"Moment of Surrender" was well received by critics after the release of
No Line on the Horizon.
David Fricke of
Rolling Stone enjoyed the song, writing, "The rising-falling effect of the harmony voices around Bono... is a perfect picture of where he really wants to be, when he gets to the line about 'vision over visibility.'"
Blender considered it the high-point of the album, comparing it to the band's 1987 single "
I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For". Reviewer Rob Sheffield complimented the melding of bass, guitar, and vocals, calling it "the kind of gimme-divinity anthem that U2 cut their teeth on, except it really does seem like they've gotten better at these songs now that they've picked up some bummed-out adult grit. Bono actually sounds scared of something in this song, and whether his nightmares are religious or sexual, the fear gives his voice some heft."
NME felt that it was the "most impressive" song on the album, describing it as a "gorgeously sparse prayer built around Adam Clayton's heartbeat bassline and Bono's rough growl", and noting that despite its seven-minute length, it did not feel too long.
Alexis Petridis of
The Guardian was more critical of the song, saying it "doesn't have enough of a tune to support the full seven-minute gospel treatment", a sentiment that
The Times agreed with.
Spin reviewed the track favourably, calling it a "celebrity-at-the-crossroads soul ballad" with an "ambient gospel sweep that's both haunted and joyful".
Mojo praised the song's musicianship, saying it was "graced by swaggering performances" and that the Edge's "languid guitar solo" was reminiscent of David Gilmour.
Q echoed these sentiments, commending Bono's soulful singing and the Edge's solo. The reviewer christened the song as "this album's '
One' or '
With or Without You', with added bonus points". The
Washington Post called the song one of the record's highlights and enjoyed the track's gospel qualities. The reviewer wrote, "The vocal harmonies on the choruses sound like something out of a church in some distant, dystopian world; the woozy, slightly detuned piano adds to that impression..."
Time gave
No Line on the Horizon a negative review, but praised "Moment of Surrender" for its "heartbreaking melody" and Bono's "Oh-oh-oh" vocals that reminded the critic of the end of "With or Without You". Bono and Daniel Lanois both cited the song as their favourite track on the album, and Brian Eno thought the band should have chosen it as the album's first single. Musician
Gavin Friday described the song as "
Al Green on Irish steroids", and
Hot Press editor
Niall Stokes called it "a
modern rock classic" that will "stand forever as one of U2's most inspirational creations". Despite not being released as a single, "Moment of Surrender" charted in two countries. In the
United States, the song appeared on the
Mediabase Triple A chart at number 45 for the week of 17 November 2009. In
Belgium, the song appeared on the
Ultratop 40 Singles Chart (Wallonia) for a week at number 35. ==Live performances==