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Today in History: John Lennon sparks his first major controversy

The apology Lennon offered was not for the message he was trying to convey, but for conveying it in a way that confused its meaning.

On this day in 1966, a comment made by John Lennon first appeared in the London Evening Standard, and erupted into the ‘Bigger than Jesus’ scandal that brought a semi-official end to the giddy phenomenon known as Beatlemania.

In their original context, John’s remarks were clearly meant not as a boast, but as a sardonic commentary on the waning importance of religion. “Christianity will go,” he said. “It will vanish and shrink …We’re more popular than Jesus now.” It was only one comment in an interview that covered such wide-ranging topics as gorilla suits and car phones, but it was this comment alone that made its way into the American teenybopper magazine DATEbook several months later, condensed into the straightforward statement, “We’re more popular than Jesus”.

From there, a handful of Bible Belt disc jockeys took over, declaring Lennon’s remarks blasphemous and vowing an “eternal” ban on all Beatles music, past, present and future. “Our fantastic Beatles boycott is still in effect,” announced two DJs on WACI Birmingham in August 1966. “Don’t forget to take your Beatles records and your Beatles paraphernalia to any one of our 14 pickup points in Birmingham, Alabama, and turn them in this week.”

The plan in Birmingham, as in various other cities in the South, was to burn the Beatles records turned in by angry listeners. Though it is unclear how many such events really took place, the story of the burnings definitely reached the Beatles. “When they started burning our records … that was a real shock,” said John Lennon years later. “I couldn’t go away knowing I’d created another little piece of hate in the world. So I apologised.”

At a press conference in Chicago, John explained: “I’m not anti-God, anti-Christ or anti-religion. I was not saying we are greater or better. I believe in God, but not as one thing, not as an old man in the sky. I’m sorry I said it, really. I never meant it to be a lousy anti-religious thing. From what I’ve read, or observed, Christianity just seems to be shrinking, to be losing contact”.

Information courtesy of: https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/john-lennon-sparks-his-first-major-controversy

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