who is ‘in the know’.

Sorrow

All I can say is that I feel a real and frustrating sorrow. Let me explain. Bowie, like most human beings was a complex man, who experienced many changes in his life. For example he moved from being gay/bisexual to being heterosexual. In an interview with Tony Parsons in Arena magazine in 1993 he said, “In the States, towards the end of the Seventies, I think the gay body was pretty hostile towards me because I didn’t seem to be supporting the gay movement in any kind of way. And I was sad about that. Because I had come to the realisation that I was pretty much heterosexual”.

He cannot just be simply pigeonholed according to what we want to be true. I didn’t know David Bowie and I am in no position to pass any judgement upon him. I do think he was a musical genius and much of his music was also part of the soundtrack of my early life. But the sorrow comes from what I heard him express, and the pathetic solutions offered to him by a society that he helped create.

Believer?

Firstly, there is no doubt that he was not an atheist. He said so. In that interview with Tony Parsons he explained why he had said the Lord’s Prayer at the Freddy Mercury tribute concert. “In rock music, especially in the performance arena, there is no room for prayer, but I think that so many of the songs people write are prayers. A lot of my songs seem to be prayers for unity within myself. On a personal level, I have an undying belief in God’s existence. For me it is unquestionable.”

Incidentally, I personally found that moment of saying the Lord’s Prayer absolutely extraordinary. It was so unexpected and somewhat surreal. Did Bowie not realise it was a public ‘secular’ event? How dare he bring religion into it! Did he not care how many people he would offend? Probably not.

 

Does this mean that we can claim him as a card-carrying Christian? Not at all. As far as I know he never professed to be one. But like all intelligent and creative people, he did show a great interest in the Bible, in Jesus Christ and in the great questions that Christ is the answer to. In his 1993 Album, The Buddha of Suburbia he wrote the following lines in the song, Sex and the Church:

Though the idea of compassion
Is said to be
The union of Christ
And his bride, the Christian
It’s all very puzzling.

All the Lonely People

The most poignant moment in the Parsons interview was when Bowie explained his collapse into drugs, sex and despair by saying, “I felt totally, absolutely alone. And I probably was alone because I pretty much had abandoned God.”

And that is where the frustration part of the sorrow comes. Because Bowie himself was clearly a seeker. He recognised that the ‘hole within’ would not be filled by ‘sex and drugs and rock ‘n’roll’. He needed to know that there is “a way back to God, from the dark paths of sin, there’s a door that is open and you may go in; at Calvary’s Cross is where you begin, when you come as a sinner to Jesus”. A society that has itself abandoned God has nothing to offer the person who is lonely because they feel they have abandoned God.

I mourn for David Bowie. As I mourn for ‘all the lonely people’, whose need for fulfilment, forgiveness, faith and a future can only be met by Christ.

Bowie’s last album, Blackstar, realised this month, has a poignancy about it that is painful. Especially this from the song Lazarus:

Look up here, I’m in heaven
I’ve got scars that can’t be seen
I’ve got drama, can’t be stolen
Everybody knows me now.

Life to the Living 

Bowie is gone. I know not where. Who knows what happened in the last years, months and moments of his life? We mourn his passing. Let the dead bury their dead. Meanwhile our task is to bring Life to the living. Let us bring the Good News to those who are lonely because they feel they have abandoned God, that He has not abandoned them.

96 comments

  1. I was shocked to learn recently that even the Beach Boys dabbled in some occult stuff, transcendental meditation, etc.

    More positively, Stevie Ray Vaughan was a Christian. Christ who helped him overcome his addictions. His mother wrote a beautiful message about his faith to when he died:

    https://srvarchive.com/letter-from-martha

    1. Peter Gabriel may sometimes explore spiritual, religious, pagan amd occult themes in his music but it seems that he’s an atheist, judging from an interview he gave earlier this year.

      “Gabriel also admires Carter for his strong views on religion, although they are opposite his own. The two bonded over church music, particularly hymns. “We had a conversation once about church music,” Gabriel says. “Obviously, Carter’s [Christian] faith is a huge part of his life, and, you know, I’m not religious at all. But … church music has been and still is an influence on what I do with my music.””

      https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/peter-gabriel-jmmy-carter-elders-1234735227/

      1. Phil Collins it very surprisingly turns out, is almost as eccentric as Peter Gabriel. I don’t know if it is because of the Freemason membership other commenters have mentioned above, but he is at least a little bit interested in the occult. In the opening page of his autobiography, Collins talks about going to a clairvoyant.

        Now, in this interview, he talks about being somewhat open to the idea of reincarnation, paranormal “glowing orbs” at the Alamo site and the existence of the ghosts of soldiers who fought there:
        https://www.teemingbrain.com/2013/05/13/paranormal-orbs-and-the-dark-side-of-phil-collins/

        In the original version of the interview this eas taken from, he talks about being open to the idea of a “threesome” too, so I don’t think he is a particularly Christian man, tragically: https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/phil-collins-last-stand-why-the-troubled-pop-star-wants-to-call-it-quits-254722/

      2. Glad I found this. I was reading an article online by Jennifer Childers just the otyer day where she talks about Peter Gabriel’s songs and she notes that Genesis’ magnum opus, Supper’s Ready, is full of occult and pagan influences. After that, I was watching a series on Foxtel about the dark side of pop music the other day. When it came to discussing the occult, as well as obvious choices like Led Zeppelin and various metal bands, they put a photo of Peter Gabriel onscreen but they did not actually talk about him.

        I had no idea Phil Collins was open to such strange ideas though. His image was always that of rock’s everyman.

        I’ve read about Genesis’ third frontman, the Dumfries-born Ray Wilson. He now seems like the most normal of the group! He is on record as saying he has grown more spiritual since he turned thirty and that his newer songs apparently consistently explore these themes. He is not religious as such though. I don’t know if he actually believes in God or of he is spiritual in a more vague sense. I just pray that he continues to grow and comes to accept Christ as his Lord and Saviour one day. I also pray for the lost sheep that are Gabriel, Collins and the other members of this band. I hope the occult influence in their music has not corrupted their fans.

      3. Great discussion. I’ve learnt a lot. After all this talk about satanic rock stars though, here is something more positive from a wonderful interview with a top theologian, William Edgar.
        “WE: Jazz is a kind of music that not only has Christian roots, but carries a Christian worldview. It articulates the sense of deep misery, but also the inextinguishable joy of the Christian life. It is sad that the churches, both Black and White, have kept themselves aloof from this marvelous music, because they fear secularization. It is true that jazz is not always performed in the most holy places. But the music itself rises above the circumstances.”

  2. “The blues is stark and realistic, and it would be easy to conclude that this type of music is without hope or redemption. The realism of the blues does not stand opposed to hopefulness, but to sentimentality. The blues tells us how to live on earth in order to prepare for heaven. The Bible never pretends that evil and suffering are easy. But it gives them meaning. God’s revelation never underestimates the power and the cruelty of the trials wrought by a fallen world. But it tells us that He is in control.”
    https://glendafayemathes.com/2010/10/06/william-edgar-theologian-and-jazz-musician/

    He talks a great deal more about tye relationship between reformed theology and the arts in the rest of the interview.

  3. That is a real shame about Phil Collins. 🙁 He frequently used to perform a beautiful version of the Christian gospel song, “People Get Ready”, at his solo concerts that seemed very heartfelt. I hope he truly does have some degree of faith.

    Van Der Graaf Generator are another progressive rock band that dabbled in the occult with their lyrics by the way. 🙁

  4. Very sad about Phil Collins. When I was doing my family tree, I discovered I am distantky related to a prominent British musician and he actually performed wirh Phil Collins on an obscure project (Collins was working as a session drummer on this album.)

    Sadly, it seems like the fad for the occult in rock and roll may have started with Scotland’s own Donovan. At the very least, some people blame his song “Season of the Witch” for kindling interest in the occult among rock and roll set.

    I recently saw on Australian Story that Midnight Oil’s Peter Garrett now says he has lost his Christian faith but is “still spiritual”.

    Please also pray especially for the sweetheart of 1980s power ballads, Belinda Carlisle. I’ve been reading about her lately. She grew up a Christian but rebelled against it (a very difficult home life didn’t help). After a thirty year drug and alcohol battle, she came clean in 2005 and is now a Buddhist and yoga devotee. She even recorded an album of Punjabi Sikh yoga mantras. She is also an LGBT activist (her son is gay). Through all her struggles, her husband, Morgan Mason (actir James Mason’s son) has faithfully stuck by her side. Please pray that she, and all these rockers, will come to know the Lord and put their faith in Him and be saved.

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