The original drummer from renowned punk rock band, The Clash, has written about his spiritual reawakening in his new book.
In his autobiography, The Strange Case of Doctor Terry and Mr Chimes,
baptised Catholic Terry Chimes, who drummed on The Clash’s eponymous
debut album and toured with the band in the early 1980s, writes about
his journey back to the Catholic faith.
Chimes describes stumbling across a copy of CS Lewis’s book Mere
Christianity at a car boot sale in 1998 and reading about Lewis’s
analysis of the sin of pride.
Chimes said: “There was a chapter entitled The Great Sin. The great
sin is pride, the
tendency we all have to think we are better than
someone else. I had always known that pride existed but wondered why
it’s referred to as the great sin. That was until I realised the
significance of pride as an obstacle to spiritual growth.
“The problem with pride is that those who have the most see it the
least. CS Lewis said that if you have done some good works, read some
spiritual books, perhaps practiced meditation or given up drinking and
you take pride in that, thinking that you are more spiritual than
someone else, then Satan will rub his hands with glee, because he will
have caught you in a spiritual trap from which escape is very
difficult.”
He continued: “As I read those words I had the chilling awareness
that I have been in just such a trap for twenty years. I put the book
down and went to sit on the sofa. I was reeling from the realisation
that I’d been in a trap for all of that time. Within minutes I was
having the most extraordinary experience of my life.”
The 57-year-old goes on to describe the ‘extraordinary experience’
which followed as a presence coming through him “in strong waves.” He
said: “At that moment, everything material and concrete seemed like
nothing compared to the power and majesty of this presence. Everything
in my world seemed to be instantly shattered, leaving me feeling tiny,
naked and exposed. At the same time I felt the most extraordinarily
powerful love. This presence knew everything about me and yet still
loved me.”
He continued: “There were many tears, but also the most profound
feeling that I would always be loved until the end of time and beyond. I
also realised at that moment that my life could never be the same
again. There was the feeling that all of the hairs on my head were
standing on end and tingling, a feeling that has stayed with me on and
off ever since.
“I decided to set about rearranging all of my life’s priorities…When I
came across the following poem, by Saint Augustine, it expressed
perfectly my feelings at that time: ‘You made us for yourself and our
hearts find no peace until they rest in you. Beauty at once so ancient
and so new, late have I loved thee. You were within me, and I was in the
world outside myself. I searched for you. You were within me but I was
not with you. You called me. You cried aloud to me. You broke the
barrier of my deafness. You shone upon me.’”
After his time with The Clash, Chimes went on tour briefly with the
rock band Black Sabbath, in the late 1980s. He subsequently began to
distance himself from his rebel, rock image when he became a teetotal
vegetarian and trained as a chiropractor in 1994.
Chimes also defends the Sacrament of Confession within his book when
he describes a childhood incident in which he stole a sword from a car
breakers yard with his friend Tommy.
Chimes writes: “I went to bed that
night thinking that what I had actually done was stealing. My Catholic
upbringing told me that stealing was a sin and an offence to God. I felt
very bad about it and wasn’t sure what to do. I felt that I should give
it back, but Tommy had no such qualms of conscience.
“I was quite upset at the time and my parents asked me several times
what was wrong but I never told them. In the end I took the problem to
the priest at Confession. He told me off, made me promise not to do it
again and gave me some homework to do. After doing my homework, I felt
as if a huge weight had been lifted from my shoulders and I never wanted
to have that feeling of a bad conscience again. So despite the
criticisms you hear about a Catholic upbringing and the concept of
Confession, in my particular case, at the time, it worked well.”