Faith of an Angel
Susan Boyle, the global singing sensation, spoke exclusively to Mike Conway about how important faith is in her life.
We all know that Susan Boyle has the voice of an angel but she also has the faith of an angel. She has a simple and uncomplicated faith in God.
Cardinal Keith O’Brien is a great friend of Susan Boyle. She visits him in his residence in Edinburgh where she not only enjoys his warm friendship and hospitality, but she also likes nothing more than to pray and be still in his chapel. Thankfully, the Cardinal is a good friend of Faith Today and through his kind auspices a meeting with Susan was arranged.
Susan’s rise to fame, although late in life (she was 48 when she appeared on Britain’s Got Talent in April 2009) has been meteoric. It was her mother Bridget who encouraged her to enter Britains’s Got Talent after she won several local singing competitions. Her mother wanted her to take the leap of faith to sing for an audience bigger than her parish church congregation. Susan makes no secret of the fact that her motivation to seek a musical career was to pay tribute to her mother. In fact her performance on Britian’s Got Talent was the first time she had sung in public since her mother died.
Her first album debuted as the number one best-selling album on charts around the world. Her audition video from Britain’s Got Talent that was uploaded onto YouTube has been viewed since 2009 several hundred million times. Her debut album remains the number one best selling UK album of all time. She is also the UK’s third best selling artist in America. To top it all in 2010 Time magazine voted her the seventh most influential person in the world.
Despite all her fame and fortune and global success she remains remarkably grounded and down to earth. The reason for this rootedness or ‘backbone’ as she calls it, is her faith in God. She also says that the greatest moment of her life was singing for the Pope at Bellahouston Park, Glasgow, in September 2010. More of this later.
Susan’s musical career began as a member of a choir at Our Lady of Lourdes in Blackburn. She believes, as St Augustine of Hippo said, ‘when we sing we pray twice.’ ‘I agree one hundred per cent that when we sing we pray twice. The responses we say at Mass are very important, of course, but singing and participating in singing the hymns is so important, well it is to me that is for sure.’
‘It was a once in a lifetime experience. I can’t really begin to put into words how I felt. It was very emotional. It’s not every day you meet the Pope is it? It was really quite awe inspiring. The Pope is after all the President of our faith’She has a great devotion to Our Lady and has been going to the Knock Shrine in Co Mayo, Ireland, since she was nine. ‘I was born with a slight disability (she was deprived of oxygen briefly at birth). You would never know that it was there now. I have had a lot of help over the years. When I was younger I had a lot of behavioural and emotional problems and my mother would take me on pilgrimage to the shrines at Knock and Lourdes to try and help me.’ These pilgrimages were formative and her spiritual life is very much rooted in her sense that Our Lady is very close to her. ‘I think our Lady is close to everyone not just me – she is our Mother after all. Ten years ago I had the protection of a family around me but now I feel a bit more vulnerable because people are looking to me as a kind of example. This brings its own pressures of course but for me Our Lady is my guiding light.’
Susan is an auxiliary member of the Legion of Mary. She says, ‘I am still in touch with the Legion of Mary and this played a big part in my early development. It has always meant a lot to me because it strengthens my character and helps me to help others. My faith is really the backbone of my life. If I didn’t have this backbone I wouldn’t be able to stand up properly. My faith helps me stay grounded.’
Susan’s faith is very practical. In order to better care for her mother she undertook two modules on the Higher Education Certificate in Care Course at Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh. The course consisted of eight modules over a two year period. Frank Quinn, a close personal friend, and a leader of this course said, ‘The course was unique in that it offered educational opportunities for both carers/support workers in formal setting's and informal carers caring for family members in their own homes. Susan was an informal carer in that she was assisting in the care of her own mother at that time and she was happy to undertake just two modules appropriate to the care of her mother.' Susan was very close to her mother and dedicated herself to caring for her until she died aged 91 in 2007.
Singing in front of the Pope in 2010 at Belahouston Park was, without any shadow of a doubt, one of the highlights of her life. ‘It was a once in a lifetime experience. I can’t really begin to put into words how I felt. It was very emotional. It’s not every day you meet the Pope is it? It was really quite awe inspiring.’
Susan is an auxiliary member of the Legion of Mary. She says, ‘I am still in touch with the Legion of Mary and this played a big part in my early development. It has always meant a lot to me because it strengthens my character and helps me to help others. My faith is really the backbone of my life. If I didn’t have this backbone I wouldn’t be able to stand up properly. My faith helps me stay grounded.’
Susan’s faith is very practical. In order to better care for her mother she undertook two modules on the Higher Education Certificate in Care Course at Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh. The course consisted of eight modules over a two year period. Frank Quinn, a close personal friend, and a leader of this course said, ‘The course was unique in that it offered educational opportunities for both carers/support workers in formal setting's and informal carers caring for family members in their own homes. Susan was an informal carer in that she was assisting in the care of her own mother at that time and she was happy to undertake just two modules appropriate to the care of her mother.' Susan was very close to her mother and dedicated herself to caring for her until she died aged 91 in 2007.
Singing in front of the Pope in 2010 at Belahouston Park was, without any shadow of a doubt, one of the highlights of her life. ‘It was a once in a lifetime experience. I can’t really begin to put into words how I felt. It was very emotional. It’s not every day you meet the Pope is it? It was really quite awe inspiring.’
Her first album debuted as the number one best-selling album on charts around the world. Her audition video from Britain’s Got Talent that was uploaded onto YouTube has been viewed since 2009 several hundred million timesSusan Boyle is a musical and global phenomena. Her rise to fame is a kind of modern parable – a rags to riches story, an example of raw talent triumphing over looks, appearance, education or background. One academic, quick to seize on the ‘SuBo phenomena’ wrote a paper called, ‘Susan Boyle and the Power of the Moral Imagination.’ In it he wrote, ‘Buried within the human psyche are feelings, yearnings, anxieties too deep for words. Always it is something outside ourselves that touches us, somehow, where we feel most deeply. At such moments we remember that we are humans - not merely creatures, but human beings, profoundly and deeply shaped by a moral sensibility so powerful that it breaks through our inhibitors; it can burst out, explode into public view, to our own astonishment.’ Academics and social commentators will discuss the SuBo phenomena for many a year to come. What is clear, however, is that she is a woman of a deep and simple faith and she knows in her heart that that someone watching over her throughout her life is God.
As our interview draws to a close Susan explains how like every performer she gets nervous before she goes on stage to perform. ‘Who doesn’t get nervous before they go on stage! You know if you didn’t get nervous you wouldn’t do your job properly. One of my favourite prayers is the Peace Prayer of St Francis of Assisi, “Make me a Channel of Your Peace.” It is such a nice and peaceful prayer it helps me to focus. I pray to Our Lady often and I say the Hail Mary just before I walk out onto the stage and then I leave the rest to God.’
As our interview draws to a close Susan explains how like every performer she gets nervous before she goes on stage to perform. ‘Who doesn’t get nervous before they go on stage! You know if you didn’t get nervous you wouldn’t do your job properly. One of my favourite prayers is the Peace Prayer of St Francis of Assisi, “Make me a Channel of Your Peace.” It is such a nice and peaceful prayer it helps me to focus. I pray to Our Lady often and I say the Hail Mary just before I walk out onto the stage and then I leave the rest to God.’
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