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HOUSES OF WORSHIP
Getting Hip
to Religion
Hip-hop
Christianity? Get used to it.
BY DAVE SHIFLETT
Friday, February 24, 2006 12:01 a.m. EST
Christianity
has an enduring message, but can you dance to
it--and should you? Apostles of the "emerging
church" movement--which includes churches where
services are conducted in hip-hop--insist that you
can and should, which is not always music to
traditionalist ears.
Hip-hop is a
long way from Martin Luther's "A Mighty Fortress Is
Our God," and that's exactly the point, according to
pastors Efrem Smith and Phil Jackson, who serve
urban communities in Minneapolis and Chicago and who
recently together wrote "The Hip-Hop Church."
Traditional fare, they say, often falls on deaf
ears, especially ears affixed to young heads, while
"holy hip-hop," such as a musical version of the
Gospel of John called "The Epic," brings the old
message to a new generation under constant secular
cultural bombardment.
Martin Luther
may be spinning in his celestial cell, yet some
suggest that these developments are a continuation
of his work. "Every 500 years the church has a giant
rummage sale," says author Phyllis Tickle, who has
been tracking the emerging church for well more than
a decade. According to Mrs. Tickle, Christianity is
in the midst of a new Reformation that will
radically remake the faith.
The new
reformers won't be nailing their theses to a
cathedral door, however. "Modernity insisted there
is strict separation between sacred and secular
space," says Mrs. Tickle, who lives in western
Tennessee. "Church was the place where you went to
engage God." No longer. "The emerging church is
dedicated to getting rid of that notion. All space
is sacred," including bars, coffee houses and parks
where the new faithful gather.
The exact
number of emergers is elusive; many attend
mainstream churches on Sunday and gather in small
groups during the week. One emergent body, the 247
Connection Church in Hickory, N.C., bills itself as
"connected, creative, fun, relevant and relational"
and suggests bringing along a laptop: "During
worship we recommend you instant message the speaker
with questions." In cyberspace, participants gather
at popular Web sites such as theooze.com and
ginkworld.net.
The lack of
sacred real estate and other formalities, including
a seminary system, keeps overhead low. It's also
very much a part of the decentralized spirit of the
movement. Nor is there apparent pulpit envy.
Evangelizing comes not so much through sermonizing
as through song, dance and visual aids--the
"cultural patois of the day," as Mrs. Tickle puts
it. Pastors Efram and Jackson agree, writing that
young people with artistic talent, "especially those
with gifts of dance, spoken word or art with the
spray can," are vital to the worship experience.
Isn't this
Religion Lite, with graffiti? Quite the opposite,
insists Mrs. Tickle. "This is religion like it
hasn't been lived in 300 years," including a renewed
interest in fasting. "They are going back to a
religion that costs them something. In many ways
they are going back to first-century Christianity."
A similar trend
is occurring elsewhere: Advocates of "emergent
Judaism" recently met with Christian evangelicals in
California to learn how to bring young Jews closer
to their religious traditions. "We've got to learn
from what our Christian colleagues are doing," Shawn
Landres of Synagogue 3000, a Jewish think tank, told
Beliefnet.com. And now Guilt & Pleasure, a new
magazine whose mission statement says that it is
"helping Jews talk more," advocates creating salons
where the magazine's articles, which include
religious topics, are discussed.
Some
traditionalists are not amused. A flashpoint of
sorts occurred last spring when Brian McLaren, the
founding pastor of Cedar Ridge Community Church near
Baltimore and a leader in the emergent movement
(which he prefers to call a "conversation"), was
disinvited by the Kentucky Baptist Convention to
speak at an evangelism conference. The organizers
concluded that passages in his "A Generous
Orthodoxy" strayed too far from historic orthodoxy.
Executive director Bill Mackey complained that "Dr.
McLaren's position diverges too greatly to be
appropriate for this conference."
R. Albert
Mohler Jr., president of the Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary, sounded a sterner note in a
widely discussed Internet commentary. Mr. McLaren,
he wrote, "embraces relativism at the cost of
clarity in matters of truth and intends to redefine
Christianity for this new age, largely in terms of
an eccentric mixture of elements he would take from
virtually every theological position and variant."
Such objections aside, the beat goes on.
Mr. Shiflett
is the author of "Exodus: Why Americans Are Fleeing
Liberal Churches for Conservative Christianity."
Sunday, June 04, 2006
- Last Updated: 9:03 AM
Hip Hop gospel
BY MICHAEL GARTLAND
The Post and Courier
The girls sit in a tight semi-circle in the fellowship hall and show
off a move called the motorcycle. They lean back
a bit, hold their hands up and roll their wrists
forward as if revving an engine. Everyone
smiles.
Krissy Grant says her peers in the church
were trying to think of something that would,
"get people in the church hype. Usually when we
sing, we're moving from side to side, and
nobody's really feeling it."
So Grant, a Burke High School freshman, and
her friends came up with a solution: the
motorcycle.
But not just that, they sing in Emmanuel
Missionary Baptist Church's traditional gospel
choir and have made it their mission to add
hip-hop elements to services. Sometimes they
rap, and their praise dancing often reflects
trends in hip-hop. They got the motorcycle move
from Yung Joc, an Atlanta rapper.
Not everyone approves.
"Do I like it? No," Krissy's mother,
Earnestine Grant says. "I'm praying they will
see this is not the way to the Lord."
Hip-hop's influence on contemporary gospel
music is widespread. And from Dallas-bred
superstar Kirk Franklin to the hip-hop seminars
put on by the Gospel Music Workshop of America,
that influence is becoming increasingly
apparent. Proponents of bringing the 30-year-old
musical genre into church services argue it's an
effective way to minister to the younger
generation, that you can't reach the youth if
their rears aren't filling pews. But the old
guard, people such as Earnestine Grant,
disagree. To them, hip-hop carries with it an
unshakable stigma of sex and violence, one that
should not be allowed into church.
Resolving this largely generational tension
is part of what Branden Sweeper tries to do as
Emmanuel's musical ministry director. Sweeper,
who's 21, wants to include as many genres in
worship as the congregation will allow, but
isn't relegating his ministry to within the
church walls. At this year's Lowcountry Gospel
Music Conference, which he directs and founded
three years ago, Sweeper will put on a workshop
on how other church leaders can incorporate
different forms of music into services. Hip-hop
is one of those.
"People my age and younger are hooked on R&B
and rap," Sweeper says. "We want to incorporate
that, the beats, the rhythms, but we want to
keep the (gospel) message."
About three years ago, Sweeper took charge of
the music program at Emmanuel and began using
genres aside from gospel. At first, older
members bristled at his additions, but some have
come around. Older members have actually begun
to enjoy the music, and realize why it's
necessary, Sweeper says.
"We need to open our eyes up to different
types of music because this is what the people
we're trying to bring in are listening to," he
says. "The music itself is not the problem ...
The beat might be from a rap song, but when you
listen to the message, it's about Christ."
Not just in church
When James Carlton Wallace first came to WXTC
Heaven 1390, holy hip-hop was not a part of the
radio station's programming. Wallace, who's 22
and also goes by the on-air name D.J. JC, says
that has changed in his four years at the
station. The last five big gospel albums at the
station have incorporated some form of hip-hop,
according to him. And, aside from the music
itself, the radio's programs (shows called Pimps
in the Pulpit, Crunk for Christ and Jammin' to
Jesus) also reflect the hip-hop aesthetic.
So does Wallace's delivery.
"Get you pumping and stomping in Jesus'
name," he calls out with a smooth baritone into
the microphone. "Don't be scared now."
He presses a button, and Zion, a Savannah
rapper, comes over the studio's speakers.
"I'm a soldier. I pledge my allegiance to
Emmanuel," says a gravelly voice that fills the
room. "We lost a generation. We're losing
another."
Wallace pushes another button and is talking
again, this time off the air.
"Holy hip-hop is not rap. It's not R&B. It's
kingdom music," he says. "They're trying to save
souls."
Audience response to hearing hip-hop on a
gospel station isn't always so forgiving,
despite artists' intentions. When Wallace gave
Kanye West's "Jesus Walks" plenty of air time
after its release, the station's phone lines lit
up. Callers told Wallace he'd go to hell for not
sticking to gospel.
But younger listeners were hooked.
About three years ago, Gerald White decided
to make good on the trend. As a youth minister
at Holy Rock Temple of God in Wando, he saw just
how much children in the church were affected by
rap music. So not only did he try to incorporate
more hip-hop into worship, he also started
promoting concerts and founded his own record
label, New Mind Records. His stable of musicians
includes Zion, the Crusaders (Myrtle Beach), and
Sincere Israel (New Jersey).
They've performed in some local churches, but
many are reluctant to open their doors. And
business for some has been relatively slow. Zion
moves on average about 1,000 units every three
months.
White understands that holy hip-hop is in its
early stages, that people often associate
Christian hip-hop with the saggy pants and
misogyny that accompany some forms of secular
hip-hop, but tries to make opponents of his
music understand where he's coming from
biblically.
"We're hanging out with sinners," he says.
"We're encouraging the kids not to be gangsters,
but to be salt and light."
White concedes that in order to save people,
one must often adopt their culture. He cites the
Apostle Paul's work in Rome and Corinth as
examples. Nowadays, he says, evangelists have to
adapt themselves to the hip-hop generation. For
White, that means dress shoes are out. Sneakers
and billowy shirts are in.
"We're to the point where we have to dress
like them and act like them to talk to them
about Jesus," he says.
Perspective
Not all church music enthusiasts describe the
introduction of hip-hop in such stark terms. Al
Hobbs is the executive vice chairman for the
Gospel Music Workshop of America and views the
emergence of hip-hop as just one aspect in a
much broader natural evolution.
He remembers the days when he was coming up
in the Baptist church, when musical instruments
started to become more and more a part of
services. The older folks frowned on it, but for
younger people in the churches, it became widely
accepted and still is. Now, heavy
instrumentation is common.
Hobbs believes the same thing will happen
with hip-hop, though he doesn't think the form
will ever replace gospel.
"I don't think it'll be the music of Sunday
worship," he says. "There are too many other
forms that put you on level with your Christian
experience emotionally."
That doesn't mean people in the workshop are
dismissing it. Hobbs describes seminars in which
gospel musicians discuss how hip-hop and other
modern forms can be integrated into traditional
and contemporary gospel. One is entitled, "Why
Holy Hip-hop?"
"Let's get a better understanding of it as a
tool to impact the culture," he says. "It is
proven that rap is the most impactful music on
young people, regardless of race, creed and
culture ... When you can use it as a tool for
evangelism, it wins."
When the Rev. Alex White Sr. founded Emmanuel
Missionary Baptist Church in 1978, hip-hop was a
communications device without much reach outside
of certain parts of New York. Busy Bee and
Grandmaster Flash may have plugged into street
lamps for electricity and bumped block parties
in the South Bronx at the time, but for
preachers such as White, church music was gospel
found in traditional hymnals. And that's what
members of his Folly Road church performed.
Hip-hop in South Carolina as a whole was
pretty much unheard of, never mind in churches.
Three years ago, 25 years after the founding of
the church, that began to change.
White, who is the uncle of Gerald White,
acknowledges there have been growing pains, but
also voiced a commitment to reaching young
people. At the same time, he says he doesn't
want to alienate the people who helped found the
church.
"We had a few of them come and express: 'I
don't think we should do that in church,' " says
the pastor, who's in his 70s. "They're getting
used to it ... It's alright to me. I have no
problem with it. I'm just thinking about getting
the young people involved."
Holy Hip Hop Catching On - June
5, 2006
It has all the markings of a traditional Sunday morning: ushers, a
sanctuary, a congregation, a minister and music. Except the
Sanctuary Covenenant Church in North Minneapolis is anything but
traditional. It is different by design.
For starters, its sanctuary is the auditorium of Patrick Henry High
school and half the congregation is under the age of thirty five.
Perhaps the biggest difference is the music.
"On my right side!" shouts Music Director Sherri Jones as a band of
musicians and half a dozen back up singers open up today's praise
and worship service. "We came to bring some praise! On my left side!
We came to bring some praise!"
The music is a mix of contemporary gospel and holy hip hop.
"I think I am a hip hop theologian," says Pastor Efrem Smith. A
former Patrick Henry boy's and girl's basketball coach, Pastor Smith
was a youth worker who believed young people needed more.
"There was a deeper pain in the soul, and that's what drove me into
the ministry," Smith says, "I felt called to the city, to the urban
ministry. The issue becomes what tools do you use to live out that
call?"
In a phrase � hip hop music.
On stage, a young man in blue jeans, white tennis shoes and a
long-sleeved white shirt dances back and forth as a the deep bass of
a hip-hop beat blares out from the speakers. He shouts into the
microphone: "Believe me God knows what you're going through! Hold on
and love the Lord for your break through! Let that go! You gotta let
that go!"
Pastor Smith is so convinced the holy and hip hop can co-exist, he
has written a book explaining why.
"The church should be front and center in the artistic expression
that influences our society." Smith says.
However, as Sanctuary Covenant's worship leader, Sherri Jones,
points out "A lot of hip hop is looked at, or looked upon, as being
negative. (When) you see a lot of rappers they talk about the bling,
and you see the dancers wearing short skirts and they've got their
skin all out � and our kids listen to that. I want to give them a
positive style of music"
While critics might argue that hip hop has no place in the church,
Pastor Smith says "I would argue that there is a place for hip hop
in the church. The only thing is our lyrics should have higher
standards and should have a deeper purpose to them."
"Lick me here, touch me there and you have those kinds of lyrics
coming from children � it begins to bother you," says local hip hop
artist Korey Dean. "Rather than just being bothered by it, God put
me in a position that I could really do something about it."
Korey Dean owns One Way Entertainment, a small Christian record
label in Minneapolis. He is a holy hip hop artist by profession. His
stage name is Xcross.
"For me everything in my life that went from bad to good happened at
the cross," he says.
Dean says that because of his own spiritual revelation, his lyrics
have gone from bad to good. He's had modest success on the gospel
charts and is featured on a new limited-release holy hip hop DVD
documentary. His lyrics are wholesome enough to be repeated by his
11-year-old son, who often travels and performs with him at gospel
festivals around the country.
"Whether it's through hip hop whether it through rhythm and praise,
whether through traditional gospel, whether it's through a
traditional Pastor preaching, souls being saved is the major key."
Back at Sanctuary Covenant, singer Sherri Jones is on stage. Eyes
closed. Microphone in hand as the band plays the introduction to a
contemporary gospel song, giving it their own hip hop feel.
"I call you holy, your name is holy. You are so holy to me. I call
you holy your name is holy. Holy you are and holy you'll be yeah,
yeah, yeah." she sings.
"It's very relevant to today's culture, but they put a God spin on
it," says Aaron Mills, a seminary student at Bethel College who
attends regularly.
"The music is tight � that's the kind of stuff I like to listen to,"
says 15-year-old Toure Montgomery, who travels all the way from
Cottage Grove to North Minneapolis every Sunday to worship here.
Sarah Scheller lives and teaches in North Minneapolis. "I think it
brings young people in who would be maybe un-churched," she says. "I
feel like there was no place for them and not voice for them and
here I feel like there is."
Sanctuary Covenant's holy hip hop approach appears to be working. In
three years the church's congregation has grown from just
twenty-five people to multi-ethnic congregation of more than 700.
"To look around the congregation on any given Sunday morning and see
the diversity," says Pastor Smith, "To see the passion, seeing
people willing to come out of their Baptist, Lutheran, Methodist,
Pentecostal conservative comfort zone and worship together, sing
together, dance together, pray together, to me that's a sign that
we're going down the right path."
(Copyright 2006 KARE. All rights reserved)
Last Updated: 6/5/2006 12:07:54 PM
----
Churches sing praises of
Holy Hip Hop
The music can help spread God's word to
youths, pastors say
The Associated Press
March 25, 2006
PORTLAND -- As he takes the stage, wearing
baggy jeans, an oversize basketball jersey and a massive gold chain,
Sahaan McKelvey could be any rapper, layin' it down for any crowd in any
of a dozen concerts happening in Portland that night. But he's not, and
they're not, and it isn't.
McKelvey is a youth pastor. His crowd is 100
teenagers, parents, grandparents and young families, and this is
RepChrist, a night of holy hip-hop at Irvington Covenant Church in
Portland.
McKelvey and his backup, a five-piece band, a
DJ and background singers, fill the church sanctuary with the
unrelenting urgency of hip-hop that has found salvation in the message
of Jesus Christ. Here's a sample:
"No condemnation, I'm free, I'm free.
"I dance and sing in liberty.
"I don't care what they say about me.
"'Cause I have a right to be free."
In a year when "It's Hard Out Here for a Pimp"
won an Oscar for best original song, most Christians wonder whether rap
and hip-hop belong in church. With its themes of sex, drugs, wealth and
violence, hip-hop seems to be the antithesis of Jesus' message. But some
ministers argue that hip-hop culture, if true to its roots, provides a
valuable outreach to young people.
An evening like RepChrist "starts where your
hearts are," said Darien West, 18, a regular at RepChrist. "It's not the
vehicle; it's the message coming out of it."
"More and more churches are opening up to
hip-hop culture," said Efrem Smith, the senior pastor of The Sanctuary
Covenant Church in Minneapolis and the co-author of "The Hip-Hop Church:
Connecting With the Movement Shaping Our Culture."
He and his co-writer, Phil Jackson, found
about 10 all-out hip-hop churches in the United States and saw the use
of hip-hop elements in a growing number of inner-city churches.
"The African-American and urban church needs
to really engage and embrace some part of hip-hop culture in order for
the church not to die," Smith said. "There is a whole generation of
people like me who grew up in hip-hop culture and, unlike me, didn't
grow up in the church at all.
"Regardless of political models that paint
culture as the enemy, pastors need to engage the culture in a loving
way, to draw people toward a positive alternative to the lives they are
leading."
The resistance to enlisting hip-hop culture to
spread the Gospel comes mainly, Smith said, from ignorance about its
roots and its popular forms.
"There is more to hip-hop than just rap,"
Smith said. "Hip-hop is about dance, art, expression, pain, love,
racism, sexism, broken families, hard times, the search for God and
overcoming."
McKelvey has hosted nine RepChrist nights in
his three years as the youth pastor at Irvington Covenant Church.
"For kids who do go to church, we empower them
that they can dress the way they dress, that church can be cool, that
you don't have to be hesitant to meet your friends there."
McKelvey is 30 and grew up in hip-hop culture.
He also grew up in the church, but by the time he hit his 20s, he had
drifted. When he returned to church, he got rid of all his secular
music.
"I threw away 300 or 400 CDs, and now I
probably have that much again," he said.
He also helped produce two CDs of Portland
artists who use rap and spoken word to talk about Jesus. He hopes to
organize a RepChrist event during the Rose Festival.
"Young people in our country now are engulfed
in hip-hop culture -- the music, the dress, everything about the way
young people live. The way that hip-hop affects them can be used for
good or bad," he said, and, yes, some mainstream hip-hop messages are
destructive.
"But we can redeem all that," he said. "It can
be a tool for God's kingdom."
--------
Holy Hip Hop hits town
by Tony Randolph,
Minnesota Public Radio
April 7, 2006
|
XROSS is a "holy" hip hop
artist who lives in the Twin Cities. (MPR Photo/Toni Randolph) |
|
Hip hop started as an alternative music in the
'70s, but it's now grown to a point where it permeates nearly every
aspect of American life. Recently, hip hop has made its way into the
black church.St. Paul, Minn. � Hip hop music is most
identifiable by its hard-thumping base lines and fast-paced rap lyrics.
But what makes Christian rap different from what you might hear on
commercial radio stations is not the music, but the message.
This is the music of Minneapolis hip hop artist
Xross (pronounced "cross"). He is one of the artists making what some
have dubbed "holy hip hop." Xross, who used to run a secular music
label, says he made the switch to religious rap after he became saved.
And he says he's just using his music to spread the word about God.
"It's a tool. When I look at different genres of
music, I look at praise and worship, that's a genre of music.
Contemporary gospel, traditional gospel, quartet, those are genres.
Those are all styles. But those are all styles geared to reach specific
people," he said.
And the specific people Xross is trying to reach
are young fans of hip hop music.
Xross recently performed at a "holy hip hop"
concert at Shiloh Temple International Ministries in north Minneapolis.
The event was the preview party for a documentary on the Christian rap
movement called "Holy Hip Hop," which features Xross. During the show
Xross performed one of his best-known tunes "Do it for Daddy."
Xross says the song was written to be played in
clubs more than churches. He says the phrase, who's your daddy has
several, sometimes sexual, connotations, and it's also catchy.
"But the question is, really, who is your daddy
when it's all said and done, ultimately. Considering the fact there's
only one God, it's Jesus Christ. That's who your daddy is. When I began
to write that song, I wrote the song because the hook was catchy. It's
'come on, dance for daddy,' that's a club joint. 'Get crunk.' Those are
club terms. And it's 'come on bounce.' But then it transitions into
;Come on pray, get saved.' It can't be no more direct than that," he
said.
Several hundred people attended the show, which
also featured spoken word artists and break dancers.
Fourteen-year-old Darin Gregory was in the
audience. He says he doesn't see much difference between hip hop and
holy hip hop music.
"It uses the same kind of element as what the
worldy hip hop is and the Christian hip hop is. Basically, I say it's
the same because it's using a different word. The worldy music is kind
of like entertainment. But the Christian music is trying to pull people
that's in bondage and in trouble closer to God," he said.
That's exactly what the Rev. Tyrone Maxwell wants
to hear. He's the youth minister at Shiloh. Maxwell says his church
regularly incorporates hip hop music into its worship because he says it
works.
"In order to reach someone, you have to be able to
communicate with them and you have to know their form or communication
in order to do so. Holy hip hop is saying that there are areas of hip
hop that's not holy, but there are areas of hip hop that are holy
because we keep that part holy," he said.
But not everyone is comfortable with having hip hop
in the church. The Rev. Belinda Green of Minneapolis is an African
Methodist Episcopal minister. She says fears that some churches may only
be using the music to build their congregations and thereby their
collection plates. And Green says she worries that the music may offer a
good time and little else.
"My premise is, if we're going to adopt all those
kinds of music, especially one that is so much a part of the culture of
today, then we need to definitely make sure that we preach Jesus first,
that those who sing it know the Lord Christ Jesus and the soul salvation
that it offers them, not the bump and the grind. That's not it, she
said.
And while Green says she'd prefer that hip hop be
left outside the church doors, she realizes she may be in the minority.
But she says if hip hop is allowed in the church, it needs boundaries.
She's not alone in that thinking.
I think there's a place for that
kind of hip hop in the church and I think there's a place
for the church in hip hop.
- Rev. Efrem Smith
|
|
The Reverend Efrem Smith is the pastor of Sanctuary
Covenant Church in Minneapolis. He holds hip hop services about six
times a year and he regularly uses hip hop -- as well as other music
genres -- as part of his ministry.
"I think hip hop should only be in the church if
its message and its lyrical content is true to scripture and has a
Biblical foundation. It has a mission that's wrapped in the principles
of Christ, which is what makes it holy. And when that happens, I'm
saying, 'why not?' I think there's a place for that kind of hip hop in
the church and I think there's a place for the church in hip hop," he
said.
And that thinking is critical says Bakari Kitwana.
He's the former editor of the hip hop magazine "Source" and he's written
several books about hip hop. Kitwana says both sides must give a little.
"Hip hop can't be brought into the church, I don't
think, exactly as it is. I think it there have to be some adjustments to
fit. And I think where it doesn't fit, young people can't be so
pig-headed to say 'this is hip hop, we're young people, you guys just
have to accept that this is how we're going to express ourselves,'" he
said.
But Kitwana says each church must decide for itself
how much hip hop is too much.
------
Holy Hip Hop
A new DVD about the holy hip hop movement is part of a
broader effort to evangelize and improve the lives of a
generation steeped in urban music.
Pamela Miller, Star Tribune
Last update: March 10, 2006 � 6:53 PM
The music is urban, urgent, loud, thumping, infectious
-- and clean. Holy Hip Hop, once considered an
oxymoron, is gaining popularity nationwide as more
Christian artists put their stamp on urban street sounds
and styles. And it's gotten a cautious welcome from many
black churches, which like churches everywhere are
looking for ways to retain and recruit young people.
Now there's a movie.
"Holy Hip Hop," a DVD directed and narrated by
Christopher (Play) Martin, a Christian hip-hopper and
half of the acting/rap duo Kid 'n Play, will be widely
available for sale and rental March 21.
The fast-paced film, packed with intense music and
spoken testimonials, features many prominent names in
holy hip hop, including two Minnesotans, rapper Xross (Korey
Dean) and spoken-word artist Mariaha Markel.
For Xross (pronounced Cross) and Markel, both 31, a
married couple from Minneapolis, holy hip hop is about
much more than music and money.
Last week they met with pastors and businesspeople at
the Church of New Life Ministries in south Minneapolis
to talk about their hope that the movie will catch the
attention of young blacks who live on the economic
margins and ignore the church.
"Jesus said to make disciples by going to places
where churches don't, and holy hip-hop is a ministry of
the street," Xross said. "As artists, we want to partner
with churches and businesses in a holistic way to get
young people off the street and into a better life."
Xross and Markel, parents of three children,
abandoned secular hip-hop a few years ago because of its
profanity and celebrations of sexism, violence and
money.
Markel, whose influences range from opera to church
house music, as well as the Harlem Renaissance poets,
said she "was inspired by secular hip-hop, but there
came a time when, as a Christian, I had to leave all
that behind."
"We want to present a positive alternative for urban
kids," said Xross. He and Markel founded Word on the
Block, a nonprofit corporation that promotes holy
hip-hop and takes its name from Matthew 22:42, in which
Jesus asks whom people think he is -- "In other words,
'What is the word on the block?'" Xross said.
The movie and the Minnesota artists' efforts to
promote holy hip-hop have the endorsement of community
leaders such as business consultant Ezell Jones and
Richard Coleman, CEO of Kingdom Oil, a Christian
community foundation.
Coleman, whose foundation works to integrate the work
of churches, schools, businesses and charities in ways
that benefit the black community, said, "The way we
relate to younger people is vitally important to them
and to us."
"Kids these days are driven by the spoken word and
art," Jones said. "Holy hip-hop is the bridge."
Bishop Richard Howell of Shiloh Temple in
Minneapolis, where a pre-release party and concert will
be held Friday, acknowledged the reservations many
traditional churchgoers have about holy hip-hop, but
added,"Jesus came to a society hung up on legalisms and
taught that the true meaning of the gospel is not in
rules, but in the heart.
"You can never compromise the message, but the
language of the streets can be turned around to serve
the gospel," Howell said.
Hip-hop ministries move beyond
the underground
Two turntables ...
and the Son of God
Hip-hop ministries
move beyond the underground
BY LISA B. DEADERICK
March 4, 2006
One day, Ben Brickhouse just sat his mom down and
read her some of his rhymes. Slowly.
"You saying all of that?" she asked him.
"Now I'll say it fast," he said, and started rapping
about the Lord.
"That's why I didn't like it. Because I couldn't
understand it."
That's OK. She didn't grow up on the sounds of
scratching and mixing, two turntables and a mic.
Most of his group did, though. Brickhouse, Angela
Smith and Aijné Williams are P.R.O.O.F., part of an
underground of holy hip-hop artists that are growing
in number across the country.
Today it's the younger sibling of the mainstream,
with a lot of quality from hot beats to tight
lyrics. Most of the DJs, rappers and producers
consider themselves ministers. They're preaching the
word of God and trying to lead people to Christ, and
do it without coming off corny. Emcees in the mid-
to late 1980s credited with starting the scene are
people like Stephen Wiley, Michael Peace and D-Boy
Rodriguez. But not a lot of people knew about them.
Christian rap got more exposure with the success of
the controversial dc Talk.
They weren't considered as authentically hip-hop as
the pioneers, said Efrem Smith, co-author of "The
Hip-Hop Church: Connecting with the Movement Shaping
Our Culture."
Still, they were able to connect with a younger
audience in a way that wasn't being done in
Christian music.
"They brought a lot of convergent styles to one
place using rap, soulful R&B and pop. They got the
industry to pay attention to that market," said
Tricia Whitehead, spokesperson for the Gospel Music
Association.
The music's popularity has grown in recent years.
Since January, about 40 percent of the albums on the
Christian R&B/Hip-hop chart were hip-hop. Black
gospel, largely hip-hop and R&B, tied for the most
popular style of gospel in 2005.
But in the beginning, holy hip-hop was treated more
like a stepchild. It was the place where weak emcees
went to practice because the perception was that it
was the minor leagues.
"If you weren't good enough to be a mainstream emcee
or get a secular record deal, then you had to become
a Christian and do Christian rap," said Smith.
That's changed.
"Production values have gotten better," said Eric
Faison, vice president of affiliate relations for
Superadio Networks. The company syndicates Club
Virtue, a gospel hip-hop radio show on STAR 94.1,
hosted by Grammy winner Tonex. "For a while it just
wouldn't hold up to what else is on the radio, and
now it does."
Members of P.R.O.O.F. admit to finding a lot of the
early stuff uninspiring. (The group's name stands
for Preaching the Reality Of Optical Faith.) In
Brickhouse's dorm room at Old Dominion University,
the trio hangs out before attending their weekly
Bible study and talks about how the rhymes weren't
that great, the beats only so-so.
"Personally, I feel like at first, there were only a
small number of people doing gospel hip-hop, so they
were all accepted," said Williams. "Now that there
are so many more people doing it, it's a higher
quality."
For Brickhouse and Angela Smith, the realization
that holy hip-hop could be done really well came
when they heard The Cross Movement, a well-known
group out of Philadelphia.
"First, I thought they were lyrically tight and
talented," said Smith. "I was like, 'Man, this is
what I wanna do.'"
All of the Christian rap he'd heard before was
corny, Brickhouse said. This wasn't. The music was
hot.
Aside from people spending more time in the lab
perfecting their craft, the emcees have been boning
up on theology, said Phil Jackson, co-author of "The
Hip-Hop Church." There are a number of them who have
degrees and who've been to seminary. It's not a
requirement, but it doesn't hurt when people are
already suspicious of whether hip-hop can be a
ministry. The lyricists who know basic theology can
say something on the mike and then break it down
after the show for the doubters.
"Cats can have mad skills and crazy production, but
that can be smoke and mirrors when it comes to being
able to be a steward of the movement of Christian
hip-hop," said Jackson.
Efrem Smith says the movement has four elements: it
represents Christ, uses elements of hip-hop culture,
deals with social justice issues and is more
concerned with people becoming Christians than with
winning awards. To make the kind of impact
mainstream has made, holy hip-hop needs more support
from churches and radio. Too many still buy into the
stereotypes of violence in hip-hop.
So what does that mean for the music? Maybe God will
keep it underground so people stay humble, Jackson
muses. Maybe with the maturity in the production,
lyrics and exposure, more people are warming up to
it. Even Brickhouse's mother will meet him halfway
-- she'll listen to gospel heavyweight Kirk
Franklin. It's a start.
Hip-hop sans the bling-bling
Hip-hop sans the bling-bling
In the Spotlight
Chris Graham
There's no bling-bling - that goes without
saying.
Also missing are lyrics demeaning women,
glorifying violence, glorifying drug use.
Hip-hop can be done without the accouterments.
The Cross Movement is living proof of that.
"You're witnessing our lives and relationships
with Jesus Christ coming out in our artistry and
writing. That's all it is. You see Christians who do
hip hop. That's all it is," said Virgil Byrd, aka
T.R.U.-L.I.F.E., a member of the Philadelphia-based
Cross Movement, which will be performing at the Word
for Life Conference being held on Saturday at
Cornerstone Church of Augusta in Fishersville.
"We don't try to put a spin on it. We don't try
to make it positive. The gospel itself, the message
and our lives makes it what it is on and off the
stage," Byrd told The Augusta Free Press.
"This is who we are. We're Christians who rap.
We're not rappers who are Christians. The difference
is, our life in Christ comes first. Our artistry is
second," Byrd said.
Christian-based hip-hop music, until now limited
to a large extent to reaching a niche market of
hip-hop fans, seems poised for a run at serious
mainstream-music-industry attention.
"Christian hip-hop is something that I think is
about to take the world by storm," said Omar Blair,
a member of the Lynchburg-based hip-hop group
Representative, which is opening for The Cross
Movement at Saturday's event in Fishersville.
"If you notice in the secular industry right now,
you have a lot of lyricists talking about Jesus
Christ. There's Kanye West doing the 'Jesus Walks'
song. I really think as of right now that Christian
hip-hop is about to take the world by storm," said
Blair, a Waynesboro native and student at Liberty
University.
Byrd agrees that Christian hip-hop is bound to
see its influence in mainstream-music circles grow.
"The growth of the industry has been
unbelievable," Byrd said. "It has a similar story to
hip-hop, in that it started as an obscure genre that
wasn't even recognized by the mainstream really at
all. And what ended up happening, just like with hip
hop itself, as it began to grow, and the artistry
began to grow, in terms of people recognizing, hey,
this can be legitimate. The music is legitimate. The
artistry is legitimate. And it seems like some of
these guys are legitimate in terms of their topic,
because it never stops, it just keeps coming."
But - and this is probably inevitable when you're
talking about a social and cultural phenomenon that
is on the verge of gaining more attention from the
world at large - there is a downside to growth.
"I see a lot of zeal, and I see a lot of people
who want to make CDs really, really bad. But it's
not always balanced out with a balanced Christian
perspective," Byrd said.
"The world view may be skewed. The idea that as
long as I can do Christian hip hop, then I'm OK as a
Christian, I think, lingers in the minds of some.
Even if it's not a forthright though, it's at least
something of a subconscious thought," Byrd said.
"I've been doing this for a very long time, and I've
seen a lot of guys with a passion to make the
artistry work. And the hip hop work itself. But I
don't see the same passion for learning and the
promotion of the gospel."
Blair, whose group is close to reaching a deal
with a Christian hip-hop recording label - another
sign of the industry's growth, that it has its own
record labels, and that they are seeing success -
said it is possible to "walk with Christ and have
fun doing what you love to do."
"A lot of people question us if we're going to be
able to handle crossing over and going mainstream,"
Blair told the AFP. "I mean, we live in the
world daily, so what is it going to be to enter into
that industry?
"Being a positive role model is your daily walk,"
Blair said. "Christ is shining through us, and you
can't serve two masters. Either you're serving Him,
or you're not. So you can't be wanting to live the
way of the secular industry and then try to serve
Christ, because it's not going to happen. Either
you're all for Him, or you're not all for Him."
SATURDAY NIGHT GATHERING CAPTURES
TEEN TALENT, EMOTIONS
SATURDAY NIGHT GATHERING CAPTURES TEEN TALENT,
EMOTIONS
Every other Saturday " night, St. Stephen
Lutheran Church in Decatur, Ga., follows a
successful recipe for evangelizing young people:
Play the music they already listen to and add the
"good news."
While many churches struggle to attract young
people to worship, St. Stephen's leaders jumped
(literally) into holy hip-hop about three years ago.
In an area of metro Atlanta that has long been
multicultural and now is predominantly African
American, St. Stephen departed from traditional
outreach methods with ease, says church council
member Andre Joseph.
A native New Yorker, Joseph is one of the major
supporters of Holdin' Down Da Spot, a name chosen
for the concert atmosphere that combines hip-hop,
urban gospel, poetry and spoken word into a
spiritual experience for "people who are
uncomfortable in a traditional worship setting,"
Joseph says.
Ramon Montgomery, better known as Ray-Ski, hosts
the bimonthly event in the nave at St. Stephen. He
explains that Holdin' Down Da Spot translates into
"a place to hold down your faith, to speak it out,
to renew your spirit." It's a spot to interact with
other young people who are excited about Jesus
Christ, he adds, "and the adults who care about
them."
James Capers, interim pastor, continues to support
the ministry started by Cliff Bahlinger, who now
serves St. Luke Lutheran Church, Cordova, Ternn.
Bahlinger says the idea of using hip-hop music
originally came from Alcuin Johnson, a St. Stephen
member who saw a similar ministry in another city,
"where the young people were lined up to get in. ...
None of us had ever heard of something that would
bring them in like that.
Church Needs to Embrace Hip-Hop
Authors: Church Needs to Embrace Hip-Hop
By Stan Friedman
CHICAGO, IL (March 7) - Two Evangelical Covenant
Church pastors say the church must "sit at the well"
with hip-hop culture if it is to continue to reach
out.
Efrem Smith (top photo) and Phil Jackson (lower
photo) recently published The Hip-Hop Church:
Connecting With the Movement Shaping Our Culture.
They learned during the 2005 Midwinter Pastors
Conference that their book was nearing sales of
4,000 and a second printing of 2,000 additional
copies was scheduled. The book has drawn national
media attention, including the Wall Street
Journal.
Jackson, 42, and Smith, 36, grew up with hip-hop and
speak as insiders. Jackson is pastor of The House
Covenant Church in Chicago, a mostly youth and young
adult hip-hop church. The church has received
national attention, including a segment on the PBS
program Religion & Ethics.
Smith is the pastor of Sanctuary Covenant Church
in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and is the urban ministry
director of Minnesota Fellowship of Christian
Athletes. His previously authored Raising Up
Young Heroes.
"The youth and young adults living in hip-hop
culture are the modern day Samaritans," Smith says.
In their book, the authors draw upon the story of
Jesus' conversations with the woman at the well and
note how he even sought her out.
Too often the church wants to live safely within
its own walls, but Jesus routinely traveled through
cultures that others avoided and engaged people of
those cultures, the two pastors observe. Noting that
Jesus first asked the woman at the well for water,
the authors write in their book, "To begin an
authentic dialogue, the church must ask for a drink
from hip-hop culture. Approaching hip-hop from a
position of judgment will not lead to real
dialogue."
Jackson and Smith also point to the Apostle Paul,
who familiarized himself with the culture of his
time so that he could cross boundaries to speak in
Athens.
Many people think rap is the same as hip-hop, the
authors say, but rap is only a part of hip-hop,
which is a culture unto itself. Hip-hop is a way of
dressing, a way of talking, relating, doing business
and even viewing the world through postmodern eyes,
the authors say. It is a culture that is open to
spiritual discussions.
Smith and Jackson believe they understand why
church members are wary of the hip-hop culture,
especially if they think it is only what they see in
many of the rap videos, which often degrade women
and glorify illicit sex, materialism and drug use.
"People get the wrong idea about the hip-hop culture
or rap if their only contact is through some of the
rap music and behavior of the artists," says Smith.
"It's like rejecting rock if their first
introduction was Marilyn Manson, but they didn't
know Bono.
"Hip-hop culture is like any other culture,"
Smith continues. "There is good and bad, the
beautiful and the ugly, the evil and the divine."
Hip-hop is important to certain segments of the
population, especially African-Americans because,
"Nobody else is validating people's experiences,"
Jackson says. The music industry is the only
industry where blacks consistently can rise to the
top, he adds.
Hip-hop comprises a number of elements, including
the emcee/rapper, the deejay, visual artist and the
break dancer. Many elements of the black church are
found in hip-hop, Smith notes.
The emcee or rapper is akin to the preacher, and
the deejay - the one who spins the records - is the
worship leader, Smith says. The work of the visual
artist parallels the stained glass windows in
churches, while the break dancer is in keeping with
praise dance.
Even the call and response of rap draws from the
black church. " 'Wave your hands into the air like
you just can't stop' is like 'Can I get a witness,'
" Smith says.
Although Jackson and Smith are hesitant to
separate secular from sacred, they do say there are
differences between hip-hop and "holy hip-hop."
Hip-hop artists can function as reporters, but are
not prophetic because they don't have godly
solutions to offer, Smith says.
The church can and should be the place where
"holy hip-hop" is birthed, supporting young artists
and recognizing the best parts of the culture. More
than simply commentating, "holy hip-hoppers" can be
prophetic, speaking biblically to a culture, Jackson
says.
Breakdown FM: Holy Hip Hop is in the House-An
Interview w/ Play of Kid-N-Play
'HOLY HIP HOP' ROCKS
posted on Sun, Feb. 26, 2006
MIRAMAR | HYPEFEST II
'HOLY HIP HOP' ROCKS
THE MUSIC IS THE MESSAGE AND THE MESSAGE IS
ABOUT RESISTING THE NEGATIVE AND PRAISING GOD
Special to The Miami Herald
BY EILEEN SOLER
Hip-hop music takes on messages of faith, love
and positive peer pressure at monthly concerts for
teens and children at the Christian Worship Outreach
Center in Miramar.
''We want kids to have an alternative. It's holy
hip-hop,'' said the Rev Nickey Lewin, pastor of the
6-year-old church.
About 150 kids from kindergarten to college age
were in the audience Feb. 18 for Hypefest II, the
second in a series of free concerts and
prayer-filled Friday nights at the church.
The nearly five-hour event featuring 14 Christian
hip-hop and rap acts was organized by Mareeta
McIntyre of Miami and headlined by Grammy Award and
Stellar Award nominee Canton Jones.
Miramar organizers presented Jones with a
proclamation prepared by Miramar Mayor Lori Moseley,
who praised the star's appearance by naming that day
Canton Jones Day in Miramar.
But Jones, who performed for free, was there to
respond to a higher calling.
''I'm up here praising God. Now, are you going to
sit and spectate or get your praise on?'' Jones
asked the crowd before jumping into a fever-hot
performance that shook the sanctuary.
McIntyre, who started Eagle Care Productions in
1999, said up to 30 acts can perform at events
called ''holy hip-hop jams,'' which aim to bring
Christian messages to the streets using modern music
genres.
''But it's more than music. We're about guns and
drug resistance, HIV/AIDS education and putting a
stop to negative peer pressure,'' McIntyre said.
Hypefest concerts, which are free every fourth
Friday of the month at the Miramar Parkway worship
center, give local kids a chance to hang out, dance
in clean liturgical style and rock out for Jesus.
Joshua White, 24, owner of Christ Center Records
in Liberty City, said the shows give Christian rap
and hip-hop performers a chance to be heard.
''We give everyone another environment to show
faith, but the importance is on the message, not the
music. Go to any secular concert and the music is
about the beat. In Gospel, it's about the word,''
White said.
About a dozen teens from the dance group Mix
Mov'z, made up of Miramar and North Miami-Dade
residents, exhibited just what White explained.
Dressed in the latest hip-hop fashions, they moved
on the dance floor like star performers. But instead
of using the provocative gyrations often seen on
MTV, they swayed in ballet- and jazz-inspired moves
and raised their hands in praise.
''Just because we're Christians doesn't mean we
can't dance. We're just crunk for Jesus,'' said
Aiz'sha Hanna, 16, of Miramar.
Hip-hop churches carry message of
redemption to urban youth
Hip-hop churches carry message of redemption to
urban youth
By Ken Camp
Published April 25,
2005
HOUSTON (ABP) -- The in-your-face attitude,
emblazoned on black T-shirts, is unmistakable:
"Jesus is Lord. Satan is a punk. Pick a side."
Street Life, a Christian outreach to young
people in Houston's urban hip-hop culture,
offers a distinctive blend of student ministry,
evangelism, church-planting and discipleship.
The hip-hop approach operates on two fronts.
Hard-edged, streetwise entertainment with a
distinctively redemptive message draws
non-Christian young people. Then small groups
offer them a place to experience community,
encounter the gospel message and develop into
disciples.
Since January, Union Baptist Association of
Houston has helped start eight Street Life
"squads" or cell-group churches -- four in homes
and others on the Texas Southern University
campus, on a high-school campus, at a day-care
center and within a church's youth ministry.
Several established congregations have worked
with the local African-American pastors'
fellowship and the Baptist General Convention of
Texas to help launch the ministry.
Bertha Vaughns, Baptist Student Ministry
director at Texas Southern University, sees the
students with whom she works as "an oppressed
generation," shaped by "broken homes, broken
relationships [and] broken promises." She says
the hip-hop approach to sharing the gospel can
be "the deliverer" this generation needs.
Street Life churches use rap music, soulful
rhythm and blues, stand-up comedy and dramatic
films to package the gospel in a way an urban
generation raised on the streets will receive,
said Shawn Scoggins, a hip-hop church planter.
"We want to give it to them in a way they've
never seen it," he said.
In part, that is accomplished through
relationships built in small groups where
non-Christians can talk frankly to mature
Christians about issues that matter to them.
"They need to see Jesus walking among them,"
Scoggins said.
But first, Christians have to establish a
rapport with them by approaching them on common
ground, he stressed. Just as Jesus ministered
among prostitutes, tax-gatherers, lepers and
other outcasts, urban missionaries must meet
people where they are, in the hip-hop culture.
"We have to be where the sinner is -- in
music, movies and media," he said.
Pointing out that some urban children start
picking up "gangsta" slang and attitudes as
early as kindergarten, Scoggins envisions
high-school youth in hip-hop churches mentoring
middle-school students, who in turn influence
younger children. "It can start in a dorm room.
It can start with a prayer group. It doesn't
have to have a building or require a lot of
money."
While Scoggins provides leadership for the
discipleship side of the ministry, Terrance Levi
provides the entertainment tools for outreach --
what he calls "redemptive entertainment." "I
have a passion to help sinners come to know the
Lord and to understand the Bible is a manual for
players," Levi said. "It's not just a book for
grandmas."
Levi speaks the hip-hop language and
understands urban culture intimately. "The Lord
delivered me out of a life of organized crime
nine and a half years ago," he testified. "And I
used to own a record company that made
cuss-you-out rap records."
After his conversion, he turned his attention
to Christian entertainment but concluded: "A lot
of it didn't relate to the unchurched. People
want to be entertained, and if it's not
entertaining, they won't pay any attention to
it."
Now Levi uses his professional expertise as a
record producer and media entrepreneur to create
Christian entertainment he believes will appeal
to young people on the streets. Through his
company, Street Life Worldwide Entertainment
Group, he and collaborator Rob Phat wrote and
produced a motion picture, Pain.
With financial assistance from the BGCT, he
also is producing short morality plays on DVD.
The "mini-movies" are designed for Christians to
give to their unchurched friends to view.
A recent "gathering of the players" at Texas
Southern University brought together leaders
from hip-hop churches around Houston for a
celebration worship service, and it offered an
outreach opportunity to students.
As minister to students on campus, Vaughns
sees tremendous potential for the hip-hop
church, which she views as a revolutionary
movement of the Holy Spirit.
"I feel like God pole-vaulted me into this
situation, and I've plummeted into something a
lot bigger than me," she said. "The Lord can use
this hip-hop approach to redeem a generation.
... I don't believe this is going to fizzle out
-- not be just a fad. I think it will bring
about social change."
-- Photo available from Associated Baptist
Press
BAY AREA
Churches try holy hip-hop
Ministries take to genre to attract more young
people
Jason B.
Johnson - San Francisco Chronicle
Tuesday, January 31, 2006
The emcee urges
the frenzied crowd to wave hands in the air
while a DJ mixes songs on the turntables and
young people jump up and down and sway beneath
the whirling strobe lights.
But this is not
a rap concert at the Oakland Arena or some show
at a local nightclub. It's church.
DJ Born Again
has the crowd rocking at Changed Life Church in
Pittsburg on a recent Friday night, where young
worshipers wear casual outfits and baggy pants
in place of dress suits and skirts.
Changed Life is
one of about six churches in the Bay Area -- and
about 2,000 nationwide -- that lace their youth
ministries with holy hip-hop to attract new,
young believers.
"Youngsters have
to have something done in a way they can
understand," said DJ Born Again, whose real name
is Ramon Jackson. "I deliver the message, but I
still keep it raw."
The gospel rap
movement, which features Christianity instead of
profanity, dates to the early 1990s in cities
like New York and Washington, D.C., but it has
begun to catch on in the Bay Area only recently.
"Gospel hip-hop
has been around as long as regular hip-hop -- it
just didn't get much acceptance or attention,"
said Curtis Germany, publisher of U-Zone, an
Oakland urban gospel trade magazine.
Germany says San
Francisco and other parts of the Bay Area were
slow to adopt rap in church. "Now doors have
been opening, and a lot of people are waking up
to it."
The movement has
struggled against the negative image many
Christians associate with hip-hop, particularly
the violent, profanity-laden gangsta rap that
dominates the genre.
At Church of
Jesus Our Lord in Oakland, Pastor Phillip
Tindsley said his first foray into gospel rap
services about five years ago got an
unenthusiastic response from his congregation.
Today, the church has a large number of young
worshipers, several of them aspiring gospel
rappers, and plans to open a music studio this
month.
"People were
kind of resistant at first because of
tradition," said Tindsley. "It's grown on them.
People realized we could use it to reach young
people, and we have reached a lot of young
people."
Gospel rap has
drawn in young people who didn't come to church
before, and some of them have also brought their
parents into the church, Tindsley said.
"The need is
great," he said. "We got young men and women on
the streets selling their bodies, selling drugs,
and they're all interested in rap. But they tend
to be interested in the negative rap."
The recent
Friday night service at Changed Life Church drew
a crowd of about 40 youths of various ages and
ethnicities. DJ Born Again played loud,
base-heavy tracks while the faithful formed long
dance lines or broke into small groups.
"My dad was
surprised when I started coming," said Emily
Thornton, 14, of Antioch, who began attending
Changed Life's hip-hop services last month with
her older brother. "I think he was thinking 'why
would you want to come to church when you could
be at home doing something else?' "
The service
included a dance-off where challengers showcased
their best break and krunk-style moves and the
"Faith Factor" finals, in which contestants ate
a mixture of liver, clams, chili sauce and
mustard. Then, youth minister Kirk Waller
delivered a sermon on the biblical figure David,
a teenager who rose to become king of Israel.
At Jubilee
Christian Center in San Jose, rap acts regularly
perform and talk to the church's approximately
500-member youth ministry, which meets on
Wednesdays and Sundays.
"Sometimes, I
might throw a short little rap in a song in (the
main service)," said Jubilee music minister
Brian Waller. "I remember the first time I did.
It blew some people away, and it turned some
people off."
Tommy Kyllonen,
32, pastor of Crossover Community Church in
Tampa, Fla., and rap artist known as Urban D,
estimates about 2,000 churches nationwide use
rap as part of their youth ministries.
Kyllonen hosts
an annual gathering called FlavorFest that last
year drew 250 church leaders from across the
country and says only about 25 churches across
the country feature hip-hop prominently.
"It's only a
small segment of churches that are starting to
use it as a mainstay in their programs, targeted
to adults," said Kyllonen, whose 400-member
church has graffiti on its walls. Christian
hip-hop's popularity is spreading in church and
on the street, with popular acts garnering
100,000-plus album sales, according to Christian
music industry observers.
Jay
Swartzendruber, editor of Nashville's
Contemporary Christian Music magazine, said some
popular Christian rap acts are being played on
BET and MTV2.
In December,
when Grammy nominations were announced, for the
first time ever, three Christian hip-hop records
were nominated. But since there's no Christian
hip-hop category, the acts were placed into the
Best Rock Gospel Album category.
Swartzendruber
said hip-hop is also becoming a regular presence
on Christian radio music charts.
"Christian
radio, that's pretty conservative music
targeting a white audience," said
Swartzendruber. "So that's just another sign of
its growing popularity."
In the Bay Area,
one group uses gospel rap on the streets to
reach out to drug dealers and gangbangers.
Turf Ministries
holds stage shows on the back of a truck on some
of the toughest street corners in San Francisco,
Oakland and Richmond to reach at-risk youth who
would never think of setting foot in a church.
For some young
people, like Andrew Allen, 17, and Dominique
Brown, 17, both of Oakland, gospel rap provides
an alternative to mainstream rap, which they say
concentrates too much on guns and drugs.
"I talk to
people on the Internet in, like, gospel chat
rooms. There's a whole lotta people who are
really into it," said Brown.
Allen said that
gospel rap music has improved. "Now that it's
getting bigger, it sounds better," said Allen.
"The musical content and the lyrics are better."
Allen and Brown
themselves have formed a rap duo called D.A.
Sciples, and perform in front of the Church of
Jesus Our Lord congregation.
They hope their
music is embraced outside the church, too. Some
of their peers who still prefer traditional
hip-hop are skeptical.
"They look at
it, and they're kinda shocked," said Allen.
"You catch a
little heat for it," Brown added with a smile.
A Grammy Awards Faux Pas?
A
Grammy Awards Faux Pas?
1/28/2006
11:45:58 PM
Jay
Swartzendruber
If you're a fan of either Christian hip-hop or rock & roll, then
there's a good chance this year's Grammy nominations
left you a bit befuddled. Personally, I'm a fan of
both, so for me, the nominations were...a double
whammy. Before I explain, please allow me to offer
some personal background for perspective's sake.
From the late nineties until the fall of 2003, I
worked for Squint Entertainment and (then) Gotee
Records--two labels whose artist rosters included
faith-based hip-hop acts. While at Squint, I had the
privilege of doing P.R. for Southern Cal. hip-hop
collective L.A. Symphony, and during my Gotee years,
I represented GRITS, John Reuben, DJ Maj, Verbs and
Mars Ill. Christian hip-hop had come a long way
since the days of my youth when I enjoyed the raps
of mid-'80s pioneer Michael Peace. L.A. Symphony,
GRITS and others have even been enjoying exposure on
general market radio, in major mainstream
publications and on television networks such as MTV2
and BET.
Faith-based hip-hop's profile remains on the rise
with artists receiving unprecedented Christian pop
radio airplay (specifically at the CHR format) and
now a surge of Grammy nominations. Seeing three
Christian hip-hop acts receive Grammy nominations
would normally put me in quite the festive mood.
Just one problem: They weren't nominated in a
hip-hop or even urban music category. In light of
this, I felt compelled to write an editorial for the
February issue of CCM. And with the Grammy Awards
just over a week away, I'd like to share it with you
here...
THE CONVOLUTION OF HIPROCKSOUL?
Is your favorite hip-hop artist currently
nominated for a GRAMMY in a Rock category? If you're
a fan of Christian hip-hop, then there's a good
chance the answer to that question is, "Yes." As a
matter of fact, this year there are more hip-hop
artists nominated in the "Best Rock Gospel Album"
category than actual rock artists! Consider the
nominees:
GRITS--Dichotomy B (Gotee)
The Cross Movement--Higher Definition (Cross
Movement)
Fresh I.E.--Truth is Fallin' in Tha Streetz
(SOAR/Red Sea)
Audio Adrenaline--Until My Heart Caves In
(ForeFront)
Day of Fire--Day of Fire (Essential)
Perhaps NARAS (National Academy of Recording Arts
& Sciences) created the "Rock Gospel" category as a
catch all for both rock and urban gospel? Think
again. There are also GRAMMY Awards given out for
the best "Pop/Contemporary Gospel," "Contemporary
Soul Gospel," "Traditional Soul Gospel," "Gospel
Choir or Chorus" and "Southern, Country or Bluegrass
Gospel" albums.
This isn't the first time a hip-hop act has been
nominated in the "Rock Gospel" category, but this
moves things beyond a "rare peculiarity." And with
rock & roll experiencing unprecedented popularity in
the Christian music world, this miscue's timing
couldn't be more ironic.
While CCM Magazine celebrates the increasing
profile of faith-based hip-hop, we feel it's
important that the genre be honored for the great
art form it is. So our hat is off to GRITS, The
Cross Movement and Fresh I.E. for their recent
GRAMMY nominations, but we think they deserve
better...as do the three rock artists whose albums
were prohibited by non-rock albums. And though many
might argue the obvious fix is to start honoring
hip-hop in the "Contemporary Soul Gospel" field
(along with the likes of Mary Mary and J Moss), we
believe hip-hop more than deserves its own category.
This year's GRAMMY Awards take place on
Wednesday, Feb. 8 and will be broadcast live on CBS
beginning at 8 p.m. (ET/PT).
Young Artists Making Holy Hip Hop
Young Artists Making Holy Hip Hop
(CBS 5) ALAMEDA Hip hop and rap
music are not always known for their
family-friendly lyrics. But some rappers in the
East Bay are throwing down tracks with a very
different message.
Does it have the "street cred" to be popular
with young hipsters? Manuel Ramos reports.
Popular hip hop looks like it's made by sinners.
So, Chosen Vessels Christian Church is luring in
teens on Friday nights with religious rap, where
young people can get down with God instead of
gangstas.
The rappers here brag they have never been in
jail. They say it's the same sound. Just a
different message.
"I don't talk about a girl being naked or
nothing like that," said Gospel rapper Young
Brett. "I talk about the positive things. You
can still be rich. You could still do a lot of
things by serving Jesus."
No mention of Eminem. No gold teeth, says the
minister, just Gospel.
"You don't gotta just rhyme about gang
violence," said Minister Jamari Bates. "You can
rap about positive things, explore their minds
about positive things, and that's what we're
trying to do."
But will kids who love Snoop give him up for cut
that sounds like a sermon?
"When you think of hip hop, you think of
Ludacris and Beyonce, and stuff like that," said
Sasha Cooper. "But, when you say church music,
you say, 'uhh, what am I listening to?' "
Cooper and the other kids were willing to give
it a try, since, in some of their homes, they
can't listen to the usual hip hop.
"Sometimes they're bad. Sometimes they good,"
said James Coleman. "It's what kids our age
like, but sometimes they get carried away."
The church is calling it cutting-edge, trying to
combine the good word with a good beat.
And they're calling it holy hip hop.
(© MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc.
All Rights Reserved.)
Friends & Neighbors: Holy hip-hop
catching on
Posted on Tue, Jan. 31, 2006
Friends & Neighbors: Holy hip-hop catching on
By Kara Andrade
STAFF WRITER - Contra Costa Times
THE PLACE IS more like a concert hall than a
church on a Friday night. Outside Chosen Vessels
Christian Church, more than 250 people packed the
pews and poured out onto Haight Avenue from the hall
where people danced to the live freestyle rap of
Young Brett.
Toddlers grabbed their parents' legs with one
hand and bounced to the rhythm; people rattled
tambourines or clapped to the rhythm "holy hip-hop."
"We're not knocking the traditional form of
worship, but we want to come up with a 2006 spiel
and praise the Lord in our way," said youth minister
Lonnell Harrell, 29, who suggested holy hip-hop
Fridays.
Holding the mic close to his face and wearing his
black track suit and white sneakers, Berkeley-born
performer Brett Moye, AKA Young Brett, had the
crowd, mostly people under 30, hanging on every
verse.
He raps: "All things work together for the good
of those who love the Lord/Yes you have a
purpose/Sometimes you have to look deep beneath the
surface/Keep moving/God has a plan for you/Ya'll
better learn how to keep the faith for things ain't
always going to go your way.
... 24 years on this earth/the devil's been
trying to kill me every since I was birthed/but I
refuse to leave in a hearse/at least not yet because
God's not done with me yet."
Loud applause follows Brett, who released his
first album in May 2001 and which, according to his
Web site, has sold close to 1,000 copies.
"I feel God has a big purpose for my life, that's
why he didn't let me die that day. I believe his
purpose for me is to reach out to the world with
this gospel rap, and that's what I'm going to do,"
writes Brett on his Web site. He writes of his heart
stopping for 45 minutes and being pronounced dead
when he was baby.
Harrell who has been working diligently to
recruit local talent said: "It's important that (the
church) create a different environment that young
people are not used to. They've got all this hip-hop
on television and they don't know that there's
another avenue for them. If you give them a chance
to listen to gospel through rap then they might
listen to it and feel it more."
Brett is one of many holy hip-hop performers in a
genre of music that has become increasingly popular
since its introduction five years ago. This year's
Holy Hip Hop and Artist Showcase and Music Awards
held in Atlanta in January was one of the largest
events, with visitors representing more than 130
cities and 30 states and more than 100 ministers,
disc jockeys and breakers for two days of non-stop
holy hip-hop," states the Web site.
Chosen, a singer with the Cross Carriers rap
group from Marin City that also performed Friday,
said holy hip-hop has become more popular because
the talent is better and it is evolving into a
legitimate art form. But one main obstacle still
remains.
"We're fighting tradition. People are still
saying this is not gospel and it is not holy," said
Chosen, 24. He said they often get criticized for
performing with their jeans and baseball jerseys and
dressing the way they usually do.
"Out biggest success is still that we get to
evangelize," said producer Cyple, 29. "We just want
to win souls and help people grow with Christ."
Hip-hop is just one way black churches are trying
to keep new members and recruit new ones.
Pamela Miller, a staff writer for the Star
Tribune, writes that the Rev. Richard Coleman, a
Baptist minister who is an officer of Kingdom Oil, a
Christian community foundation in Minneapolis, said
that one of the greatest tools that black churches
can use to attract young people is a paid youth
minister. For reasons both historic and economic,
she writes, youth ministers are not common in the
black church.
Another tool, according to Harrell, is spoken
word, dance, drama and other forms of music. This is
why the evening's line-up included comedian Mother
Onion, dancers, such as Performing Arts Dance,
instrumentalists, choirs such as the Life
Transformation Choir, poetry and prayer.
"Holy dance is another venue for young people to
express themselves and to not just dance, but to
inspire others," said Mario Howard, artistic
director of Antioch Church's ACE dancers who range
from 5 to 17 years old and who also performed that
evening.
Harrell, who's a drummer, said they've had more
people requesting hip-hop Fridays every week, but
for now they're only doing the fourth Friday of each
month. He hopes that as the numbers grow, they'll be
able to move to a bigger building, have more
performers and make the hip-hop Fridays a weekly
event.
"Rapping or performing for God sends the message
that it's not about the money the way it is on
television. It shows you have character," Harrell
said.
Faith - Believe in the beat
Faith - Believe in the beat
By Andrea Useem
Special to The Examiner
Published: Thursday, October 27, 2005
"Ason" (Thurman Custis) has taken his Christian
hip-hop from First Baptist Church of Glenarden to
the nation. On Friday he performed for a small group
at E's Place on Baltimore Avenue in Hyattsville.
Andrew Harnik/Examiner
As he watched Los Angeles-based artist Tonex
performing slick dance moves on stage several years
ago, Thurman Custis says he felt God call him to a
special ministry.
"I felt he was saying to me: 'I want you to do
this,' " said Custis, 28. "But I can't dance or
sing, so the only thing he could be talking about
was rapping."
Now Custis is known by his stage name, "Ason" - as
in "a son of God" - and tours full time in the D.C.
area and across the country. He is part of a growing
nationwide Christian hip-hop industry that seeks to
capture the soul of young urbanites.
Last Friday night, after playing at a Christian
coffeehouse in Hyattsville, Ason (pronounced ah-SON)
arrived for a similar event at Jammin' Java in
Vienna. Dressed in a black-and-silver tracksuit,
Ason seemed immediately at home in front of the
crowd of 20- and 30-somethings.
After asking the audience to sing along with the
chorus or "hook," Ason launched into "Nod Ur Chin,"
a song that describes the joy - and complexity - of
life after being "saved" by faith in Jesus Christ.
"Nobody told me 'bout the joy when I let Him come
in/I found out life still goes on/That I still do
wrong/Haters still hate and the bills ain't gone,"
he rapped.
Declining relevance
In Ason's view, Christian churches are becoming less
relevant to young people.
"Even churchgoing youth - God is not in their
heart," said Ason, 28, who lives in Greenbelt with
his wife and their two children. "When they leave
services on Sunday, they get in their cars and
listen to 50 Cent and Eminem" and other mainstream
rap artists whose lyrics are explicit and, some say,
"un-Christian."
Ason argues that Jesus was a plainspoken man who
used agricultural metaphors that common people of
the day understood.
"Today preachers still use those agricultural
metaphors. But that's not the society we live in
today," said Ason. "In 2005, we live in a society
dominated by hip-hop."
Ason's mission is to give young Christians an
alternative to mainstream rap, whose lyrics he says
deal primarily with "drug dealing, womanizing,
murdering and clubbing."
Kevin Parker, co-founder of Christianhangsuite.com,
an online magazine for the D.C. area, said that Ason
is just one of many local Christian artists who are
helping to fill the "long gap between Sundays" for
many young believers.
"A lot of people think that fun stops after you
start going to church," said Parker, whose Web site
targets "edgy, urban" Christians ages 18 to 35.
The site's "First Sunday" music and mingling events
- held monthly at H2O, the Southwest lounge and
restaurant - draw more than 250 people, said Parker.
And interest in Christian hip-hop has taken off in
the past three years, he said.
"Everyone loves hip-hop. And with Christian hip-hop,
you get a good beat, a good bass line and a good
message," said Parker.
William Romanowski, a professor of communications
who has studied the Christian music industry, said
Christians have long been striving to put a
faith-filled spin on pop culture trends.
"There was a time when everyone was looking for a
Christian Lionel Richie," said Romanowski, who
teaches at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Mich.
The recent popularity of mainstream rapper Kanye
West's song "Jesus Walks," however, has given
hip-hop artists permission to talk about Christian
faith, said Flynn Atkins, an artist with Christian
hip-hop group LA Symphony.
Ason said his own artistic philosophy is still
evolving. While "The Recruiter" is an explicitly
Christian album, the rapper says he is working on a
more mainstream album so he can reach a wider
audience.
"Kids today want to dance. They don't want to hear
you just preaching over beats," said Ason. "You have
to be more sophisticated in your presentation of the
Gospel."
Fast Facts
- Ason's album, "The Recruiter - Part One," is
available at Christian bookstores or at his Web
site, www.bigsonny.com, which also has music samples
and performance dates.
- For information on Christian music happenings in
the D.C. area, visit www.Christianhangsuite.com.
Preaching the hip-hop gospel
"Yes, Jesus could identify and keep it real with
regular folks."
So begins the introduction to the Gospel of Matthew
in "Real: The Complete New Testament," a "Biblezine"
from publisher Thomas Nelson aimed at hip-hop fans
and urban youth.
The New Century Version translation of the New
Testament is presented in magazine format, with
personal testimonies, top 10 lists and random
factoids on each page.
A reader's eye might wander from the lengthy
genealogy in Matthew - "Ram was the father of
Amminadabâ€-" - to the "Bible 411" sidebar that
explains how Jesus "is the single most important
person in all of the past, present and future."
One sidebar in the Gospel of John, called "Jail's No
Joke," tells the story of a young woman who went to
jail for prostitution and lost custody of her baby
before finding faith in Jesus. In Second
Thessalonians, readers can find a list of the 10
"hottest" NBA teams.
Kwesi Williams, a minister and youth leader at
Emmanuel Covenant Church in Glenarden, said he often
gives the "Biblezine" to students leaving for their
first year of college.
"It's hard to maintain your Christianity on campus,"
Williams says. "It's easier to walk around with
something that looks like a magazine than a thick,
leather-bound Bible."
Holy Hip Hop: Evangelists use
music to win souls
November 11, 2005
Holy Hip Hop: Evangelists use music to win souls
By Colette M. Jenkins
Knight Ridder Newspapers
AKRON, Ohio — Jason and Brandon Wallace aren't
traditional evangelists.
Their pulpit is the stage.
Their congregation is made up of young hip-hoppers.
Their message is delivered using rap music.
"Hip-hop has been one of the most influential forces
in our lives," said Jason Wallace, 29. "We know how
much of an influence it can have on the lives of
young people."
Armed with that knowledge, the two 6-foot-5-inch
brothers are passionately committed to using the
music genre as a tool to win souls for Jesus Christ.
Jason Wallace (whose rap name is J-wal the Rizon
Product) and Brandon Wallace (S.o.L. or Servant of
the Lord) make up the duo Divine Soldiers.
The Christian rappers describe their music as "holy
hip-hop" and have a style that borrows from East
Coast rap, jazz, Latin music, rhythm and blues and
rap-metal.
"We're not a Christian entertainment group. We're a
ministry," said Brandon Wallace, 27. "Music can
really impact people. Music can move a nation."
As a teen, gangsta rap moved Brandon Wallace to buy
a gun.
"I wanted to be a gangsta," Brandon Wallace said. "I
remember showing (the gun) to Jason and he gave me a
tongue-lashing, telling me either I was going to get
killed or I could kill somebody else and end up in
prison, like our uncle. I ended up getting rid of
it, but that is just one example of how powerful
music can be."
Gangsta rap became a major force in hip-hop in the
late 1980s, and in the mid- and late 1990s. Some
philosophies trace rap back to ancient African
societies where men and women related their history
through spoken word.
The Divine Soldiers, much like those men and women,
are using the spoken word to relay their message of
hope in Jesus Christ.
"If we could sing, we wouldn't be rapping," Brandon
Wallace said. "While the beats may draw some people
to listen, what is important are the lyrics because
the message is in the words."
The Wallace brothers state on their Web site
(www.divinesoldiers.com) that their mission is "to
intercept enemy communication by adding a fifth
element to the hip-hop culture — Jesus Christ."
Lyrics from a song called Desensitized on their
first CD release, Equivalent to Water, intend to
make their mission clear:
Time's running out so we declare war
Don't want to open your heart I'm gonna kick down
the door
You think your life is a game then I think that's a
shame
When the circle's been completed you ain't got no
one to blame
I've come in Jesus name I've come to smother flames
That might burn your flesh I don't do this for fame
Cuz in these last days I'm gonna fight for someone's
life
And if I lose mine I'm going home tonight.
Shouting hip-hop's praises
Shouting hip-hop's
praises
By Cathy Lynn Grossman, USA TODAY
November 28, 2005. Tampa, Florida The pastor
bounds past the disc jockeys at the turntable bank
under the nightclub lighting of Crossover Community
Church's worship/concert space.
The Rev. Tommy Kyllonen is in his Sunday best a
sparkling white "Twice-born" T-shirt under his open
sport shirt as he strides onto a catwalk and
launches into a sermon on "how Christ would roll,"
how he would act, facing anger, self-righteousness
and deceit.
Would the Son of God give offenders the "ice grill"?
Kyllonen asks, freezing in a confrontational pose,
eyes glowering.
Or would he be "pouring out love onto them"?
Kyllonen asks, citing in Psalm 86:15 how God is
"slow to anger, abounding in love."
Welcome to hip-hop church a multiracial,
multi-ethnic, mega-decibel, authentically biblical
worship service where urban street sound and style
take a holy spin.
To Read More (entire USA Today article),
Click Here:
USA Today (or copy/paste the following link into
your web-browser:
http://www.usatoday.com/life/2005-11-27-hip-hop-church_x.htm)
For more information on Crossover Community Church,
Flavor.Alliance and Pastor Tommy Kyllonen, go
to:
FlavorAlliance.com
Come and Hear Pastor Tommy Kyllonen preach and see
the Flavor.Alliance Break-Dancers, during
2006 Holy Hip Hop Week - For more
information, go to:
HolyHipHop.com
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'Holy hip hop' energizes young
Christians, fans say'
'Holy hip hop' energizes young Christians, fans say
Sunday, November 7, 2004
By ERIK ORTIZ
HERALD NEWS
PASSAIC - Once a month, hip-hop meets the Holy Bible
at the Prince of Peace Christian Church on Howe
Avenue.
This is where Satan is a street thug and dancing in
the pews is not only allowed, it's required.
"You gotta get out of your seats," Arthur Soto, 30,
shouted to youngsters at the church on a recent
Friday night.
"If you're under 30 years old and you're happy
you're alive, clap your hands," urged his brother,
Jonathan, 29.
These gatherings, known as Radical Alternative
Worship, or RAW, are an urban version of
old-fashioned tent revivals, only the preachers
convey their messages over Tupac tracks and the
congregation is made up mostly of teens. Instead of
shunning youth culture, Prince of Peace has embraced
it, becoming the first church in Passaic with a
regular "holy hip-hop" event.
Although spiritually laced hip-hop is regarded as a
novelty by churches across the country, some within
the movement say it is a powerful evangelical tool
for packing youngsters back into the pews.
"We typically submerge kids in a church culture that
they don't understand," said Jonathan Soto, a city
councilman and the son of Prince of Peace's senior
pastor. "But if we're going to reach youth, we need
to be able to express the Gospel on their level.
It's a bit out of the box compared to what some
churches have, but it works."
Since January, the church has sponsored RAW on the
last Friday of every month. The event can attract
250 youngsters, whereas regular youth gatherings
might net no more than 50, Soto said.
The hip-hop, dance and spoken-word performers take
the stage in front of a mural of a brick wall spray
painted with Biblical passages. Just as they would
in a club, the young people, from Christian churches
in Paterson, Orange and Bloomfield, bob their heads
and dance.
Andre Robertson of East Orange, better known as DEED
the Gospel, swayed to prerecorded beats and rapped
slowly:
I can rhyme with any letters, from A to Z.
To die for our sins, Jesus paid the fee.
Despite nods by mainstream artists, the Christian
hip-hop movement, with roots in the early 1980s,
still remains on the fringes of the music industry.
While the traditional hip-hop album can sell 400,000
copies upon release, a well-known Christian artist,
if lucky, might break 15,000, said Sherice Sudds,
publisher of FEED, a Christian hip-hop magazine.
Even the recent radio success of "Jesus Walks," by
secular rapper Kanye West, has not influenced
conventional hip-hop stations to start playing
Christian artists.
Meanwhile, many churches continue to shy away from
them. "They face rejection on both ends," Sudds
said.
Rhonda Ridley, a New York publicist for the popular
Christian duo Corey Red and Precise, says pastors
are turned off by the culture because Christian
artists typically mirror their mainstream
counterparts.
"Their style, their language is still hip-hop," she
said. "If you saw them on the street, they're not
the image of what people have of a Christian. But
they don't want to compromise who they are just to
be accepted."
That lack of widespread acceptance doesn't mean
Christian hip-hoppers aren't making strides, Ridley
said, estimating that more than 150 churches in the
New York area are now opening their doors to the
culture.
"They're getting kids interested in Jesus," she
said. "It may not be the King James version, but
it's something kids understand. Hip-hop has gone
from rapping about sneakers, to rapping about
diamonds and cars, to rapping about the goodness of
God. It's here to stay."
Newark rapper Juan DeJesus is in the new minority.
The 30-year-old says he can interest youngsters with
his spiritual message because they understand what
he's been through.
The "crack-pipe dreams" and "ghetto-fabulous
lifestyle" were tempting, but now he rebukes his
experiences on the streets of Newark, Paterson and
Passaic as a member of the Latin Kings gang.
"Yo, before I start ... I got to glorify [God],"
DeJesus, who goes by the rap name "Forgiven," told
the youngsters at RAW. "If it wasn't for you Lord, I
wouldn't be here."
Six years ago, he found his spiritual side. He had
been enlisted as the getaway driver during the
murder of two fellow Latin Kings. He later told his
"brothers" that what they had done was wrong, so
they put a hit on him, he said.
But police got to him first. He was arrested as an
accomplice and faced up to 60 years in prison for
conspiracy to commit murder. He served only three.
He attributes the lighter sentence to his faith.
"I said, 'God, if you for real, I'm-a give you my
life and see what you can do with it,'Ÿ" said
DeJesus, who now has his own part-time ministry out
of the Christian Faith Center in Bloomfield.
Since his release, he has refused to slink away into
the witness protection program. He wants to become a
reverend and preach to other gang members, their
children, or anyone else who will listen.
"God got my back," he said.
After Friday's event, youths swarmed around a table
featuring RAW T-shirts and DVDs of past concerts. A
night of holy hip-hop was rewarding, they said.
"When you least expect it, God calls to you," said
Ary Esther Payano, 20, who stopped listening to
traditional hip-hop because of its "vulgar
messages."
"I've never heard this kind of music in church,"
said her friend Luis Ortiz, a Passaic High School
senior. "They rap about true things, things with a
message."
Rappers Are Raising Their
Churches' Roofs
Rappers Are Raising Their Churches' Roofs || By JOHN
LELAND of NY TIMES
At Christ Tabernacle Church in Glendale, Queens, on
a recent Friday night, Adam Durso, the church's
youth pastor, raised a microphone in exaltation. "Yo,
God is so ill," he shouted, using a hip-hop term of
praise.
It was more than two hours into the weekly service,
and neither the pastor nor his congregation, a
multiracial group of about 350 teenagers and adults,
was ready to quit. The D.J. played a hip-hop beat,
and shouts of praise rose from the pews. "Come on,"
Mr. Durso encouraged, "tear the roof off this place
in praise to God."
Eleven years after the Rev. Calvin O. Butts III of
the Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem ran a
steamroller over rap CD's, in what has come to
symbolize the antagonism between hip-hop and the
church, the two worlds seem to be inching closer
together. The singer R. Kelly and the rapper Mase,
who left the music business for five years to become
a minister, have new hit albums filled with gospel
messages, and one of this summer's most popular
songs was "Jesus Walks," an overtly Christian rap by
Kanye West.
From the church side, a growing number of ministries
are adopting both the rhythms and the bluntness of
hip-hop culture. Mr. Butts remains critical of some
rap music, but younger ministers like Mr. Durso are
using its attitudes and beats to spread the gospel.
In the New York area alone, at least 150 churches or
ministries use hip-hop in some form, said Kim
Stewart, a booking agent for Christian rappers.
These include many storefront churches or campus
ministries, she said.
"Hip-hop is the language and the cry of this
generation," said Mr. Durso, 27, who mixes guest
rappers and videos with conservative evangelical
preaching in his Friday services, which are called
Aftershock. The results are part revival meeting,
part Friday night out.
"In today's terms, the apostle Paul would be living
in the projects saying, 'Grace and peace to you,
a'ight,' instead of 'amen,' " Mr. Durso said, using
the hip-hop contraction for all right. "Don't get
stuck on the word 'amen.' 'Amen' just meant 'I
agree.' Well so does 'a'ight' to this hip-hop
culture." The sometimes bumpy rapprochement between
the church and Christian hip-hop reflects changes in
both. Instead of meeting in the middle, each is
adapting to the rougher norms of commercial rap.
Christian rappers, who once presented themselves as
squeaky clean alternatives to their secular peers,
are increasingly spinning graphic tales of urban
life, with little aroma of church sanctimony. Corey
Red and Precise, a New York duo that performed at
Aftershock, rhymed about their pasts as drug
dealers, lacing their rhymes with sexual frankness
and references to gunplay. Strutting the stage in a
do-rag and football jersey, Corey Red rapped, "I put
the heat to your knot," pointing a finger to his
head like a gun, even as he talked about being
saved.
For churches, making peace with hip-hop is a matter
of survival, said Ralph Watkins, who teaches
African-American culture and religion at Augusta
State University in Georgia. "Mainline churches have
identified hip-hop culture as an enemy, and that's
their problem," he said. "If you walked in to 90
percent of your mainline churches who have not
embraced this culture, you're going to find an
absence of young people."
He added that even at its crudest, hip-hop
flourished by telling truths that churches ignored.
"The church really doesn't want to hear the true
stories," he said. "They want the made-up stories,
'I was broke on Thursday and God came and I got paid
on Friday, ain't he all right, he's an on-time God.'
Well, sometimes God don't come on Friday. Hip-hop
says, that's the deal. So I'll start selling weed or
selling crack, because that's the only choice I had.
And that's where the church can't embrace the
honesty of what hip-hop tries to get us to
understand and deal with."
In "Jesus Walks," Kanye West cites a comparable
unwillingness on the part of the rap business to
address matters of faith. He rhymes, "They say you
can rap about anything except for Jesus/ That means
guns, sex, lies, videotapes/ But if I talk about
God, my record won't get played, huh?"
Mr. West, the son of a Christian marriage counselor,
said that when his father heard the song, he said, "
'Maybe you missed your calling.' I said, 'No, maybe
this is my calling.' I reach more people than any
one pastor can."
He likened "Jesus Walks" not to church teaching but
to his secular songs, which celebrate the high life
without moralizing. "I don't tell anyone they have
to do this or that. I never said, 'You better have
your Louis Vuittons on or something's going happen
to you.' I just said, 'This is what I want.' Same
with Jesus."
The resistance that many churches have shown to
hip-hop culture resembles previous battles over
gospel music or drums in church, said Alton Pollard
III, the director of black church studies at the
Candler School of Theology at Emory University in
Atlanta.
"This is just the latest version" of the battle, he
said. "It's about the continuing need for new
expressions of what it means to be human, and the
church oftentimes is not able to keep up, whether
we're talking about jazz, the blues, soul or gospel
music."
But unlike gospel and soul, "hip-hop didn't start in
the church," said Phil Jackson, a youth pastor who
last year started a hip-hop ministry called The
House in one of Chicago's poorest neighborhoods.
"So there still exists some antagonism. But for this
generation, the only way to make the gospel relevant
to them is through hip-hop. In my neighborhood we
don't need another church on Sunday morning. We need
something to speak to young people."
Corey Red and Precise, who call their style hardcore
gospel, are emblems of the uneasy crossover. Corey
Red, whose surname is Sullivan, rejected the church
as a teenager, turning to hip-hop and
small-timecrime. "I didn't know anybody Christian my
age," he said. "The ones I did know, there was so
much religiosity that we wouldn't be able to talk.
That turned me off." When he was stabbed in a street
confrontation and critically injured, he said, he
felt Jesus in a way that he never had in church.
"It took God to visit me outside the four walls" of
the church, he said. "That's why I love the Lord,
because he came into the street and met me where I
was. Even though the people inside the four walls
wrote me off, like 'He's finished, he's not going to
see 25 years old.' "
The experience put him at odds with both his secular
and his Christian peers, he said. Even now, he uses
the word "religion" as a pejorative and sees his
faith as tangential to the business of churches.
"I'm not Christian by following the
institutionalized religion of Christianity," he
said. "I'm Christian like what the word really
means, a follower of Christ."
He and Precise occupy a precarious niche, recording
for Life Music, a Christian label started by Derek
Ferguson, the chief financial officer of Bad Boy
Entertainment, Sean Combs's company. Bad Boy stars
who rap about sex and material excess earn instant
fortunes, but Corey Red and Precise say they
struggle to make ends meet. Unlike Christian rock
bands, Christian rappers are rarely played on
religious radio stationsand get little support from
churches or the music industry.
Mr. Ferguson said he struggles to justify the music
of some Bad Boy acts. But their Christian
alternatives, he acknowledged, can barely support a
small business.
"The church has these soldiers at their disposal,"
said Precise, whose real name is Robert Young. "But
a lot of brothers, after a night of risking their
life, they can't even keep their lights on in their
house. We're here for the church. But any army
poorly funded is going to struggle."
At Crossover Community Church in Tampa, Fla.,
Tommy Kyllonen has built a thriving ministry around
hip-hop and runs an annual festival of Christian
rap. Like Christ Tabernacle, Mr. Kyllonen's church
is loosely affiliated with the Assemblies of God
denomination.
Mr. Kyllonen, 31, who raps under the name Urban D.,
teaches pastors around the country to use hip-hop in
their ministries. With the success of Kanye West, he
said, churches and the music industry are looking at
the potential reach of Christian hip-hop.
But if churches simply add a D.J. or a little slang
to their services, the audience will not be fooled,
he said.
"Hip-hop is the hook that might draw them in, but
what keeps them is building a relationship with God
and with other people that are here,'' he said.
"Because if they don't have that, and that doesn't
become authentic, we would just be another place to
come hang out, like a club. A club gets old after a
while. Then there's a new club that opens up down
the street that the music is better, they got a
better D.J., that's where everyone's going now. The
difference with us is that spiritual aspect."
At Aftershock, the crowd lingered long after the
beats went silent. A plexiglass box onstage brimmed
with items that people had turned in at previous
services, including secular CD's, pornography and
gang insignia.
Leamon Richardson and Richard Dauphin, who arrived
well before the doors opened, embodied the
complicated messages of holy hip-hop. Both are
rappers. Mr. Richardson, 19, who lives in the South
Bronx, called himself a "walking testimony," and
wore a T-shirt celebrating 50 Cent, a secular rapper
who rhymes about dealing drugs and killing people.
Because of the shirt, Mr. Richardson said, "You
might see me and have a bad perception." But he
added: "I don't take nothing from 50 Cent because
he's not talking about anything godly. I pray for
him."
Mr. Dauphin said that people who cannot understand
this apparent contradiction are blind to the
prophetic powers of hip-hop. "We're street
disciples," he said. "You can be the greatest
preacher in the world and not reach the street.
That's where we're at."
Churches Adopt Hip-Hop's
'Rhythms, Bluntness' to Spread the Gospel
World News
Churches Adopt Hip-Hop's
'Rhythms, Bluntness' to Spread the
Gospel |
|
|
A growing number of churches and ministries
are "adopting both the rhythms and the
bluntness" of hip-hop culture to spread the
gospel. In a report earlier this week that
featured the headline "Rappers Are Raising
Their Churches' Roofs," "The New York Times"
observed that despite the longstanding
antagonism between hip-hop and the church,
"the two worlds seem to be inching closer
together."
"The singer R. Kelly and the rapper Mase,
who left the music business for five years
to become a minister, have new hit albums
filled with gospel messages, and one of this
summer's most popular songs was 'Jesus
Walks,' an overtly Christian rap by Kanye
West," the newspaper noted.
Additionally, Kim Stewart, a booking agent
for Christian rappers, said in the New York
area alone, at least 150 churches or
ministries use hip-hop in some form,
including many storefront congregations or
campus parachurch groups.
"Hip-hop is the language and the cry of this
generation," said Adam Durso, youth pastor
at Christ Tabernacle Church in Queens, 27,
who mixes guest rappers and videos with
preaching in his Friday services, which are
called Aftershock. The results are part
revival meeting, part Friday night out at
Christ Tabernacle, which is loosely
affiliated with the Assemblies of God.
"In today's terms, the apostle Paul would be
living in the projects saying, 'Grace and
peace to you, a'ight,' instead of 'amen,'"
Durso, using the hip-hop contraction for all
right, told the "Times." "Don't get stuck on
the word 'amen.' 'Amen' just meant 'I
agree.' Well so does 'a'ight' to this
hip-hop culture."
At Crossover Community Church in Tampa,
Fla., Tommy Kyllonen, who has built a
thriving ministry around hip-hop and runs an
annual festival of Christian rap, said,
churches and the music industry are looking
at the potential reach of Christian hip-hop.
"Hip-hop is the hook that might draw them
in, but what keeps them is building a
relationship with God and with other people
that are here," he said.
|
Church Communicates the Gospel in
Inner-City Context
Church
Communicates the Gospel in Inner-City Context
There was a shooting on one of the
bus runs the Sunday night that Terry Raburn,
district superintendent for the Peninsular Florida
District, spoke at Pastor Tommy Kyllonen's Crossover
Church in Tampa. It didn't begin to slow down the
church's community outreach.
Pastor Tommy
Kyllonen
Fla.vorFest 2002 2
disc DVD cover |
"Crossover is in one of the most
down-trodden, compromised areas of Tampa," Raburn
says, "and Tommy sends out buses across that area to
bring in kids. The church is very youth oriented,
but it offers spiritual growth on a level that every
age level can accept. The Spirit of the Lord is
incredibly present at Crossover. I don't know how
many people would have the chance to see 'Amazing
Grace' done with stomp and rap, but at Tommy's
church you can."
Crossover Church's sole purpose is
to give streetwise teens and 20-somethings a soul
purpose. It's been this way since Tommy Kyllonen
came to Tampa, Fla., in 1996 and started the
"hip-hop" youth ministry at the church with four
teens.
The group grew to nearly 200 during
the next 6 years. When Kyllonen became senior pastor
2 years ago, the church as a whole transitioned its
focus to reaching out to those in Tampa's hip-hop
culture.
Sunday morning services at Crossover
are like no other. A disc jockey runs turntables,
with hip-hop as well as rhythm and blues tunes
mingled with praise and worship songs booming from
overhead speakers. Remarkable testimonies from
former drug dealers and strippers help define the
services.
"God made it clear that we were
supposed to reach out to what the majority of the
neighborhood was, and that's hip-hop," says
Kyllonen, 30. But that doesn't mean the gospel is
watered down for the congregation, which is 50
percent Hispanic, 25 percent black and 25 percent
white.
"We tell it like it is, but we
always do it in love," says Kyllonen, noting the
church has nearly 20 first-time visitors each week.
Visitors receive a free CD that
includes music from various hip-hop and R&B artists
who attend the church, as well as an introduction
from Kyllonen, who has also recorded five hip-hop
albums under the name Urban D.
For the community, Crossover holds
quarterly Christian hip-hop and R&B concerts, which
include a graffiti expo on a portable wall the
church built. The church recently completed
construction on a basketball court and, thanks to a
$13,000 grant, a 10,000-square-foot skate park
complete with half-pipes, ramps and rails.
"Our church doesn't look like your
typical church," says Kyllonen, noting that the
church is covered with murals. "The crowd we're
reaching doesn't want to come into a place where
there are pews and stained-glass windows."
Edward Bayonet, who is known as
Spec, says Crossover's hip-hop environment led him
to accept Christ as Savior at a youth service in
1998.
"I saw [people] here that looked
like dudes from around my block," says the
25-year-old Spec, who as a teen regularly sprayed
graffiti on the streets of Long Island, N.Y. "I felt
comfortable because I could be myself."
Now Spec puts his love for Christ
into his love for art. He is Crossover's media
director, designing promotional graphics, fliers and
the church's website.
"Hip-hop was all I knew," Spec says.
"Hip-hop isn't our god, but we use what we know as a
tool for Christ."
Today nearly 300 people from ages
18-50 attend Sunday morning services at Crossover,
and the church recently added a second service. On
Thursday nights more than 60 teens attend a junior
high-only hip-hop youth service that started last
year with 15, while 220 senior high and young adults
meet in the main auditorium.
Newcomers are plugged into
small-group Bible studies. The church has drama
teams, a choir, and open microphone and poetry
nights.
Youth can purchase Christian hip-hop
music from Crossover's CD store. The church also has
a hip-hop shop and a skate shop, and produces a
magazine.
"New churches establish a new
presence for Jesus," says Church Planting Director
Paul Drost. "With the diversity of America now, the
more churches we have that can target different
segments of the population, the greater impact we
can have on extending God's kingdom. I heartily
recommend churches like Crossover."
by Isaac
Olivarez, Today's Pentecostal Evangel
Fros'T - Minister of the Gospel
Fros'T
The Bible says there's a road in life that is WIDE and EASY
and many find it, but it leads to DEATH. It also
says that there is another road that is NARROW and
HARD and many don't find it, but this road leads to
LIFE. Fros'T decided when he was a youngster
to take the road that was harder, but lead to life!
He heard his Mom and Pops tell him that it was the
best road to take and after seeing some of his
partners go the wrong way and end up at dead ends in
life, he decided to go God's way. Since that day
he's been on a life long journey to please God. His
latest album is a tribute to that journey.
How'd you come to know Jesus? Why would you
recommend someone else to give Him a chance?
Well I am very greatful to have been raised in a
Christian home, my Mom and Dad for as long as i
remember (all my life) have been pastoring an inner
city church in the middle of the south Los angeles
area called praise chapel, but we all know that
everybody says the pk's (Pastor's Kids) are the
worst, and there probibly right, but this pk
survived the storm, and now I'm reaping all the
blessings God has for me, alot of my friend's
growing up in the church went there own way and
backslid, but I knew I was one of the chosen to do
something great for god. I truly got serious with
the calling on my life at the age of 15, and ever
since God has been guiding me every step of the way.
for those of you walking the picked fence, and are
flirting with the ways of the world, just remember
that sin equals death, stay encouraged you can make
it, I know i'm a living testimony of that.
Explain the title of your latest album "Life Long
Journey"?
The title "Life Long Journey" is pretty, much self
explanitory, for the last 10 years since I first
picked up a mic and started rapping, it's been like
this life long roller coaster ride that never ends,
at times very smoothe, and times as lots of dips and
bumps in the path of which I'm traveling to get to
where God is taking me, and what he's preparing me
for in the future, I just wanted to get down dirty,
and personal on this record, so after people listen
they can maybe relate, and it can help somebody else
in there own personal journay as well.
What advice do you have for any emcees tryin' to
make it into the biz-ness?
Well, my advise to all up and coming emcees, is that
it's very important that you learn ministry before
you get all caught up in music. You see rap music is
a great tool to use if it's used right, but God has
called us to be ministers of the gospel, and that is
where a lot of these new breed of emcees are missing
the boat. They just want to grab the mic and flex
there skills, and try to put out a demo to shop and
try to get signed. Take my advise, if you want to be
in this game for the long hall, focus on building
youself a creditable ministry, and the music part of
it will all fall into place. (Those of you
interested in this should read our articles on
"How to Start a Hip-Hop Ministry".)
How'd you hook up with such incredible talent for
this album with emcees like Ahmad, Mr. Solo (Gospel
Gangstaz) and Pidgeon John and producers like Bobcat
(2 Pac, Mac 10, LL Cool J, T-Bone), KP (Ahmad & 4th
Avenue Jones'), and N.Y.X. (SS Mob)?
It's all about relationship. I've been good friends
with Ahmad and the 4th ave jones' camp for a few
years now. I supported there ministry by hooking
them up with shows and giving them plugs in
Underground Fire magazine, when they where just
stepping over to the gospel side. When the time came
for me to record my album him and his wife Tina came
down and blessed a track with me on my album. On the
other hand I've know Solo, Tic-Toc, Chille Baby (of
the Gospel Gangstaz)for years when I just first
started to rap. I praise god, they did not hesitate
to come down to the studio and rock a track. That
songs a hit! KP (of the 4th Ave Jones' has been
doing tracks for me for now two years and N.Y.X. has
been doing tracks for me for the last 4 years. I
just praise God for the relationships that He has
blessed me with.
Your style's kinda a mix of East and West.
Describe your style for us.
Yeah, you can say my style is pretty much
universal--East/West. Many people like to say, this
album has got a little something for everybody. It's
rough. It's smoothe. It's very hard to describe. I
guess you can say my style is just different.
Hip-hop churches carry message of
redemption to urban youth
Hip-hop
churches carry message of redemption to
urban youth |
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Source:
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05-37 - Associated
Baptist Press |
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By Ken Camp
HOUSTON (ABP) -- The in-your-face
attitude, emblazoned on black T-shirts, is
unmistakable: "Jesus is Lord. Satan is a
punk. Pick a side."
Street Life, a Christian outreach to
young people in Houston's urban hip-hop
culture, offers a distinctive blend of
student ministry, evangelism,
church-planting and discipleship.
The hip-hop approach operates on two
fronts. Hard-edged, streetwise entertainment
with a distinctively redemptive message
draws non-Christian young people. Then small
groups offer them a place to experience
community, encounter the gospel message and
develop into disciples.
Since January, Union Baptist Association
of Houston has helped start eight Street
Life "squads" or cell-group churches -- four
in homes and others on the Texas Southern
University campus, on a high-school campus,
at a day-care center and within a church's
youth ministry.
Several established congregations have
worked with the local African-American
pastors' fellowship and the Baptist General
Convention of Texas to help launch the
ministry.
Bertha Vaughns, Baptist Student Ministry
director at Texas Southern University, sees
the students with whom she works as "an
oppressed generation," shaped by "broken
homes, broken relationships [and] broken
promises." She says the hip-hop approach to
sharing the gospel can be "the deliverer"
this generation needs.
Street Life churches use rap music,
soulful rhythm and blues, stand-up comedy
and dramatic films to package the gospel in
a way an urban generation raised on the
streets will receive, said Shawn Scoggins, a
hip-hop church planter.
"We want to give it to them in a way
they've never seen it," he said.
In part, that is accomplished through
relationships built in small groups where
non-Christians can talk frankly to mature
Christians about issues that matter to them.
"They need to see Jesus walking among them,"
Scoggins said.
But first, Christians have to establish a
rapport with them by approaching them on
common ground, he stressed. Just as Jesus
ministered among prostitutes, tax-gatherers,
lepers and other outcasts, urban
missionaries must meet people where they
are, in the hip-hop culture.
"We have to be where the sinner is -- in
music, movies and media," he said.
Pointing out that some urban children
start picking up "gangsta" slang and
attitudes as early as kindergarten, Scoggins
envisions high-school youth in hip-hop
churches mentoring middle-school students,
who in turn influence younger children. "It
can start in a dorm room. It can start with
a prayer group. It doesn't have to have a
building or require a lot of money."
While Scoggins provides leadership for
the discipleship side of the ministry,
Terrance Levi provides the entertainment
tools for outreach -- what he calls
"redemptive entertainment." "I have a
passion to help sinners come to know the
Lord and to understand the Bible is a manual
for players," Levi said. "It's not just a
book for grandmas."
Levi speaks the hip-hop language and
understands urban culture intimately. "The
Lord delivered me out of a life of organized
crime nine and a half years ago," he
testified. "And I used to own a record
company that made cuss-you-out rap records."
After his conversion, he turned his
attention to Christian entertainment but
concluded: "A lot of it didn't relate to the
unchurched. People want to be entertained,
and if it's not entertaining, they won't pay
any attention to it."
Now Levi uses his professional expertise
as a record producer and media entrepreneur
to create Christian entertainment he
believes will appeal to young people on the
streets. Through his company, Street Life
Worldwide Entertainment Group, he and
collaborator Rob Phat wrote and produced a
motion picture, Pain.
With financial assistance from the BGCT,
he also is producing short morality plays on
DVD. The "mini-movies" are designed for
Christians to give to their unchurched
friends to view.
A recent "gathering of the players" at
Texas Southern University brought together
leaders from hip-hop churches around Houston
for a celebration worship service, and it
offered an outreach opportunity to students.
As minister to students on campus,
Vaughns sees tremendous potential for the
hip-hop church, which she views as a
revolutionary movement of the Holy Spirit.
"I feel like God pole-vaulted me into
this situation, and I've plummeted into
something a lot bigger than me," she said.
"The Lord can use this hip-hop approach to
redeem a generation. ... I don't believe
this is going to fizzle out -- not be just a
fad. I think it will bring about social
change." |
Christian Ministry Hip Hop Haven
Christian outreach ministry Hip Hop Haven hopes
to reach teens through music and dance
By Kim Mulford
Picture a church service designed for urban
teens. Instead of a choir, it would have hip-hop
artists and step dancers. Instead of a live band, it
might have a DJ. Instead of a pastor preaching from
a pulpit, it might have somebody such as 28-year-old
Miguel Ortiz "keeping it real" and delivering his
personal testimony.
This is Hip Hop Haven, a Christian outreach
ministry beginning next week in Camden. It's the
project of Urban Mission Fellowship, an ecumenical
and multicultural collaboration of area churches
interested in hooking young people.
Pastor Noel A. Morales, a street preacher in
Camden, came up with the idea after pestering a
teenager on a street corner about why she stopped
coming to church. She told him church was boring.
"Kids nowadays make a lot of excuses," said
Morales, who holds an afternoon service at Urban
Promise at 36th and Federal streets. "They have to
do this and they have to do that. There's no time
for God, no time for church. But if I tell them I'm
having a concert, they say, `Oh, yeah! I'll be
there.' "
How does a 51-year-old preacher do that?
Morales approached Ortiz, a former club and
concert promoter whose life once mirrored the
stereotypical lyrics of the big-name artists he
brought to town.
Four years ago, after he was questioned in a
fatal nightclub shooting, Ortiz walked away from his
business, the money, the women and the drugs.
After he was released by police, Ortiz spent a
day looking at his life and praying. The next day,
he said, he was back in church.
"I remember the Holy Spirit just saying, `What
are you doing? I haven't called you to do this. My
streets are crying for you.' " Ortiz recalled. He
turned his life over to God and joined the Coast
Guard.
Now nearing the end of his enlistment, Ortiz and
two partners have formed a nonprofit organization
called Vigilant Multimedia & Entertainment, which
seeks to promote the Christian Gospel through music,
drama and the arts.
Lately, VME has been doing just that. In
December, the Voorhees resident organized a holy
hip-hop concert for his congregation, Revo Youth
Church, under Cherry Hill's Kingsway Church. In
March, at Morales' request, Ortiz put together
another concert, this time at Urban Promise in
Camden. About 140 kids showed up.
"Even when we told them, `You have to go home,'
they didn't want to go home," said Morales. "Kids
were fellowshipping, taking each other's names and
addresses. They loved it. They are the ones that
asked me to do it again."
He went back to Urban Mission Fellowship, which
decided to organize a monthly outreach service
through the summer on the last Saturdays of May,
June, July and August.
Hip Hop Haven is not a church, said Carol
Pavlicin, a 47-year-old Cherry Hill resident and a
member of Urban Mission Fellowship's board of
directors.
"Kids don't like to do church," Pavlicin
explained. She prefers to call this "youth
fellowship." The message will be the same, but the
way it's delivered will be different.
Eventually, the organizers hope to broaden their
outreach and become a resource for other churches.
Urban Mission Fellowship already holds a weekly
Bible study at Urban Promise. It hopes the
monthlyservice will draw more to attend.
Pavlicin's 18-year-old daughter, Tracey, goes to
the Bible study with her mother. The two have passed
out flyers in Camden, inviting kids to next week's
service. They've been receptive, said Tracey.
"I think they're ready to see who God really is,"
Tracey Pavlicin said. "They don't want the boring
traditions. They want to live in a radical new way
that's relevant to the culture."
When they do come, they'll hear the rap artistry
of Jessica Garcia, aka Jusdis. The 21-year-old
Philadelphian is signed with VME. She and her fellow
artists perform mostly in churches. The kids love
it, she said.
"My testimony is the biggest part of my
ministry," said Garcia, who became a Christian about
a year and a half ago. "If you can be real to the
youth, the youth is going to respond to that."
Her life turned around one night after she
accepted a friend's invitation to attend church. The
pastor was preaching out of the basement of a house.
As soon as she walked in, he looked at her and told
her Jesus loved her, but didn't love the life she
was living.
"The tears started coming to my eyes," recalled
Garcia. "It was anger. This guy doesn't know me from
a can of spray paint."
The conversation changed her and on Feb. 4, 2004,
she became a Christian. Now, she said, she wants to
share her faith with other young people through her
music.
"I just hope that they see and they accept
Christ," Garcia said. "I do all this for God. I'm
God's microphone."
Hip Hop Haven is "the greatest idea ever," Garcia
said. "What better way to get them than with their
own music?" IF YOU GO
Hip Hop Haven opens at 7:30 p.m. May 28 at Urban
Promise, 36th and Federal streets, Camden. Admission
is free. .
Hip Hop Ministry
osted on Tue, Oct. 25, 2005 |
|
|
Hip-hop ministry
By Glenn Lovell
Mercury News
Like others who eventually heed the clang
of The Firehouse, rapper SanJoe remembers a
time not so long ago when his life was
burning down around him.
``I was so lost, man -- I used PCP and
crank,'' the ex-gang member from Modesto
testifies from the stage of the San Jose
youth club on St. James Street. ``I'd ride
around in stolen cars. I've been left for
dead in the desert with an ice pick in my
back . . .''
At this, the 29-year-old SanJoe (real
name Joe Whitson) nods in time to his
pre-recorded performance mix and raps,
``Father, forgive me, I was stuck in the
streets/Thought I had to fend for myself,
like a savage beast.''
A popular fixture on the local scene
since February, The Firehouse has become a
safe haven for ``all young people at risk,''
explains San Jose pastor-activist Sonny
Lara. ``We're an alternative to the thug
life, man. When they come here, they don't
need to stand with their guard up; they can
relax . . . be themselves.''
The free, non-denominational nightspot
meets the last Friday of each month at the
old Oasis disco or, if that's taken, the St.
James Community Center down the street. The
club has been hailed by San Jose Recreation
Superintendent Angel Rios Jr. as ``cutting
edge'' and ``a positive alternative'' for
kids who are confused or have lost their
way.
``When you tell teens don't join gangs or
do drugs, that comes across as preachy,''
says Rios, a member of the mayor's Gang
Prevention Task Force. ``This points them in
a new direction, but in a fun setting so
they can still be cool.''
Besides SanJoe, this night's decidedly
non-gangsta lineup includes Bloodline and
Brother Ig. They do their thing, then mingle
with audience members, some of whom are
called onstage to dance or recite poetry.
Each testifies about his or her deliverance
from drugs and gangs.
`Introduce
yourself'
``Get up and walk around,'' instructs
Sonny Lara's son, Israel, who as
emcee-Christian rapper works the crowd with
the fervor of a televangelist.
``Shake hands, introduce yourself,''
prods Israel Lara. ``It's not about my
color, your color, my
church, your church -- it's about
fellowship.''
If this sounds like a hip-hop version of
the old-time prayer meeting, it is.
``I've seen people break down in tears,''
Rios says. ``The look on their faces says,
`Man, I'm accepted, I'm important.' So
something is happening there that's meeting
their needs.''
Adds Israel Lara during a break in the
show, ``We provide a safe place for
teenagers who are struggling with drugs and
alcohol, but you don't have to be troubled:
We welcome kids 12 and up who just want to
hang out and have a good time.''
James Chavez and Patty Balderrama, both
16, fit this description.
Chavez, no stranger to school detention,
commutes here from Modesto; Balderrama, of
San Jose, found the youth club when she was
taken from her mother, who was doing time
for drugs. ``I had a lot of anger in me,''
Balderrama confesses. ``But I came to this
place instead of going out on the street and
doing other stuff, like partying and
drinking.''
No fear
Pastor Lara rents the St. James Street
club from downtown developer Barry Swenson
for a token $375 or ``as close to that as we
can come.'' He calls The Firehouse ``neutral
ground,'' a place where different religions
and ethnicities can mingle without fear of
the kind of gun violence that erupted
Saturday morning outside the Ambassador
Lounge on San Pedro Street.
``Neutral means anyone is welcome, man,''
says the pastor, whose heavily tattooed body
still carries the scars from a gang
shooting. ``Check out the atmosphere, man.
It's charged with positive energy. We give
the kids a place to express their talents,
whether it's poetry, dancing, drama or
rap.''
But leave the gangsta attitude at the
door.
``It's the Law of Magneticism, man: Who
you are is who you attract,'' says Sonny
Lara. ``The rebellion comes from the music.
They hear all that negative stuff by Eminem
and Snoop Dogg and 50 Cent. No wonder
they're depressed. Our music relaxes you,
puts you in the mood.''
So far, he says, there have been some
tense moments, people who were asked to
leave -- but nothing physical. ``You'd have
to be crazy to try something here. You see
those bouncers? They're big guys, they're
buffed-out, man.''
Heading off
trouble
Angelina Macias and her husband, Freddy,
are members of the security team. A former
gang member herself, Macias says she can
home in on potential troublemakers.
``It's easier for me because I was part
of that lifestyle,'' she says. ``Anybody
that's trying to sneak narcotics or alcohol
in, look out -- I can read your mind.''
Rios is impressed by the level of
supervision. ``It's not just a bunch of kids
running rampant,'' he says. ``It's run by
adults who are trained to interact with
young people.''
Clubs come and go in the downtown. How
long does Sonny Lara think he can keep this
one going with donations? (A fundraiser is
planned for Nov. 5 at San Jose's Wyndham
Hotel.)
``I'm training my son Israel to carry
on,'' he replies. ``We're not one of those
fly-by-night ministries -- here today, gone
tomorrow.''
Rios would like the youth club to meet
more frequently because ``young people don't
just hang out the last Friday of every
month.'' |
PERKINS TO HOST HIP-HOP WORSHIP
SERVICE
April 13, 2005
PERKINS TO HOST HIP-HOP WORSHIP SERVICE
DALLAS (SMU) -- SMU's Perkins School of Theology
will host an outdoor Hip-Hop Worship Service at
11:30 a.m. Thursday (April 21) on the steps of
Perkins Chapel. Christian hip-hop recording artist,
La Crea, of Denton will perform, and Rev. Tiate
Carson, senior pastor of Bethel AME Church in San
Antonio, will preach.
In the event of inclement weather, the service will
be held in Selecman Hall Auditorium.
The event was conceived, planned, and will be
facilitated by the Perkins Worship Committee; Dr.
Mark Stamm, Perkins director of community worship;
and other Perkins seminarians who embrace hip-hop
culture.
The Perkins Worship Committee was supported in this
venture by the SMU Wesley Foundation and affords an
opportunity for Perkins to demonstrate the piety and
spirituality of Holy Hip Hop culture. Perkins
invites the SMU community and lovers of Christian
Hip-Hop to support this event with their presence
and participation.
Perkins School of Theology is one of five
university-related official schools of theology of
The United Methodist Church. The school was founded
in 1911 by the Methodist Episcopal Church South, now
The United Methodist Church. Degree programs include
the Master of Church Ministry, Master of Divinity,
Master of Sacred Music, Master of Theological
Studies and Doctor of Ministry degree, as well as
the Ph.D. in cooperation with SMU's Dedman College
of Humanities and Sciences.
Bringing Hip-Hop to Church
By
MARK JOHNSON
Posted: Aug. 13, 2005
For a month, the pastor cruised his neighborhood
blasting the car stereo.
The year was off to a bloody start. Homicides way up
from 2004. Killings just a few blocks from
Win-A-Soul Ministries, the faded brick church at E.
Concordia Ave. and N. Richards St., where the Rev.
David King preaches.
So
the 43-year-old pastor, tall with a shaved head,
drove past young men and women hanging out on
porches in the summer heat. He went by slow with his
windows rolled down. He made sure they heard his
music.
Their music, really. Hip-hop. Trunk-rattling bass.
Rat-a-tat rhymes.
And yet, not the same hip-hop folks blame every time
the homicide rate spikes.
Listen:
So can I get an encore,
Christ is our Lord - that's what we praise him
for
So everybody out there give Christ a roar
Now tell me what are you waiting for?
The pastor's music. The bait he used to fish for
souls.
"I
cannot catch the hip-hop generation with the old
hymns that grandma used to listen to. They're not
biting on that," King said. "It's like trying to
catch catfish with the same bait you'd use to catch
bluegill."
In
the pastor's logic, there was a simple solution to
Milwaukee's crime wave. The solution was the church.
He
saw too many young people with no connection to God,
and too many houses of God with no connection to the
young. He had an idea how to put young people in the
pews: hip-hop. The plan, supported by a handful of
other preachers, was to open the church for Friday
night gospel hip-hop services. Rappers and preachers
rock the mike.
If
the music was the problem, as some insisted, maybe
it could be the solution.
Any solution sounded good to the young men and women
on N. Buffum St. who'd been talking to the pastor
and listening to the music blasting from his car.
One hot morning, they stood chatting on a
neighborhood porch, their eyes drifting now and then
to a nearby tree decorated with teddy bears and two
dozen liquor bottles, the memorial to their slain
friend Randy "Lorenzo" Winfrey.
Winfrey was 24 and died in early July from a gunshot
wound to the head. His killer dispatched him with a
taunt: "Who's the tough guy now?"
"Music encourages people," said Telecia Johnson, a
26-year-old mother of two. "Rap music is strong."
But the combination of hip-hop beat and Christian
lyrics might reach some people, she said. "Maybe
some of us standing right here."
Demetrius Renfro, 20, put it this way: "If you can
dance to something with bad lyrics, why not dance to
something with good lyrics?"
The music called gospel rap or holy hip-hop has come
many miles these last 15 years, from the small
churches and community centers to concerts in the
new 5,000-seat mega-churches and even sometimes in
the arenas usually booked for acts such as Madonna
and Britney Spears.
Although the recording industry has yet to measure
the sales of gospel rap, there are signs the music
is starting to come into its own. Sales of gospel
music almost doubled in the last decade from $381
million in 1995 to $700 million last year, according
to the Gospel Music Association. The rock segment,
which includes holy hip-hop, rose 125% in the last
year alone. Grits, a Nashville-based gospel rap
group, has sold 140,000 copies of its 2002 CD, "Art
of Translation."
M.
Sean Agnew has tracked the music since the early
1990s when he met gospel rap pioneers DC Talk while
touring with his own band.
"I've always felt that they were very, very good
lyrically, but from a rap standpoint, the tone and
cadence never matched up to the innovation," said
Agnew, 37-year-old CEO of Blue Metallic
Entertainment Group, a Chicago-based marketing and
promotions company in the entertainment industry.
Now, holy hip-hop bands have made a leap forward in
rap and production skills, he said. "They're going
toe-to-toe with a lot of the secular artists."
Still, the gospel rappers aren't exactly slugging it
out with their secular rivals when it comes to
sales.
"I
just think there's not enough of the product out
there," said Joey Elwood, president of Goatee
Records, a label with five gospel rap acts. "I
think, too, that the gatekeepers at all levels -
record labels, promoters, radio stations, booking
agents, club owners - there's just not that many
engaged with that genre."
The exception: churches, a place where gospel rap
can offer something the secular version does not,
Agnew said.
"In church, people would have this emotional outlet.
They would be emotionally drained. They'd pass out
and someone would have to catch them. With rap, with
many people we haven't given them that outlet."
With Jesus Christ there is no reason to fear,
Because he's coming back in time, this is the
season and year
We live by faith even though we never seen him
appear
He never breaks a promise, giving us reason to
cheer
Rapper Shannon Eric Vick wrote those words. Stage
name Eric Cross (Cross stands for "Christ
Rose On Sabbath Sunday"), the 24-year-old Vick said
he was born out of wedlock and didn't meet his birth
father until the age of 17.
Vick grew up in Milwaukee influenced by the music of
LL Cool J, Eric B. & Rakim, and later Tupac Shakur
and Notorious B.I.G.
They weren't throwing down rhymes about peace, faith
and Christ, particularly Shakur. Still, Vick found
in rap a way of competing, or fighting without
fists.
"People want to battle so it was a battle, a
freestyle battle, to see who can connect the words,
who has cadence, who has the proper gestures and the
right thing to say at the right time," Vick said.
"I
would have guys come at me and they might say
statements that were kind of bad, I guess you could
say. I would always keep it clean, but at the same
time be aggressive with the lyrics."
Vick's early raps were solidly secular:
I was rolling in my 6-4 number one rate,
Girls are looking fine and I'm feeling great.
Although he went to church, he didn't give much
thought to the conflicting messages he heard from
the preachers and the rappers.
"It wasn't until later on when I met my wife that I
realized that what is preached and what is given
through hip-hop, they don't correlate," Vick said.
"The two don't match. And that's when I realized
there was a calling for me as an artist of hip-hop
to clean it up and give people a new perspective on
what hip-hop is." In 2001, Vick decided, as he put
it, "to show the world the true hip-hop." He began
rapping about his personal battles against
temptation and about the return of Jesus. He
recorded a CD. The cover bore his logo: a silhouette
of the rapper kneeling by a cross, "being humble."
Vick started performing in churches. Those who heard
him never seemed to mind that he was bringing God
into hip-hop. Maybe, he said, it was because many
hip-hop fans had gone to church at least sometime in
their youth, even if they'd later stopped.
"When they hear it," said Vick, "it brings them back
to their roots, to where they started."
They were hearing it on N. 22nd St., near Center,
where Serita Ward-Campbell was running 3G Records
out of her house (the Gs stand for God's Gift
Gospel). She formed the label to record her own
brand of holy hip-hop.
Born in North Carolina to a mother addicted to
crack, Ward-Campbell was still an infant when her
mom began taking her to smoke-filled clubs and
parties. She was removed from her mother's care,
sent to foster homes and finally, at the age of 2,
adopted by an aunt.
Her birth mother died of an overdose when
Ward-Campbell was a teenager. By then she had
already found a place to channel her sadness: music.
"I
started doing what they call crying on paper," she
said. "Instead of shedding tears, I wrote it on
paper."
Ward-Campbell sang and learned keyboards. She played
trumpet in church and eventually learned the tuba,
saxophone and clarinet.
At
13, she wrote her first song, "Put Your Trust in
Jesus Christ."
In
1998, she moved to Milwaukee, where she met her
husband, Rodney Campbell, a pastor. She started 3G
Records and set up a small studio in her home
because she didn't have enough money to record in
other people's studios.
"My husband and I invested every dime we had (in the
studio)," she said. More than $30,000 over the last
five years.
Her first CD, "Miracle Worker," was produced in
2001. It sold maybe 100 copies. Three CDs later, her
sales have totaled somewhere between 3,000 and
5,000.
Gradually, Ward-Campbell added other gospel rap acts
to her label: Day-Day, Anointed Prophet, Moe' Soul
and others. She performed in some churches and was
turned away by others.
"I
got rejected by many churches," she said. "I heard
people say, 'We don't want that kind of music in the
church' and 'That hip-hop is (music) of the devil.'
"
But that hip-hop was absent from her words:
Dear Lord, I wanna thank you
For savin' me
Raisin' me
Baptizing me
And filling me
Protecting me
With your grace and your mercy
Long before the Rev. David King invited the rappers
to his church, the pastor had shown a willingness to
seek new ways of reaching the young.
King, who had survived sexual abuse and drugs in
childhood, became a Baptist minister in the
mid-1990s and founded Win-A-Soul Ministries in 1998.
In the summer of 2000, in the midst of a 40-day
"soul drive," he began leading members of the
congregation into some of the city's rough
neighborhoods on "midnight raids." Past midnight
they'd confront young men and women bound for
taverns, drug houses and street prostitution. They'd
try to get the lost souls to commit their lives to
Christ.
This year, the pastor heard Vick rap at a block
party in his neighborhood. As he listened, King
said, "I knew Eric was anointed by God to do what he
was doing. Not only his beat, his music, but I felt
his heart."
At
the same party, Day-Day and other gospel rap artists
from 3G records performed. Afterwards, the pastor
asked Vick's help in offering a gospel hip-hop
service at the church.
"I
thought about the Pied Piper," King said. "He went
after folks and ended up getting them through
music."
Friday evening, 8 p.m., sun sinking, cars cruising,
music pumping.
The pews filling in Rev. King's box of a church - 30
people by the time the beat began. The pastor handed
the mike to Daytona "Day-Day" Rhodes.
Ain't no party like a Holy Ghost party
Cause a Holy Ghost party don't stop!
Ye-aah!
Now, the congregation:
Ain't no party like a Holy Ghost party
Cause a Holy Ghost party don't stop!
Ye-aah! Ye-aah!
Rhodes, 15, shuffled and hopped as he rapped, his
knees pumping up and down like a metronome.
Say 'He's Christ the king.'
He's Christ the King!
Bass rumbled from the speakers. The folks in the
pews - now 40, half of them children and teens -
danced and cheered. Kids from the neighborhood
peeked in the open church doors, curious.
Finally, the rapper handed the mike back to the
pastor. King wore a T-shirt that said, "Follow Jesus
and He will make you Fishers of Men."
"How many of you all realize that religious people
say hip-hop is bringing the world into the church?
How many of you all have heard that?" King said.
Oh yeah. Oh yeah.
"But what it actually is: We're not bringing the
world into the church. We're taking the church into
the world."
Amen. Yeah.
The pastor continued: "It's nothing wrong with the
beat, it's nothing wrong with the music. What was
wrong was the words. It's the words that plant the
seeds in our children's heads. That's why a little
boy at the age of 6 can go up to a little girl and
call her a B-, because he got it off a song. . . .
But now we've got these young brothers and they're
rapping about Jesus Christ."
Oh yeah.
Back and forth the mike goes: preacher, rapper,
preacher, rapper.
In
the final hour of three, King introduced Vick by his
stage name, Eric Cross.
"I
married as a virgin. My wife was a virgin," Vick
said, offering testimony before rap. "We waited
until we were married. We fought (the temptation)
and we fought and we fought."
Then he was off, the rhymes flying from his tongue,
his finger pointing to the heavens. In the pews,
they were on their feet, more than 50 people now.
Christ is our Lord - that's what we praise him
for
So everybody out there give Christ a roar
From the Aug. 14, 2005, editions of the
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Hip Hop 'A Voice for Justice'
Covenant News
Hip Hop 'A Voice for Justice'
By Stan Friedman
CHICAGO, IL (March 24) - Church property may "abut a
street," but far too often churches are failing to
reach people "on the street." Instead, "There's a
vast gap between the church and the street," said
Pastor Phil Jackson on Saturday in addressing North
Park University's symposium, "Hip Hop: A Voice for
Justice."
Attendees were broken into groups for a lengthy
discussion, during which they were asked to discuss
where they found justice issues in hip hop (the
accompanying photo shows a group of students with
Precise). They also heard from a panel of speakers,
to whom they were able to address questions.
Precise and Group Discussion The biggest injustice
discussed, however, was the refusal of much of the
church to use culturally relevant means of ministry,
including hip hop, that have proven effective in
reaching people who otherwise might not give the
Gospel a hearing. "Every other week, we're having to
bury cats, then there's more wounded people, people
being harassed by the police," said Jackson, who
pastors the Evangelical Covenant Church plant known
as The House in Chicago and served on the panel.
"We've got dudes who can preach their brains out,
but can't do ministry."
"There's a lack of urgency," Jackson continued.
"There's not a zeal for the people. There's a heart
for 'churchianity,' but not Christianity."
"We have to figure out what is culturally sensitive
and what is essential to the Gospel," said
Kaziputalimba Joshua, North Park Theological
Seminary professor of justice ministries and
director of the Center for Justice Ministries. "The
church has to do its work with attention to the
sounds and the voices that are coming from the
street. If the church is going to reach the street,
it must be as diverse as the street," Joshua
observed.
Included on the panel were Corey Red and Precise, a
New York hip-hop duo who are supported by a label
run by Covenant Pastor David Holder. Corey Red and
Precise have the street credentials, with the former
giving his life to Christ when he feared he might
die from a knife wound that punctured a major
artery.
Precise suggested that the church keeps away people
from the street by not meeting people at the street,
as well as having "a preconceived idea of how they
should look." He laments that the church too often
is concerned more with the outer appearance of those
entering its doors than with the condition of their
inner life. "Let's let God be God," Precise said.
"Decently and in order, yes, but let's not have our
ideas on top of that."
Corey Red With reference to hip hop that often is
played on the radio, Corey Red told the audience,
"You're smarter than what they're rapping about."
The duo lamented that while some churches are saying
good things about Christian rap, they aren't using
it or supporting it so that it can be noticed.
Programmers at secular radio stations ask, "Why
should we play you when your own people won't play
you?"
"God's not sending us to make rap conversions,"
Precise said during an interview, explaining that if
people do not like hip hop, that is fine with them
(the duo). They just want an opportunity to reach
those who do. Winners of a 2002 Holy Hip Hop award,
the duo has shared the stage with well-known artists
such as Yolanda Adams and Mary Mary. Their album,
Resistance Iz Futile, has received positive reviews.
The symposium was followed by an evening of hip hop
from various groups and individuals at The House,
which raised nearly $1,000 that will be directed to
Covenant World Relief to assist people in Darfur,
Sudan, according to Ginny Olson, co-director of the
Center for Youth Ministries. The audience also
viewed a video from the nationally broadcast PBS
program Religion & Ethics Weekly that focused on the
church in February. To read more about hip hop and
view the PBS video, visit PBS.
The Evangelical Covenant Church - - Copyright 2005
=5101 N. Francisco Ave. Chicago, IL 60625
Ministers give gospel a hip hop
beat to reach young souls
Ministers give gospel a hip hop beat to reach young
souls
By WENDY ISOM
Apr 17 2005
At 8 p.m. on the fourth Friday of each month, youth
are flocking to the Faith Deliverance Center for
Freestyle Friday in the Hamilton Hills Shopping
Center in Jackson. It's part of a thriving ''holy
hip hop'' ministry that is reaching the younger
generation by combining hip hop culture and holy
Scripture.
Admission is free, and youth are encouraged to be
''free in the Spirit'' as well. They are ministered
to in an environment that's more like a club setting
than a church. There they are free to dress in
what's comfortable to them and dance to the sounds
of holy hip hop, music performed by Christian hip
hop artists. There are also biblical games and
prizes.
And so far it's working. Youth of all ages and
ethnicities continue to come. Over three services,
more than 100 youth have turned their lives over to
Christ after experiencing the holy hip hop services
in Jackson, said Charles Wallace, pastor of the
Faith Deliverance Center, where the Freestyle
Fridays are held.
Mr. Del, a former rapper with Three 6 Mafia, pastors
City of Refuge, a holy hip hop church in Memphis. He
is the visionary behind the holy hip hop services in
West Tennessee.
''This is the most innovative thing that has come to
Jackson,'' Mr. Del said in a recent interview with
The Jackson Sun. Anticipating more growth, Mr. Del
has plans to eventually move the holy hip hop
services to the Carl Perkins Civic Center. A holy
hip hop radio show is in the works. The rap artist
and minister said he feels called to ''use hip hop
and Christ to win the world.''
Hip hop is a culture originated by young blacks that
not only relates to certain forms of music - now
primarily associated with rap - but also relates to
fashion, language and social interaction.
The hip hop culture is a major influence among the
majority of U.S. youth, Mr. Del said.
''Seventy percent of hip hop music is bought by
white people,'' he said.
Mr. Del and Wallace, the pastor of Faith Deliverance
Center, sat down to talk with The Sun about the
future of holy hip hop services in Jackson.
Question: How long have you been holding holy hip
hop services at Faith Deliverance Center in Jackson?
Mr. Del: Since September 2004.
Q: What do you say to people, including some
ministers and parents, who don't think that hip hop
belongs in the church?
Wallace: Out of three (holy hip hop) services, 111
have got saved. While they're complaining, we're
doing God's work. I'm too excited and too motivated
to worry about the haters.
Mr. Del: We're actually doing what the Bible says.
He said: ''Go out into the world.'' The majority of
the people we want to get to will not come to
church.
Q: Two studies released earlier this week, one from
UCLA and one from the Jewish networking group,
Reboot, show that youth in America are very
interested in developing their spirituality. But the
studies say that youth are more likely to explore
their spirituality in non-traditional ways. Why do
you think that is?
Mr. Del: Religion and tradition has never catered to
young people. I remember when I was younger in the
church, it was like ''sit at the back of the church
and children don't say nothing.'' For so long, we've
been turned away if we have on jeans or wear
earrings. They're looking at other vehicles.
Q: What have you found that young people really want
from a church experience?
Wallace: The kids really just want to be accepted.
We want them to open up and let them have a say-so
their way. I never read in the Bible that you had to
have a neck tie or a suit on.
Visit talkback.jacksonsun.com to share your
thoughts.
- Wendy Isom, (731) 425-9782
If you go The community is invited to attend a holy
hip hop service featuring Mr. Del at 8 p.m. April 22
at Faith Deliverance Center, 581H Old Hickory Blvd.
(in the Hamilton Hills Shopping Center). Admission
is free.
On the Net To learn more about the holy hip hop
ministry, visit www.holysouth.com
About Mr. Del
# Name: Mr. Del
# Age: '20-something'
# Hometown: Memphis
# Ministry: Mr. Del, former rapper with Three 6
Mafia, got saved in April 2000 and left the rap
group to start the Holy South ministry in 2001. Now,
he is the pastor of City of Refuge, a hip hop church
in Memphis.
About Wallace
# Name: Charles Wallace
# Age: 47
# Hometown: Jackson
# Ministry: Wallace has been the pastor of the Faith
Deliverance Center for the past 10 years. He
embraces the 'holy hip hop' ministry.
Copyright 2005 The Jackson Sun - 245 W. Lafayette
Street, Jackson, Tennessee
Interview with "THE BODY"
Contributed by:
Min. Anita Jarrell,
Staff Writer, Street Chronicles, The 411
This morning, I had the honor of getting to know
"THE BODY" a little better. THE BODY is an
innovative group of soldiers on guard for Christ, as
you'll discover for yourself as you check out their
responses in this interview. Be encouraged and
empowered.
Min. Anita Jarrell: Who are you?
The Body: We are "The Body". A Hip-Hop collective
out of Brooklyn N.Y. The members are Nzingha,
Missionary Men, NeoRock, Paradox, G-Force, Syntax
and Mr. Skidz.
Min. Anita Jarrell: Why did you choose to do what
you do?
The Body:
-- NEOROCK - Simply because I was made for this. I
just have too much fun doing it.
-- SYNTAX - I did not even know I could do this
rapping thing until one of my GETGOSPEL peeps asked
me to "spit" some lyrics. After that, it was a
"rap".
-- JAHDIEL - I do what I do because I love Rap, but
not the way people do it now. I believe I could put
it into better use especially when delivering the
message with each song.
-- NZINGHA - This helps me to use my skills and
talents to let people know that I'm passionate about
what I do.
-- MR. SKIDZ - WELL IT WASNT DAT I CHOSE IT. I WAS
CALLED TO DO THIS. WHENEVER I CHECKED OUT MY TALENTS
IT ALWAYS POINTED TO THIS.
-- PARADOX - I guess the best response is that "I'm
driven". The ideas come to me all the time and I
right them down or do a scratch recording as quickly
as possible before I lose the idea. Music wasn't my
original career path but I'm happy that I became
true to myself and started taking my talents
seriously.
Min. Anita Jarrell: What has been your biggest
challenge as a soldier for Christ?
-- MONK - Women, when they see that you're doing
something special (music), they see you in a whole
different light but they approach you in the wrong
way. They don't want to take the time to get to know
you, they just want to have a relationship. A lot of
women, when they see a young guy doing big things,
they want to be a part of his life and what
he'sdoing. Like groupies. Sometimes I feel like they
don't respect my mission, probably because they
don't respect themselves.
-- G-FORCE - My biggest challenge is being a human
being who makes stupid mistakes everyday. The
challenge is not making excuses.
-- NZINGHA - My biggest challenges are making good
music and living the lifestyle that people who don't
know Christ can relate too without compromising my
views.
-- MR. SKIDZ - STAYIN' CONSISTENT. TRYING TO KEEP
CREATIVE AND APPEALING WITHOUT COMPROMISING JESUS'S
PRINCIPLES.
-- NEOROCK - Learning how to love like Christ,
unconditionally. Its hard, I am not going to lie.
-- PARADOX - Staying balanced. Somehow, our day to
day challenges can bring us down if we don't keep
them in check. I saw a lot of people quietly drift
away from God over the years. You can be so
concerned with reaching your personal goals that
things like prayer and Bible study get lost in the
chaos. It's one of the side effects of a Rat Race
Society. On the other hand I saw a lot of people
become spiritual fanatics to the point that they
lost the ability to think for themselves. It's like
they have to have a week of prayer and fasting to
decide whether they should have toast or pancakes
for breakfast, or if it's even Godly to have
breakfast. Their faith has been replaced by fear and
there's no joy in the Lord.
Min. Anita Jarrell: When is the last time you all
performed and how'd it go and when's the next time
you'll perform? Give us some dates, some times, and
some words to describe how you feel about it all.
The Body:
-- SYNTAX - The last time we performed, the acts
that went on before us blew out the monitors. As a
result, we could not really hear ourselves during
our performance, but that whole situation reminded
me of how much God blesses us. I think we gave a
great performance, even with handicap of no
monitors. I think we did great.
-- NZINGHA - I do what I do all the time. This is
what life is about now.
-- PARADOX - Typically we perform every week or
every other week. We intend to perform more
frequently now that the album is done. We don't make
much appearances when working on a project. Our last
performance was cool. The sound system was real
clear although we had some issues with the mics. The
audience said that they heard everything we said so
it was good to me. We enjoyed it and they enjoyed
it.
Min. Anita Jarrell: Where did Jesus find you and
what were you up to that day?
The Body:
-- SYNTAX - He always knew where I was but I just
had to accept that fact. It was during a deep
conversation I had, with the woman who eventually
became my wife, that led to me accept Jesus for the
second time.
-- G-FORCE - Honestly, I get lost often. He comes
looking for me everyday...
-- JAHDIEL - My cousins and uncles would always talk
to me about the Bible, but would always tell me to
read it for my self. I was about 17 years old when I
was convicted and I kept on reading until it changed
my life.
-- MR. SKIDZ - WELL I CANT REALLY WRITE WHAT I WAS
DOING WHEN I FELT DA LORD REALLY CALL ME, BUT LET'S
JUST SAY HE SAVED MY LIFE, AND HE CAME RIGHT ON
TIME!
-- PARADOX - I was fine and then all of a sudden I
wanted to change my life. It's weird because people
always tried to get me to go to church but I was
never interested. And the few churches I did visit
with friends didn't compel me to come back. I had
Christians, Muslims and New Agers giving me books
and pamphlets about their faiths and why the other
people are no good. I thought that all of the
material was interesting but only the content of the
Bible seemed real to me. I keptreading and decided
that that's the direction I'd go. I was eventually
baptized and here I am now.
Min. Anita Jarrell: How are you gonna or how have
you already moved past the stereotypes associated
with Holy Hip Hop artists to be for real for Christ?
-- MONK - We moved past the stereotype by not
escaping reality with our lyrics and we give people
songs that they can relate too. Our songs are not
just for the Christian audience but for everyone.
-- SYNTAX - First, I do not say Holy Hip-Hop. It is
Hip-Hop. I would say it is positive music, or
something like that, if I had to classify it. We
pass the stereotype by us making music for everyone,
not just for church people.
-- G-FORCE -- It was easy to move past the
stereotype and be real because Christ was real. The
stereotypes are ongoing and I'm not sure we will
ever get past them.
-- NEOROCK - Simply, I am not a Holy Hip-Hop artist.
To be honest with you I hate that title. No matter
what style of music I choose to do its still music
to me, no matter what I am saying on it. I hate
titles like "Gangsta Rap", "Positive Hip-Hop", "Holy
Hip Hop","Gospel Hip-Hop", etc. Hip-Hop to me is
freedom, to express yourself in art like no other
type of music. To me, no matter what you say its
still Hip-Hop.
-- NZINGHA - I stay being myself.
-- MR. SKIDZ - WELL WE NEVER WERE DA TYPE TO LISTEN
AND MODEL OURSELVES AFTER ANYONE OR ANY FAD DATS
OUT. WAT WE DO IS HARNESS OUR INNER EXPERIENCE AND
CONVICTIONS AND JUST LET IT COME OUT DESPITE WAT
PEOPLE MAY THINK AND JUST MAKE IT SOUND GOOD, YOU
KNOW?!?!
-- PARADOX - People know I'm real because they know
my history, They know I made a choice to be
Christian but I'm not a Holy Hip-Hop artist. I was
already doing this before I knew HHH existed. I
didn't even know that Holy Hip-Hop was a separate
type of music before 2003. I always thought it was
just Hip-Hop from a different point of view, but as
I kept
reading about it I realized that HHH has it's own
history, style and sound. Since none of us came up
in the HHH circle we don't have any of the
stereotypes associated with it. People just see us
as Hip-Hop.
7. In your own words, describe the perfect Holy
Hip-Hop concert.
-- MONK - A concert where everyone is listening to
your words and enjoying it as well as edified by
what you brought to them. Also that it's fun as
well.
-- SYNTAX - That way everyone would come (the gospel
is for people who don't know God). Then we would rap
some real deal songs that everyone can relate to.
Our songs would say what we represent.
-- G-FORCE - Everyone would be invited.
-- MR. SKIDZ - WOW! THE PERFECT HHH CONCERT WOULD BE
TO HAVE ALL OF DA HOTTEST HHH MC'S LEAVE ALL OF
THEIR EGOS OUT DA DOOR AND INVITE ALL EVEN SOME OF
SECULAR MC'S OVER TO PARTICIPATE AND HAVE DA MEDIA
COME OUT. EVERY ONE WOULD THINK TO SEE SOME TYPE OF
COMPETITION, BUT WHAT THEY WITNESS IS DA HOLY SPIRIT
FILL ALL OF DA MC'S AND A TOTAL LIFE TRANSFORMING
EVENT DAT EVEN DA SECULAR HIP HOP WORLD BEGINS TO
ADOPT. DA MEDIA BROADCAST IT AND DA WORLD SEES DAT
GOD IS USING HIP HOP TO CHANGE PEOPLE AND SPREAD DA
GOSPEL OF LOVE (JESUS) TO MANKIND.
-- JAHDIEL - If a lot of the songs performed had a
message and each song touched someone - everyone was
convicted and everyone enjoyed and everyone realized
who Jesus was is.
Min. Jarrell's 5 Good Sense
(worth about 5 good cents)
Whoa. Can you feel it? Did that not move you? It
sure moved me- toward more dedication to my Savior,
Jesus Christ. You just have to visit the websites
listed for "The Body". You just have to find out
where they're gonna be and get yourself there asap.
Don't miss out on the opportunity to be blessed and
de-stressed.
I always say that the best parts of a song are the
melodies and lyrics behind the melodies and lyrics.
There's nothing better than a heart surrendered to
the Almighty God.
****CHECK OUT SOUNDCLIPS OF THE NEW ALBUM BY 'THE
BODY'!!!****
http://getgospel.com/promo.html
GETGOSPEL Ministries / Records -
http://getgospel.com
JAHROCKN Productions - http://jahrockn.com
Renee Hampton Media - http://reneehamptonmedia.com
YAHAHAMEDIA - http://yahahamedia.com
Contributed by:
Min. Anita Jarrell,
Staff Writer, Street Chronicles The 411
Click here to
skip directly to Bishop "A".
Written by
Min. Anita L.
Jarrell,
Staff Writer,
Street
Chronicles The 411
I would like to first thank God for all the love He
has shown me by sending His Son to the cross for me.
I thank Jesus for being willing to go through with
God’s plan for His life. I thank my producer
BlancO aka Oscar White III for all his heart felt
help, Unc and T over at Trigate Studio, Dove Media
and Joey Garza for mastering, my grandparents A.C.
and Mable Allen for raising me, my mother Christian
Allen, my father/stepmother Eddie and Patricia Smith
for all they do for me, my Uncle Lloyd Allen for
teaching me how to play drums because that’s what
brought me back to Christ, my mother and my Uncles
for inspiring me in music with their band “The
Funk Factory”, my wife Destiny Allen and my kids
Travon, Antinette, Marcus and Kamaria for putting up
with me and being my audience, my godson Alex and my
niece and nephew Tashara and Ronald Bradley for
being the background for my first show, also my
brothers and sisters for their support. I would like
to give a special thanks to my public supporters and
pray that I continue to be a blessing to them
through D.O.C. Records Inc.
www.docrecordsinc.org
Min. Anita L. Jarrell's 5 Good Sense
Disclaimer . . . my opinion is worth about 5 good
cents, but for at least that much, here we go.
Bishop "A" does not need my endorsement. He has
already been chosen by God and anointed with the
Holy Ghost to go forth in obedience. He is
determined to destroy the citadels that have been
erected and furnished by Satan. Isn't that cool?
Check out his mission statement. . .
Mission Statement: D.O.C. Records is on a mission to
take over the party scene! Since the dawn of the
music industry, there has not been a Christian
record label willing to venture into Christian party
music. However, D.O.C. Records is willing and
prepared to carry out this much needed assignment.
Powerful.
Don't forget to support this warrior.
Here's the release information that can be found on
his website as well. . .
On February 25, 2005 D.O.C. Records released its
first single entitled "Head, Shoulders, Knees &
Toes". The song was written and performed by Bishop
"A" (Anthony A. Allen) the CEO/President of D.O.C.
Records and produced by BlancO (Oscar White III).
The single also has an inspirational song on it
entitled Prodigal Child, which Bishop "A" says is
part of D.O.C. Records' call.
KWWJ 1360am located in Baytown Texas was the first
to air the single on February 26, 2005. The single
received a lot of positive feed back from the KWWJ
listeners. Bishop "A" also performed the song live
for the first time on February 26 at the 32nd
Anniversary Celebration for the Inspirational Souls
of Harmony. The celebration was given at Canaan Land
Baptist Church located in Houston Texas. The
audience found this new style of music quite
entertaining and applauded the mission.
Album Release: D.O.C. Records will release its first
album in June of 2005, which will be entitled Bishop
"A" and the D.O.C. Party Squad - "Got The Whole
Church Crunk". This album will be produced by BlancO
and written and performed by Bishop "A" and the
D.O.C. Party Squad. The Album will feature several
Christian Hip-Hop and R&B artist like Donyale,
Praise, Paul Revere, The Soloist, T-Wrecks and Big
Texas. Bishop's mission on this album is to be an
example to other record labels and artists that God
has impregnated with the same vision. Bishop says
he's on his way to start a revolution in the
nightclub industry and believes that he won't be by
himself.
I know there's at least One on his side. Guess who?
Contributed by:
Min. Anita L.
Jarrell
Staff Writer,
Street
Chronicles The 411
Written by
Min. Anita L. Jarrell,
Staff Writer, Street Chronicles The 411
Recently, I had the distinct privilege of reviewing
the website of Holy Hip Hop Artist, XROSS. The
graphics and artwork are superb. The message behind
it all is supreme, to say the least. Videos . . .
Music . . . a Live Interview . . . He brings the
goods. Let's go on tour through the heart of this
servant.
Min. Anita L. Jarrell: Who are you?
XROSS: XROSS (pronounced cross) I am an artist and
the president and CEO of One Way Entertainment, an
urban gospel record label. I live in Minneapolis,
Minnesota. I am from Louisville, Kentucky.
Min. Anita L. Jarrell: Why did you choose to do what
you do?
XROSS: I didn't choose to minister the gospel, God
choose me. I actually ran from his calling. No
matter how pre-occupied I was with something, God
would come to me at the most uncomfortable and
embarrassing times and speak, I wasn’t one of
those people who got convicted at church by hearing
the word of God preached. I was out in the world
having a good time, living and indulging in sin. Now
that I am saved and filled with the spirit of
Christ, I am able to look at worldly things thru the
spirit and see how a whole generation is being
misled, and pulled totally away from God. When God
revealed my purpose and perfected my gift I then
accepted it and went forth to deliver it.
Min. Anita L. Jarrell: What has been your biggest
challenge as a soldier for Christ?
XROSS: From a spiritual perspective, my greatest
challenge, is accepting the fact that I have no
control over what I do now, and that Christ is in
total control of my life. I have willingly given all
of my rights over to Christ. It's challenging
because, the closer you get to God, the worse you
view yourself and the less you see of yourself.
Therefore, allowing Christ to be the leader in your
everyday walk, life, decisions, ways, thoughts,
actions, and choices is frightening to me because I
now realize that I depend on Christ completely and
if He removes His hand from me, then there is
nowhere for me to go, but down, to hit rock bottom.
So I am training myself to not focus on where He is
bringing me from, but rather to give Him praise and
worship for where He is taking me. To be with Christ
is to be absent from the body. From an industry
perspective, the greatest challenge is securing
capital to fund a global vision.
Min. Anita L. Jarrell: When have you done your thing
and when's the next time you'll be doing your thing?
XROSS: I just came off of a performance in
Minneapolis, Minnesota at Shiloh Temple
International Ministries for Easter service with
over 3,000 in attendance. It was absolutely
wonderful. My next engagement is scheduled for
Louisville, Kentucky (home) during derby weekend.
Min. Anita L. Jarrell: Where did Jesus find you and
what were you up to that day?
XROSS: I was out in Orange County, California;
Ballin' and out of control. Jesus spoke to me one
night when I was driving along the Pacific Coast
Highway getting high. He gently asked me one simple
question. "Are you happy?" Of course, my answer was
no and from His personal visit to me I broke. I then
realized that the norm was not for me and that I was
called to do something exceptional that had never
been done, which was to minister the gospel through
Hip-Hop to the masses. I left my job as the COO of a
secular hip-hop record label and moved back to
Minneapolis. During that time, I put myself on lock
down at home for a year and just read the word of
God. I didn’t even have a desire to go outside.
When the time came to record my debut album “The
God” I moved diligently. You can purchase it at:
www.xrossmusic.com
Min. Anita L. Jarrell: How are you gonna or how have
you already moved past the sterotypes associated
with Holy Hip Hop artists to be for real for Christ?
XROSS: Jesus said in his word that I would be
persecuted for preaching the gospel, but that I
should rejoice in it for his namesake. I don’t
sweat the stereotypes because Christ justifies me,
and I don’t look for my validation from men any
longer. I love people, but I don’t look for man's
approval to carryout the passion God has placed in
my heart. I don’t expect for everyone to accept it
and pat me on the back. I know God works in
mysterious ways, I know that God has not revealed
nor done all that He is going to do in the time that
He has allowed us to witness. We are living in a
Joshua generation, God is doing things that have
never been done before and I am willing to ride with
Him until my mission is complete.
Min. Anita L. Jarrell: In your own words, describe
the perfect Holy Hip Hop concert.
XROSS: When people from all walks of life, colors,
and creeds turn out in the masses to hear the
unexpected. . . When sinners are baptized in Jesus'
name and they receive the gift of the Holy Spirit as
a result of being convicted at a Holy Hip-Hop
concert . . . When believers of the Gospel seek a
closer relationship with God as a result of
attending a Holy Hip-Hop concert . . . When people
purchase Holy Hip-Hop CD’s and paraphernalia to
take home with them afterwards to continuously get
fed the word of God. . . When the ministers of the
Gospel perform their songs that have Christ at the
forefront . . .
To read more or book XROSS go to: www.xrossmusic.com
or www.sonicbids.com.xross
Min. Jarrell's 5 Good Sense
Here's my disclaimer. You know this is worth about 5
good cents, but for what it's worth . . . XROSS is a
work of art. From the streets and back with power
from on high, this child of God expresses only what
God places within his spirit. Whether bringing the
house down with forceful lyrics or taking it back up
with focused praise, He brings along with him the
presence of God. He doesn't need my accolades, but
because his God is worthy of praise, I want you to
remember this dude's name and don't forget to drop
some change.
On several occasions, I've communicated with this
overcomer and was encouraged each time. In a time
when men and women of God all over the land are
being exposed for being hypocrites and swindlers,
it's nice to come across a true soldier. It's a
breath of fresh air to meet a brother who is down to
earth, but heavenly minded. That does not happen
everyday, does it? Keep your eyes on this one. Don't
forget to support him spiritually and financially.
Here are some things you may not have heard about
him yet . . . He has a real name. His mom did not
name him XROSS, but our Daddy did. Did you catch
that? He was born in Kentucky, but raised in
Missouri. Now, he lives in Minnesota.
He faithfully serves at Shiloh Temple International
in Minnesota, where he is cultivated and developed
in his intimate relationship with God. "It was at
the cross that I got my deliverance, " says XROSS.
When He received the baptism of the Holy Spirit, he
was further convinced about his calling to reach the
multitudes with his new name, "XROSS".
God anointed him to play the drums in the 3rd grade
and he went to a Holiness church with his
grandmother because he felt compelled by God. How
many 3rd graders are feelin' church like that? I
know I wasn't. Although he grew up in church, he
holds tightly to his experience with the Holy Spirit
as the propeller to his mission. From all of the
experiences good and bad was birthed "The God", his
debut album. Let me warn you that XROSS does not at
all sound like a rookie- in rhythm or in verse.
He says that God has his back. I dare you to listen
to one of his songs or watch one of his videos and
see if you don't immediately agree. His overall
message to those who don't know Christ is
repentance, baptism, and being born again. You can't
get any better than that.
He is liked and loved by many already- only hated by
the foolish of spirit. My niece bobbed her 11 year
old head to one of his hits, "Who's Your Daddy",
which she heard recently on one of the major
Christian television networks. When she found out I
was communicating with XROSS, she got excited. That
little girl has a triple dose of discernment. When I
saw how excited she was, I knew that XROSS was
something special. You're gonna have to listen for
yourself, though. Get your own blessing. Then share
it with someone.
Tough as nails . . .
Gentle as a lamb . . .
XROSS is a worshipper of THE GREAT I AM.
To read more or book XROSS go to: www.xrossmusic.com
or www.sonicbids.com.xross
Written by:
Min. Anita L. Jarrell
Staff Writer, Street Chronicles . . . The 411
On the 24th of March this year, I had the privilege
of getting to know one of God's sons a little
better. I asked him a few questions. He kept giving
me the same answer within the context of a few
words. That answer for him in a word is "Jesus".
He's for real. Check the verse . . .
Min. Anita L. Jarrell: Who are you?
Sincere Israel: Sincere Israel C.E.O. OF
ProdigalSonz Innertainment
Minister and prophet of Yahweh the Most High
Bondservant of Yashua Hamashiach (Jesus Christ the
Messiah)
Min. Anita L. Jarrell: Why did you choose to do what
you do?
Sincere Israel: Hip Hop chose me. I have always done
this form of
music as well as many others.
Min. Anita L. Jarrell: What has been your biggest
challenge as a
soldier for Christ?
Sincere Israel: Conquering my past and temptations
in the
flesh. . . to remain patient waiting for God's
will
to be done . . . to not let MY Passion override HIS
direction.
Min. Anita L. Jarrell: When have you done your thing
and when's the
next time you'll be doing your thing?
Sincere Israel: I've preached and performed at
various churches in
various states with some well known artists as well
as local artists of those areas. This ministry was
one of those select few chosen by Holy Hip Hop.com
that ministered at the United States Pentagon in
Washington, D.C. on December 12, 2003 along with
Corey Red & Precise, Gospel Gangstas, Platinum
Souls, Street Sweepers, Flavor Alliance, DJ. Lace
and DJ. Halfman.
My Next event is Saturday March 26, 2005 6pm
Fountain of Life Church
622 Broad St. Newark, NJ
To see my calendar log onto:
www.sonicbids.com/SincereIsrael
Min. Anita L. Jarrell: Where did Jesus find you and
what were you
up to that day?
Sincere Israel: Jesus found me July 25th 1999. I was
homeless and
facing 11 years in prison for a gun charge in New
Jersey and an Aggravated Assault and Battery Charge
in Oklahoma.
I was set up by my best friend of 25 years.
Jesus saved a Gang Leader
(Crip Affiliate- Leader of the Bulldog Posse in OK.)
Drug Trafficing Cocaine & Marijuana Dealer, Stick
up Kid, Whoremonger, Adulterer, Muslim, Zulu Nation
Member, Suicidal, Demonically Oppressed, Ninja
Black Magic Kungfu Instructor, House Burglar,
Alcoholic since 15 years old, Backslider that
taught kids in the park that the Bible was written
by Shakespeare.
Min. Anita L. Jarrell: How are you gonna or how have
you already
moved past the sterotypes associated with
Holy Hip Hop artists to be for real for
Christ?
Sincere Israel: I do not let traditions judge me nor
hinder me from
doing what I've been called to do for Christ. When
I do a concert I open with prayer first to cleanse
the air. I say what the Spirit tells me to say
knowing if I compromise I will be held accountable.
I do not care what people think or say as long as
my Father is pleased with me. I don't care if the
Church ever calls me back. It's about saving
souls. Record sales will come because of my Gift
and Talent and because God made me one of the
Hottest M.C's out right now and the world wants
me.
I am called for the edification of the Body of
Christ and the Salvation of the Lost to be grafted
into this Body of Believers, period. I can only
offer truth and Reality and let people know what
made Sincere Israel, Formally Esau Rashad Aly-Muu
Akbar, change and become who he is today.
Min. Anita L. Jarrell: In your own words, describe
the perfect Holy
Hip Hop concert.
The Perfect Holy Hip Hop Concert is one that
no one knows is a Holy Hip Hop Concert done
in a secular arena with prayer warriors
surrounding the area with songs of reality
being played. Not any of the Hardcore
churchy churchy traditionalism but songs
from the struggle of fighting the Enemy and
being Homeless, desperate, drug addicted,
molested, alcoholic with aspirations of
dreams, being betrayed by friends, suicidal,
lonely and then finally finding a way out of
Gangs and violence and let people know that
Christians are people too and the only
difference between Saint and Sinner is HOPE
and Jesus Shed Blood.
That would be perfect. You have to reach
people where they are in life. That's being
led by the Lord's example.
You would literally see Sinners change into
Saints.
BE Blessed,
WATCH & PRAY
SINCERE ISRAEL
ProdigalSonz Innertyainment
P.O.BOX 5288
EAST ORANGE, NJ 07017
Mobile:(973) 830-5623
Office: (973) 673-5539
[email protected]
[email protected]
Minister Jarrell's 5 Good Sense
Ok. First of all, let me give you this disclaimer.
This is worth about 5 good cents, if that. This
soldier does not need my promotion. He has already
received His commission from God Himself. The best
way to get answers is to ask questions. Wouldn't you
like to get to know this brother better after the
power you just felt reach out to save and deliver
you through him? Whoa.
Sincere-Israel careth not what haters thinketh for
he knoweth He who hath senteth himmeth. Got that?
From listening to this brother's heart, can't you
just see the multi-colored crowd oozing into the
large open space carrying with them every pain's
name? Can't you see God's generals and lieutinents
getting their final orders from the President and
mentally preparing for the daunting task soon to
happen upon them? Look at the vast array of
artillery glaring out of many pages for immediate
and fatal use against the enemy.
Don't be scared.
It's about to go down, but Sincere is on the winning
team. He knows it. He breathes it. He says it. He
loves it. It shows. He glows. The Shekinah glory of
His Warrior-God crashes the party his enemy thought
he was having with that oozing crowd. Blam! A loud
silence covers the hearts of the crowd in a long
instant of grief and belief in this Savior that
Sincere-Israel respresents . . .
This Savior was sent for them. They recognize His
voice in the midst of it all. Chunks of the crowd
start to cry out loud as quietly as possible until
they open up their mouths and allow some nearby
general to shoot the enemy dead that has held them
captive for so long. Freedom rings. Freedom sings.
Freedom brings her friends to stay forever and
things change in the neighborhood. Nothing is ever
the same. Names have changed. Prices have been paid.
Foundations have been laid. Life is sweet like red
koolaid.
There's a new meaning of words like "today". At the
end of the night, you hear the people say . . ."Ok.
Ok. I have to keep it real and pray. Jesus, I just
wanna say . . .you're okay. You saw me and loved me
anyway. You sent Sincere up in here this day to
break these chains and get me saved. Much respect.
Much praise. Lord, have your way. All respect. All
praise. I'm yours to stay."
Alright stop. That was a snapshot of what you might
see when you look into the heart of this soldier.
For a bigger picture, you might wanna check him out
in concert or pick up a cd. This brother is
determined to be determined and you just can't get
away from God with that kind of faith. I don't
believe he wants to. If this interview touched you,
well, it was supposed to for that is what it was
sent forth to do.
In the words of Sincere-Israel, be blessed.
Contributed by:
Min. Anita L. Jarrell
Staff Writer, Street Chronicles 411
All about soul: Christian
rappers' holy hip-hop
All about soul: Christian rappers' holy hip-hop
by Chris Slattery
Staff Writer
Mar. 16, 2005
Preaching from the choir: Jamal Ingram and Terrell
Sullivan mix rap and religion when they perform in
Silver Spring this weekend.
Somewhere between rap wars and holy wars is -- holy
rap. Music that fuses hip-hop beats with the
religious fervor of the born again isn't quite as
incongruous as it seems.
Whether it's King David putting his psalms to music,
Mozart composing his Requiem Mass or the cheerful
nuns-with-guitars that could be heard on the radio
in the '70s, the marriage of pop music and worship
has been happening since, if you'll excuse the
expression, The Beginning.
"You reach a lot of people, a lot of lives," says
Jamal Ingram aka The Professor -- get it? -- who
formed his Christian hip-hop duo The Phusion with
Terrell Sullivan, aka Tru Soldier, in 2001. "It's a
mix of spiritual music and inspirational music, and
it also has an international sound.
"Different cultures and backgrounds, that's the
fusion."
Ingram, the son and grandson of ministers, grew up
in the District and graduated from Bethesda-Chevy
Chase High School. He says he "came to know the Lord
being raised in a Christian home," while his musical
partner grew up in a more secular environment.
Indeed, if Sullivan's compelling autobiographical
rap "My Story" is to be believed, it was downright
dangerous at times.
But what his upbringing lacked in religious fervor,
it made up for in music.
"We were not a 'musical family,'" he says. "It was
just something God had given me, a talent."
He started playing trumpet in the school band at age
8, but he says he always had been interested in
singing -- plus breakdancing and rapping on the
streets of East Baltimore where he grew up. Music,
he says, "just compelled me and grabbed my
attention."
Back then, the music Sullivan liked was East Coast
gangsta rap. He favored the classics: Run DMC, LL
Cool J and the Wu Tang Clan. But he liked gospel,
too. And by age 14, he liked The Gospel even more.
"My life needed a change," he remembers. "Starting
around high school, I surrendered my life to the
Lord, committed to going to church and living my
life under God."
So both men were committed Christians by the time
they met through mutual friends at the Church of the
Redeemer in Gaithersburg.
At first, they performed with other musicians, from
Peru and Trinidad.
"We had a multicultural thing going on," Ingram
says. "We decided to take different styles and
incorporate them to give it an international sound."
They scaled down to a duo and formed the songwriting
and production team known now as The Phusion. They
cut a CD, "One." And on Saturday night, they're on
the program in Silver Spring, part of "Eight Months
of Straight Fire," a version of the
third-Saturday-of-the-month-coffeehouse that offers
a mixture of Christian punk rock, hip-hop and rap.
"It's an alternative for young people," Sullivan
says. "They can enjoy the culture of hip-hop in a
positive way."
That's positive, not wimpy; both musicians insist
their music is true to its roots.
"Lyrically, we tend to lean more to the gospel
sound," says Ingram. "We don't have any profanity,
but we don't make the lyrics so religious that
people can't relate to it. It's not preachy."
He adds that The Phusion has its own distinct sound
that goes beyond the anachronistic nature of its
clean lyrics.
"It's hip-hop," says Sullivan, "but it gives answers
for living. And [people] receive it very well;
they're tired of hearing the negativity. We get a
good reaction from parents and the older generation:
'Wow, it's something my children can listen to.'"
Which, with national figures like Bill Cosby and
Rev. Al Sharpton stepping up to address mainstream
rap's vices -- profanity and violence among them --
could mean their timing is right.
"Someone has to say something," says Ingram. "Our
theme is to show that hip-hop can be done in a
positive and encouraging way."
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Holy Hip-Hop: When Reverend Phil
Jackson spits, Jesus talks
Holy Hip-Hop
When Reverend Phil Jackson spits, Jesus talks
By: Tom Lynch
A handful of attendees shuffle to the front rows of
a North Park University auditorium, a room haunted
with empty chairs. The daylight beams through the
many windows, as it's only early afternoon, the
start to a long day. More people are to come,
everyone's assured. It feels, and looks, a bit like
church.
However, it's only the "2nd Annual Hip-Hop
Symposium," as the screen projector hanging over the
stage reads, titled "Hip-Hop: A Voice for Justice."
A table rests on the stage, under the screen, with
multiple microphones primed for the panel discussion
to come. Towards the back, juice, soda and snacks,
as well as two tables of religious literature
revolving around pop culture--"The Gospel According
to Tony Soprano," "Faith, Hope, and U2," and others.
After several hip-hop artists--including Corey Red
and Precise, both from New York-- freestyle about
Jesus Christ for the growing crowd, Rev. Phil
Jackson, the man behind Lawndale's new hip-hop
church, is introduced by the emcee as "My man--the
hip-hop pastor of Chicago."
The reverend takes the mic. "Everybody cool?" he
asks, donning a relaxed pair of jeans and a 1968
Olympic Games T-shirt he looks like he's had for
years. He lectures a bit about the history of
hip-hop, the terrors of economic expansion in New
York, and a bit about himself, like his experiences
at the once massive Fresh Fest. "It was my B.C.
days, you know, so I was all high. When Run DMC came
on stage it was like, damn, we finna die? That be
God?" The crowd laughs as the Reverend mildly jokes,
but his point is clear. Plus, with the expanding
religious aspect of hip-hop these days--with artists
like Kanye West winning Grammys for songs with
titles like "Jesus Walks"--it all seems quite
timely. Jackson talks of sending and receiving--that
the hip-hop artist is sending his message and
receiving from the audience--and that's why hip-hop
has lasted for decades.
He cues the projector screen and plays an old Slick
Rick video, "Children's Story," a tale about a boy
who takes "the wrong path" down a road of drugs and
violence and ends up dead. It's a warning to all the
kids of hip-hop, to reject the bad and embrace the
good. "Hip-hop's gift is storytelling," says
Jackson. "If you have a tight MC, an MC spitting
about justice, that will bring you into the story.
It'll drop the truth on you. You'll be like `Damn, I
never saw it that way.' Storytelling is the key to
real MCs."
(2005-03-22)
(c) NewCity Communications, Inc.
Words: Michael Williams
In a recent call in segment of a local Gospel radio
station fans are outrage over the latest Destiny
Childs video featuring Gospel recording artist
Michelle Williams. In that video Michelle displayed
ungodly lucious acts of sex said one caller. Another
caller said that she will now longer support
Michelle Williams ministry cause she is singing for
the devil. And Last but not least one caller called
Michelle a fornicator referring to lyric's in the
video by Micghelle that says "This boy don't know we
are about to get it on tonight". People say thats
you can't please God and man. But its not our job to
judge or decide when it comes to someones faith.
Cause if it was, then why are Christians watching
Hip Hop video's In the First Place.
Contributed By:
Min. Anita L. Jarrell
Staff Writer, Street Chronicles 411
When rap music meets contemporary
gospel, all heaven and hell break loose
Emcee JayCee: Sunnyvale gangmember-turned-gospel-singer
Jason Carter stands at the forefront of the local
gospel rap movement.
When rap music meets contemporary gospel, all heaven
and hell break loose
By Traci Hukill
JASON CARTER CAN'T stop dancing. It's hour three of
an all-night recording marathon, and he's standing
in the glassed-in sound room all alone with his
music. The bass boom and melody of "Sound of Love"
are blossoming into his headphones for the 10th time
today and he's still blissed out: this is his song,
his time, his lucky star. His body weaves and his
head bobs as he starts the second verse in a tenor
smooth and rich as caramel: "A love that is pure and
holy 'cause it flows from right here in this
sanctuary ..."
In the studio's equipment room, sound engineer
Denard Fegans leaps to his feet in exasperation and
shuts the music off. "No dancin' AROUND, bra!" he
pleads into the intercom. "I know you're feelin' it,
but you gotta stay still! Stand closer to the
microphone. No--closer. Now stay there. Let's take
it from the same place."
Chastised, Carter makes a sincere effort to stand
still. But a couple of takes later his eyes are
closed and he's swaying again, singing gospel R&B in
a soulful voice that makes women go dewy-eyed and
men nod their heads in time to the beat. Carter
makes praising God look and sound that good.
He can't help himself about the dancing. Staying in
place goes against everything that's natural to this
25-year-old who in the last 10 years has covered a
lot of ground. At 15 he was a skinny little
Sunnyvale gangbanger with a police file and a big
mouth. Now he's a devout Christian, a family man
with three kids and a gospel artist who's just
finished his first solo CD, a compilation of sacred
R&B songs and gospel raps, under the name JayCee.
During a break in recording, Carter plays back a rap
he recorded the night before. His style is goofy and
lighthearted, but the message is all Christian
business.
He endured the cross even though despising the
shame, so in the Lamb's Book of Life you can find
your name
And it gives me joy to know I serve a risen Savior,
it's not about a bunny laying eggs on Easter
And when I realized this, you know I wanted to
change, so I got baptized in Jesus' name
Plop, plop, fizz, fizz, oh what a relief it is,
filled with the Holy Ghost, tongues is the evidence
And with the Lord, I came and made amends, I don't
need to do drugs, I've been high ever since.
To an entire sector of the faith community, gospel
rap's beat alone sounds like the devil's footsteps
at the door. Secular rap is so saturated with sex,
drugs and violence that some critics can't even
stand the thought of a cleaned-up twin in a
Christian CD collection.
But nowadays more churches than not recognize the
futility of asking kids to insulate themselves from
pop culture. Christian bookstores are packed with
CDs by Matchbox 20 soundalikes and rap acts with
names like the Bruthaz Grimm, along with
compilations like Glory Grooves and Heavenly Hip
Hop. Gospel rapper Kirk Franklin's 1996 album,
Whatcha Lookin' 4, entered the R&B charts at No. 3,
and his latest album went double platinum and won a
Grammy this spring.
Traditional rocking gospel, with its scorching blues
solos by robed choirmembers, is still going strong.
Walk into any black church on a Sunday morning and
the music sounds better than what most people were
dancing to Saturday night. That's the style that
defines gospel for the general public, and it's been
drawing souls to the church for decades. But the
face of gospel music is changing to mirror popular
culture--just as it always has--and Carter, with his
good looks, honeyed voice and magnetic personality,
could be its newest poster boy.
Jason Carter Gift Rapped: Gospel rapper Jason Carter
counters critics by saying that rap music is just
another instrument to reach souls.
Christopher Gardner
A GOSPEL RAPPER'S STORY of sin and salvation is his
stock in trade. It establishes credibility with the
troubled youth he's charged with saving, and it
testifies to the strength of his spirit. Finding the
avenues to mainstream power closed to him, an
ambitious, talented young black man seizes power in
a parallel universe by turning to crime. And then
when he barely escapes the prison sentence or his
best friend overdoses or he almost dies, he thanks
God for getting him out of the fix, accepts Jesus
into his life and vows to save others. People's
testimonies are practically formulaic, like the
classic hero myths of antiquity.
Jason Carter grew up in Sunnyvale under a "rough
upbringing" and at 13 started running with a gang
that called itself the SVC, for Sunnyvale Crips.
Already charismatic and talented, he was voted Most
Popular at school and was known for his abilities as
a singer and dancer. "I had a certain clout about
me," he says modestly.
His old friend and former fellow gangmember Johnny
Harper puts it another way. "He was this young guy
who ran off at the mouth," the 26-year-old Harper
remembers. "When I met him he thought no one could
touch him. Jason was younger than us, but he was
wilder than us. He was the one who would start the
fights. More often than not, he was the ignition to
the fire."
Then came the night that changed Carter's life. When
a rival gangmember pulled a gun on Carter and his
friends during a fight, the group scattered. Carter
stopped to pick up the medallion he'd dropped, and
when he stood up, there was a gun at his head. "I
thought, 'I'm too young to die,' " he remembers. The
gunman fled when a cop car pulled up, and Carter,
shaken, vowed to make a change.
Shortly thereafter, two unlikely evangelists brought
him to their father's church. His gangster friends
Johnny Harper and Willie Harper Jr.--sons of
ex-49ers linebacker-turned-minister Willie
Harper--woke him up one Sunday morning and dragged
him to services. That week Carter was baptized by
the elder Harper.
"I tore all the naked ladies off my wall," he says.
"I cut 'Jesus Saves' in my hair." He made a
4-foot-by-8-foot wooden cross, got a bullhorn and
started witnessing in downtown San Jose at his old
hangouts, urging people to repent. He still does it
sometimes. His gospel raps developed as an outgrowth
of his evangelizing, as something he just did
naturally.
THE REV. Johnie Thompson, choir director and youth
pastor of Emmanuel Baptist Church in east San Jose,
spins a yarn of debauchery that would make a great
movie. The climax would have to be the scene where
he's just been busted selling cocaine to an
undercover cop and takes off in the city bus he
drives as his day gig. He shuts the doors, instructs
the panicked passengers to remain calm and turns the
bus onto 880, whereupon he proceeds to lose the
cops.
Thompson came to the Lord after drug charges were
dropped that would have surely landed him in prison.
He believes life as a sinner prepared him for life
as a saint, working with young people who are
skeptical of adults who've never seen any action.
"I know now that God put me through all of that just
so He could use me here in this capacity," he says.
"If your life has been too goody-two-shoes, you're
just talking a bunch of rhetoric."
Likewise Horeish White, a local gospel rapper known
as Menacesta Reese, sustained four gunshot wounds in
1993 and came to God while in jail. Now poised to
release his CD The Sacrifice in July, White says he
raps "so I can reach the people who are still doing
what I was doing, let them know you ain't got to be
perfect, you know what I'm sayin', to be forgiven."
Meanwhile, neither of the Harper brothers ever made
the commitment to the church their friend has.
"We're the ones that brought Jason to church, and
that's where we left him," Johnny Harper laughs.
Harper wound up spending two years in the California
Youth Authority and almost lost his life in a fight
after he got out. He went on to play football for
San Jose State and now works at a technology
investment firm in Palo Alto. His brother, Willie
Jr., an AllSanta Clara County running back from
Fremont High, was shot three times by rival gang
members in Nebraska in 1991. Willie Jr.'s now a Bay
Area rapper.
But to Johnny Harper it's not a simple case of being
saved or lost. More than anything else, the church
praises young men for their willingness to preach
the gospel, and that's what people call him--a
preacher, even though he doesn't spend much time at
church. Even his co-workers teasingly call him
Deacon Harper for his tendency to quote scripture.
"That's what people didn't understand about my
brother and me," he says. "Our whole lives are
church. We do church 365 days a year. We would bring
people to church and yet we didn't go--because we
could see, 'Hey, you're looking for something,
you're reaching for something,' and we would take
them to church. Just because I'm not out there
preaching the Word like Jason doesn't mean I don't
accept God, don't worship God."
Bible Way Christian Center Choir
Christopher Gardner
Under God's Spell: The choir at Bible Way Christian
Center--here featuring Rolesa Smith--sings
traditional gospel music, although the church is
open to the influences of rap.
RAP SOUNDS AREN'T the first worldly beats to infect
gospel and scandalize the faithful. At another
moment earlier in this century, African American
spirituals joined up with music from the streets,
prompting all manner of hand-wringing by church
folk. Until the early 1930s, the black spirituals
that had their genesis as veiled messages sung among
slaves remained true to their roots--embellished,
more rhythmic cousins of the hymns sung in white
churches. Then Tommy Dorsey came along.
A preacher's son with a love for the blues, Dorsey
(not to be confused with Frank Sinatra's bandleader
by the same name) played piano for the great blues
singer Ma Rainey and in 1928 penned the scandalous
hit "It's Tight Like That." Neither distinction did
much for his relations with the church. Blues were
considered the soundtrack to a life of sin, and the
low moan and wail of Dorsey's hit single horrified
decent folk. But three years later the prodigal
preacher's kid returned to the church and scribbled
bluesy spirituals like "Precious Lord" as fast as he
could.
At first the churches ignored him, put off by his
sordid past and his music's worldiness. Then, as
now, when church people used the term "the world"
they meant an evil, dangerous place that tempted the
Christian soul from the straight and narrow. Nothing
symbolized "the world" at that time like the blues
did, with its whiff of gin and dirty dancing. But
the Depression brought hard times, and eventually
the magic formula of soulful music plus hopeful
message overcame suspicion. The blues fit the times,
and gospel moved to take full advantage of that.
Which is exactly what it's doing now, explains
Emmanuel Baptist's Thompson.
"God allowed the older gospel music style to go from
generation to generation," he says, "but as society
changed it didn't have the same effect. His grace
allowed it to make a change, turn a corner. Now we
have a new gospel music with R&B style, rap style."
Thompson's written a few raps of his own, though he
doesn't look the part. He wears suits with suave
accents--gold watch, colorful tie, spicy cologne.
He's a powerful man with a small build and eyes like
a fox's, quick and clever.
"People come to the black church because of the
music. What the music does, it sets your heart up to
receive the Word. We're talking biological now. It
gets those neurotransmitters going in the brain, and
they send a message to the heart to open up, and the
heart sends a message right back to the brain: 'This
is good! Send some more!' It's nothing but spiritual
food."
The Emmanuel Baptist Male Choir performed its
contemporary R&B-based gospel at Ron Gonzales'
inauguration, and a mostly rhythmless stageful of
city councilmembers and dignitaries awkwardly
clapped and attempted to boogie.
"People were up on their feet, clappin' their hands,
having a good time," Thompson recalls about the
blending of church and state at an official
municipal function, "and"--he leans forward--"we
were singin' about Jesus. We had Susan Hammer
clapping her hands--now, how do you get Susan Hammer
to get with it?"
He leans back in his chair.
"That's what happens when you get a group of men
together singing about Jesus."
Arron Kelly Child of God: Young Arron Kelly adds his
voice to the joyful noise that rocks the East side's
Emmanuel Baptist Church on Sunday mornings.
Christopher Gardner
ON A SUMMER MORNING in the late 1970s, sunlight
pours in the windows of a little white church in
rural East Texas. In the pulpit a pale, thin man
with a forlorn expression is leading his aging flock
through hymns, their quavering voices frail and
naked against the silence of the new day. My
grandmother's gardenia perfume and those simple
hymns are the best things about church, in my
youthful opinion. The tremulous strains of the music
float out of the building, roll over the old cars
parked in the churchyard and drift out to the
deserted highway to finally evaporate in the
shimmering heat.
Draw me nearer, nearer, blessed Lord, to the cross
where thou hast died ...
No one dances in the Church of Christ or claps or
shouts Hallelujah. Musical instruments are
forbidden. If the Lord wanted us to use a piano or
organ to worship Him, the wisdom goes, He would have
instructed us in the Bible accordingly.
The Church of Christ has a reputation for
joylessness. People tell jokes about it: Why don't
Church of Christers have sex standing up? Because
it's too much like dancing.
Most African American churches--most churches,
period--are more flexible than the Church of Christ,
but Jason Carter has still encountered opposition to
his music from black churches. In Sacramento, where
he sang and rapped with a Boyz II Menstyle gospel
group called Step of Faith, he was often criticized.
"One place, the pastor set me down afterward and
said, 'I'm disappointed in you,' " he recalls, "
'because you have such an anointing in your life.
When you rapped,' he said, 'you gave me a bad taste
in my mouth.' I tried to get him to see how we were
just reaching out to souls, but his concern was that
we shouldn't compromise the message. It was hard,
because I really respected this man."
Willie Mae Ford Smith would understand Carter's
distress. One of the first to use a heavy blues
sound in her gospel singing, she blew minds in the
early '30s and was upbraided for it. In the
documentary film Say Amen, Somebody, she recalls the
sting of the accusations and her ultimate response.
"They said I was bringing the blues into the
church," she says. " 'You might as well be Mamie
Smith, Bessie Smith, one of those Smith sisters, you
make me sick with that stuff.' Well, I said, that's
all the stuff I know. I kept going because that's
what the Lord wanted."
ON THE OTHER HAND, Carter tells about one Step of
Faith concert at a water theme park that made him
wonder if his music was too worldly.
The show was for a church of several thousand
members who received the quartet warmly. Steamily,
even. "They loved us to death," he says. "They
had"--he laughs a little telling it--"they had all
these church people, but they were wearing bikinis!
And I remember, we were up there singing and this
one person was really dancing and getting into
it--and I remember I was feeling awkward onstage,
wondering, 'Whoa, is this wrong?' So there is an
extreme. You can take it too far."
One oft-cited example of overdoing cool is the
L.A.-based group the Gospel Gangstas. With their
braided hair, saggy pants and slangy lyrics, Da
Demon Recka, The Holy Terra, Da Gangsta Poet and The
Holy Hoodlum set off alarms all over the gospel
community. The violent imagery--even if it is about
violence against the devil--is the hottest button:
They called me cool when I blasted a .380, then
Jesus saved me, now they call me crazy
But I'm smarter, I comes a little harder, I pack a 9
for those thinkin' of makin' me a martyr
Me wrestle against the flesh, I'm not saying that,
but comin' up on me, devil, I ain't playin' that.
Much about gospel music requires the balance of
worldiness and holiness, like the art of dancing in
church. Rocking from side to side is OK, even
jazzed-up swaying with a little hip shimmy is
acceptable, but front-to-back pelvic thrusting is
strictly forbidden. The trouble is, some of the
choirs around here are so good it's hard to remember
to dance nice.
At Bible Way Christian Center, Pastor Oscar Dace,
working miraculously under the burden of needing a
kidney, has positioned his church to be an
up-and-coming leader in the South Bay African
American community. Michael McBride, the young man
whose mistaken detention by San Jose police in March
led to a controversy over police profiling, is a
youth minister there. The church hosts an old-time
gospel quartet called The Legget Brothers and a
75-member choir that released a CD in January. Quite
simply, the choir rocks. Backed up on organ by
director Tammy Brown (she also delivers fabulous
solos), plus drums, bass and lead guitar, the choir
raises the roof with soaring vocals and energetic
dancing (of the side-to-side variety, of course).
It's living proof that traditional gospel music is
alive and well. And it's a stronghold of musical
talent.
"This church is really on the move," says Carter,
who is in the midst of changing membership from
Jesus Christ for All Nations in Fremont--Willie
Harper's church--to Bible Way. "This time next year
it's going to be a Mecca of gospel music. There's so
much talent there."
The mannerly Church of Christ experience of my
memory cannot explain Jesus Christ for All Nations
in Fremont, where the service is nearly three hours
long and a saxophone player serenades people
speaking in tongues. Nor does it apply to Emmanuel
Baptist, where a man leads a prayer that turns by
degrees from speech into a half-sung, half-chanted
blues solo, or to Bible Way Christian Center, where
Pastor Oscar Dace winds up his sermons with an
impromptu musical invocation, a sort of trancelike
spoken song. In these churches, something different
happens. The left side of the brain shuts down at
prescribed times, logic takes a hike and something
else moves in--inspiration, the Holy Spirit,
whatever you want to call it. It's powerful.
Vincent Harris The Word Up: Vincent Harris of Bible
Way Christian Center delivers the kind of powerful
blues-inspired solo that has come to represent
traditional gospel's trademark sound.
Christopher Gardner
CHURCHGOERS' FAITH--the kind they like to say can
move mountains--often resembles what's called
arrogance in other contexts. But Christians always
give God the glory. God allows great things to
befall them.
So when Carter answers the question of whether he
will be successful by saying, "I know it's gonna
happen. I already got the promise from God," it's
impossible to tell whether he's full of faith or
full of himself.
Superstar gospel performers are like rich devout
Christians, left to walk on the slippery slope of
worldly success. Gospel has lost countless
performers to the world: Sam Cooke, Dinah
Washington, Aretha Franklin, Dionne Warwick--the
list goes on.
But staying in gospel music is no guarantee of
prolonged holiness either. The Queen of Gospel,
Mahalia Jackson herself, was criticized for allowing
Columbia Records to dilute her potent style in the
interest of broadening her appeal. No babe in the
woods, Jackson was famous for her business acumen.
Her business ventures at one time included a chain
of fried chicken stores a la Kenny Rogers.
Carter says he's constantly aware of the threat of
the secular world. He used to attend church with a
prime example of what can happen when an artist
strays from the gospel calling--the great MC Hammer.
Hammer began his career in a gospel act called the
Holy Ghost Boys. When Capitol Records got ahold of
his sound and repackaged it, Hammer wound up going
almost completely secular, though he always included
a sacred song or two on each album. Three Grammys,
25 million records and an estimated $33 million
later, Hammer was riding high.
Then came the Mattel Hammer doll and the Taco Bell
endorsements, and people started accusing him of
selling out. His popularity plummeted, and in 1996
Hammer declared bankruptcy and sold his 12.5-acre
estate in the Fremont Hills, labeling his problem
"the business drug" that most successful artists
can't recognize. Hammer's making gospel music
again--he's in London recording right now--but his
story stands as a cautionary tale to Carter.
"I need to be concerned about it," Carter says,
"because it's happened to so many people. I don't
think I'm beyond that temptation, but I have to keep
myself close to God. That's why my first project is
Keepen It Real."
Back in north San Jose's Upper Room Recording Studio
in the first week of May, Carter is nearly finished
recording. He's finally laying down the title track,
and he's imported family friend Edna "Nikki" Owens
to help out with harmony. While Denard Fegans works
the computerized digital recording program, Owens
eats a Twizzler and nods her head to the music, lost
in thoughts of harmonic lines she's making up on the
spot. Carter, meanwhile, lays down the tracks,
dancing this time without reprimand.
"He didn't listen to me," Fegans says, defeated. "As
long as his vocals are coming through, I'm OK."
"Keepen It Real" is a song about the hypocrisy of
people who maintain a veneer of holiness while
enjoying the world's sensual pleasures. Naturally
it's written in Carter's humorous style.
You're full of carnality and worldly livin', in
church Sunday mornin' but on Friday you're giggin'
On the dance floor getting numbers from the ladies
and you got more babies than a dog has rabies ...
Between takes Fegans makes a face. "I have a problem
with some of his raps. They're too corny," he
asserts. "When you rap, you kind of have to get the
approval of a certain crowd, if you will."
Carter takes this critique in stride, grinning and
dancing in place while Owens expresses shock at this
harsh treatment.
"Oh, no," Carter says. "We're open about it. That's
just not my style, that hard-core rap. I'm gonna
make people laugh, have a good time."
He finishes the rap. "Keepen It Real" just might be
his own personal doctrine, speaking to his desire to
preach the word, inspire others and remain genuine:
Junction, junction, what's your function, I feel an
unction comin' from the Holy OneAnd can't no one
stop this flow 'cause I believe it's 'bout to go
from shore to shore Touching every single man,
woman, boy and girl, heck it's 'bout to go across
the world.
Across the world is a long way from Sunnyvale. Jason
Carter's going to need a lot of faith to get
there--either that or a lucky star. No matter. He
seems to have both in abundance. The way things have
gone for him so far, he'll be just fine.
[ San Jose | Metroactive Central | Archives ]
From the May 20-26, 1999 issue of Metro.
Copyright� Metro Publishing Inc. Maintained by
Boulevards New Media.
All about soul: Christian
rappers' holy hip-hop
All about soul: Christian rappers' holy hip-hop
by Chris Slattery
Staff Writer
Mar. 16, 2005
Preaching from the choir: Jamal Ingram and Terrell
Sullivan mix rap and religion when they perform in
Silver Spring this weekend.
Somewhere between rap wars and holy wars is -- holy
rap. Music that fuses hip-hop beats with the
religious fervor of the born again isn't quite as
incongruous as it seems.
Whether it's King David putting his psalms to music,
Mozart composing his Requiem Mass or the cheerful
nuns-with-guitars that could be heard on the radio
in the '70s, the marriage of pop music and worship
has been happening since, if you'll excuse the
expression, The Beginning.
"You reach a lot of people, a lot of lives," says
Jamal Ingram aka The Professor -- get it? -- who
formed his Christian hip-hop duo The Phusion with
Terrell Sullivan, aka Tru Soldier, in 2001. "It's a
mix of spiritual music and inspirational music, and
it also has an international sound.
"Different cultures and backgrounds, that's the
fusion."
Ingram, the son and grandson of ministers, grew up
in the District and graduated from Bethesda-Chevy
Chase High School. He says he "came to know the Lord
being raised in a Christian home," while his musical
partner grew up in a more secular environment.
Indeed, if Sullivan's compelling autobiographical
rap "My Story" is to be believed, it was downright
dangerous at times.
But what his upbringing lacked in religious fervor,
it made up for in music.
"We were not a 'musical family,'" he says. "It was
just something God had given me, a talent."
He started playing trumpet in the school band at age
8, but he says he always had been interested in
singing -- plus breakdancing and rapping on the
streets of East Baltimore where he grew up. Music,
he says, "just compelled me and grabbed my
attention."
Back then, the music Sullivan liked was East Coast
gangsta rap. He favored the classics: Run DMC, LL
Cool J and the Wu Tang Clan. But he liked gospel,
too. And by age 14, he liked The Gospel even more.
"My life needed a change," he remembers. "Starting
around high school, I surrendered my life to the
Lord, committed to going to church and living my
life under God."
So both men were committed Christians by the time
they met through mutual friends at the Church of the
Redeemer in Gaithersburg.
At first, they performed with other musicians, from
Peru and Trinidad.
"We had a multicultural thing going on," Ingram
says. "We decided to take different styles and
incorporate them to give it an international sound."
They scaled down to a duo and formed the songwriting
and production team known now as The Phusion. They
cut a CD, "One." And on Saturday night, they're on
the program in Silver Spring, part of "Eight Months
of Straight Fire," a version of the
third-Saturday-of-the-month-coffeehouse that offers
a mixture of Christian punk rock, hip-hop and rap.
"It's an alternative for young people," Sullivan
says. "They can enjoy the culture of hip-hop in a
positive way."
That's positive, not wimpy; both musicians insist
their music is true to its roots.
"Lyrically, we tend to lean more to the gospel
sound," says Ingram. "We don't have any profanity,
but we don't make the lyrics so religious that
people can't relate to it. It's not preachy."
He adds that The Phusion has its own distinct sound
that goes beyond the anachronistic nature of its
clean lyrics.
"It's hip-hop," says Sullivan, "but it gives answers
for living. And [people] receive it very well;
they're tired of hearing the negativity. We get a
good reaction from parents and the older generation:
'Wow, it's something my children can listen to.'"
Which, with national figures like Bill Cosby and
Rev. Al Sharpton stepping up to address mainstream
rap's vices -- profanity and violence among them --
could mean their timing is right.
"Someone has to say something," says Ingram. "Our
theme is to show that hip-hop can be done in a
positive and encouraging way."
The Phusion will perform at 7 p.m. Saturday during
FreeStyle Feat at Immanuel's Church, 16819 New
Hampshire Ave., Silver Spring. Admission is $5. Call
240-876-2317.
Frederick County | Montgomery County | Carroll
County | Prince George's County
Contributed by Min. Anita L. Jarrell
Staff Writer, Street Chronicles 411
Bryant Sojourner, whose pseudonym is Parabols, is a
twenty-seven year old husband and father of three.
For the past 4 years, Bryant has been traveling this
country ministering to youth and adults alike.
Bryant's ministry consists of: preaching the gospel,
motivational and awareness speaking in junior high
and high schools, gospel hip-hop/poetry, and he also
possesses the licensing necessary to perform
marriages and funerals.
Bryant has faced many hardships and struggles in his
life. However, the tribulations he experiences
produces perseverance; and perseverance, character;
and character, hope. Bryant now shares this hope
with a troubled generation thirsting for the
redemption of Jesus Christ. Covered by a true
anointing, Bryant creatively, and fluently
communicates Bible based solutions for everyday life
struggles. Through the gifts God has provided,
Parabols' vision is to internationally share the
gospel and lead youth and young adults into a Christ
centered relationship. Furthermore, not only lead
them into a life changing relationship, but through:
preaching, hip-hop, and poetry, teach them how to
stay committed.
Bryant "Parabols" Sojourner has been called to
affect the city, state, nation, and the world.
Called by God to be a preacher, youth motivational
speaker and a Gospel Hip-Hop artist, Parabols
travels the country effectively communicating the
gospel to youth and young adults.
Contributed by
Min. Anita L. Jarrell,
Staff Writer, Street Chronicles 411
Opening the Hip-Hop Hymnal
Holy hip-hop
Saturday night gathering captures teen talent,
emotions
By Kay S. Pedrotti
While many churches struggle to attract young people
to worship, St. Stephen's leaders jumped (literally)
into holy hip-hop about three years ago. In an area
of metro Atlanta that has long been multicultural
and now is predominantly African American, St.
Stephen departed from traditional outreach methods
with ease, says church council member Andre Joseph.
A native New Yorker, Joseph is one of the major
supporters of Holdin' Down Da Spot, a name chosen
for the concert atmosphere that combines hip-hop,
urban gospel, poetry and spoken word into a
spiritual experience for "people who are
uncomfortable in a traditional worship setting,"
Joseph says.
Ramon Montgomery, better known as Ray-Ski, hosts the
bimonthly event in the nave at St. Stephen. He
explains that Holdin' Down Da Spot translates into
"a place to hold down your faith, to speak it out,
to renew your spirit." It's a spot to interact with
other young people who are excited about Jesus
Christ, he adds, "and the adults who care about
them."
James Capers, interim pastor, continues to support
the ministry started by Cliff Bahlinger, who now
serves St. Luke Lutheran Church, Cordova, Tenn.
Bahlinger says the idea of using hip-hop music
originally came from Alcuin Johnson, a St. Stephen
member who saw a similar ministry in another city,
"where the young people were lined up to get in. ...
None of us had ever heard of something that would
bring them in like that."
Believing it could work in Atlanta, Bahlinger and
other leaders sought performers "who would bring the
message in the language of the people," he says.
There is no lack of holy hip-hop performers in
Atlanta, says Bahlinger, and it wasn't difficult to
get them to come and play. After all, he notes, "the
average church doesn't want that kind of music and
the average bar doesn't want them, so where would
they find a place to tell about God in their music?"
An ELCA In the City for Good grant and help from the
Southeastern Synod furnished equipment, small
stipends for performers and other necessities for
the ministry. In the City for Good is a program that
funds urban ministry initiatives that illustrate a
potential for transforming lives, congregations and
communities.
Recently a group called JAADE (first initial of the
members' names) played to a smaller-than-normal
crowd at the church. Ray-Ski also invited the
fledgling group from his congregation, Body of
Christ Church International in College Park, Ga.
In a blend of high and low voices, the teens (all
aged 16 or 17) raised the blood pressures and bounce
levels of listeners as they danced out such lyrics
as, "I will keep my head up in Jesus Christ's name;
the devil tries to bring me down but I will dodge
his flame ...."
Montgomery says he loves doing the ministry at St.
Stephen because "it's so uplifting to see the kids
not just entertained but fed spiritually." He has
witnessed turnarounds in the lives of kids as young
as 11, as they come to realize God's love and the
gift of Christ and salvation, he says.
"There is not enough paper" to write down all the
names of those who have helped Holdin' Down Da Spot,
Montgomery adds, but he cites Billy "Blaze"
Davidson, first host Denique Alexander, a DJ named
EDoubleU, and musicians Clay and K-Bizzy.
If those names aren't enough to denote a
nontraditional ministry, Bahlinger provides an
anecdote that proves the willingness of St. Stephen
to reach out to the young people. He says the
congregation's altar guild changed its usual
practice of setting up communion and preparing the
altar on Saturday nights — just to accommodate the
holy hip-hop ministry.
The Lutheran | 8765 w. higgins rd. | chicago, il
60631 | usa |0©2003 Augsburg Fortress.
Giving Hip-Hop a Good Name
Campus Life, June/July 2002
Giving Hip-Hop a Good Name
DJ Maj talks about the power of holy hip-hop
by Mark Moring
Mike Allen is boring. But DJ Maj, the name by which
he's known on his CDs and at his shows, is like
magic.
It's an exciting "alter ego" that brings out the
best in a guy with a plain name. Like Mike.
When we asked Mike why hip-hop artists
don't use their real names, he said, "Because it's
square."
"Hip-hop and rap is like an alter ego for people,"
explains Maj, whose two CDs, Wax Museum (Gotee) and
Full Plates (Gotee) are a great introduction to
Christian hip-hop. "You have your regular job where
you're John Doe, but when you're on stage, you're
Super Emcee Fresh Kid or whatever. You can become
that person on stage."
That stage persona, says Maj, is one of several ways
to express yourself within the hip-hop culture,
which is about more than just the music.
"Hip-hop is an expression of who you are," he says.
"It's a total culture of break dancers and B-boys,
MCs and DJs."
We asked Maj to explain those terms:
* Break dancer: "He's the guy on the dance floor,
spinning on his head and all that kind of stuff."
* B-boy: "He's just a hip-hop fanatic. He may not be
able to dance, he may not be able to rap, but he's
got all the gear and the clothing."
* DJ: "He plays the records."
* MC: "He's the guy who raps."
Maj says almost anybody can rap.
"For me, an African-American young man without
musical training, hip-hop gave me something to
do—and someone to look up to besides drug
dealers," says Maj. "You don't have to be a musician
to make a good rap song. It welcomes people who want
to express themselves in music, but may not be
educated in music theory."
But it still takes talent, says Maj.
"You can't just jump up on a stage and start rapping
and expect people to show you some love, 'cause it
just won't happen," he says, laughing. "You have to
be sharp at your skills."
Maj says crass acts like Eminem and Dr. Dre—and
all the MTV videos glorifying sex and big
money—have given hip-hop a bad name.
"You can't label all of hip-hop music because of
those people," he says. "They've even tainted the
image of Christians who are doing hip-hop."
The good news is that many Christ-ians, like Maj,
are doing hip-hop, providing an alternative to the
often vulgar message of the mainstream scene.
That's why Maj hosts a radio show, Virtual
Frequency, featuring the best in Christian hip-hop.
(You can find it online at virtualfrequency.com.)
When DJ Maj moved to Nashville, Christian music's
capital, in 1992, he didn't see much respect for
Christian hip-hop. "But instead of griping, I
started a radio show, just to raise awareness of
Christian urban music. I just want to get this music
out to the people."
Christian Music Gets Hip
Saturday, February 12, 2005
By Megan Dowd (Fox News)
Christian Music Gets Hip
Pop Culture Puts Religion in the Spotlight
NEW YORK -- It might not seem like a miracle that a
song about Jesus is up for a Grammy but this
isn't gospel music. It's hip-hop.
Producer-turned-rapper Kanye West (search) heads
into Sunday night's Grammy Awards (search) ceremony
with a leading 10 nominations — and his
inspirational mega-hit "Jesus Walks" (search) stands
to win two awards, song of the year and best rap
song.
Naysayers told West a song about "hustlas, killas,
murderas, drug dealas, even the strippas" and Jesus
didn't have a prayer.
"They say you can rap about anything except for
Jesus/ That means guns, sex, lies, videotapes/
But if I talk about God my record won't get played,
huh?" he says in "Jesus Walks."
The song, however, was a huge success, and the
26-year-old star is poised to walk away with gold.
But experts say it's not the message of the song hat Jesus walks even with "sinners"that has
made it big. It's the mastermind behind the music.
"It is a spiritual song, but that is not why it is
popular, that is secondary," said Neil Drumming, a
music writer for Entertainment Weekly. "It is really
an addictive, engaging and unique track. The first
time I heard it at a party it had just come out and
already people were dancing to it."
That said, Christianity has been creeping up on
American pop culture in recent years. In 2002,
Christian rock bands like Creed and POD blew up the
charts and converted mainstream fans. Mel Gibson's
2004 movie "The Passion of the Christ" was the
third-biggest film of '04.
And while he hasn't been included in the titles of
many popular rap songs, there's actually nothing new
about hip-hop artists giving a "holla" to Jesus. For
inner-city youth and rap fans, West is only "keepin'
it real" when he mixes a song about God with
profanity and street life.
"If you look at the hip-hop albums, a lot of rappers
try to 'shout out' to God. They manage to reconcile
their faith with the realities of street and 'hood
life — it is not that contradictory to them," said
Nathan Brackett, senior editor for Rolling Stone
magazine.
In fact, "Holy hip-hop" first appeared in the late
'80s and early '90s with little-known underground
groups like SFC, Dynamic Twins and Stephen Wiley.
"Holy Hip Hop: Taking the Gospel to the Streets"
(search), featuring various artists, received a
Grammy award nomination for Best Rock Gospel album
of 2004.
But surprisingly, the holy hip-hop community does
not see West's success as opening the door to fame
for religious rappers.
"It is interesting, the [holy hip-hop community] has
not accepted him with open arms. They have not seen
it as a way to mainstream," said Brackett.
Maybe this is because West is not trying to conform
to any particular religion through his song, but
rather spread his own vision of faith.
"This is his own 'Jesus,' what his vision of Jesus
is, a modern, forgiving Jesus," Brackett said.
West couldn't rap it better himself:
"I ain't here to argue about his facial features,
Or here to convert atheists to believers,
I'm just tryin' to say the way school need teachers,
The way Kathie Lee needed Regis that's the way ya'll
need Jesus," he says in "Jesus Walks."
At the Grammys Sunday night, West will perform with
an impressive group of soul, R&B and gospel artists,
including John Legend, Mavis Staples and the Blind
Boys of Alabama.
But will he do what filmmaker Mel Gibson could not,
as in get his "Jesus" piece accepted by a group of
mainstream critics?
Brackett said OutKast's (search) 2004 win for
"Speakerboxxx/The Love Below" is a signal that the
Grammy judges are opening up to hip-hop and
progressive music, whether it is religiously
inclined or not.
But there is one potential winner who may trump
West's night.
"I hope [West gets the gold], but he is up against a
legend. Ray Charles would be the one contender in
his way," Brackett said.
Copyright 2005 FOX News Network, LLC. All rights
reserved.
Hip Hop Ministry
February 18, 2005 Episode no. 825
Requires Real Player
BOB ABERNETHY, anchor: Appealing to young people is
a challenge for congregations as well as religious
publishers, and there is something going on in about
150 churches around the country that, if not a
model, is at least attention-getting. Every other
Saturday night in Chicago, a group called The House
fills the Lawndale Community Church for testimony,
scripture, preaching, and hip-hop. Bob Faw reports.
BOB FAW: Across America, in toddling towns like
Chicago, hip-hop isn't just hot -- it's downright
holy.
Bless the Lord through the house. Bless the Lord
through the house.
FAW: Hip-hop, the inner-city sound of protest and
rage, is now being used to bring souls to Christ.
Pray turn from your ways. You've got to seek his
face.
Photo of sign for hip-hop church FAW: An art form
often raw, vulgar -- sometimes misogynistic -- here
proclaiming the gospel.
Are you ready for the change that's going to change
your life?
FAW: This new style of worship uses both the lingo
of the streets ...
Church, they call me big brother bang-wow. I'm the
one that brings the funk, the bang, and the wow --
all in the name of Jesus Christ. And I never turn my
back on God.
Photo of hip-hop church performance FAW: ... and its
hard-driving cadence. Rappers call this "step
sessions." In an old factory converted into a
sanctuary, the physical and the verbal are
accompanied by old-fashioned testimonials.
As crazy as I was for the devil, I'm more crazy for
Christ!
FAW: Sponsored by the Evangelical Covenant Church,
these twice-monthly Saturday night sessions are the
inspiration of Phil Jackson, the worship leader.
Photo of PHIL JACKSON PHIL JACKSON (Pastor, The
House, Lawndale Community Church) (Preaching): It's
important to me that we raise up brothers to be
serious about our commitment to Christ. Am I right?
FAW: A hip, 41-year-old former seminarian, father of
3, who says when it comes to reaching young people,
most churches just don't get it.
(To Rev. Jackson): The old hymns, the conventional
order of service, that's not going to cut it with
these kids?
Rev. JACKSON: What we're trying to do, objectively,
is to reach students where they are, to take them
where God would have them to be and using the
vehicle of hip-hop.
FAW: Jackson does more than talk the talk. In
Chicago's North Lawndale neighborhood, where drugs
and violence are rampant and the unemployment rate
approaches 50 percent, he cruises the mean streets
inviting anyone and everyone to what Jackson calls
The House of Hope.
Rev. JACKSON: You'd like it; these folks look like
you and act like you. They are there all the time.
Photo of girls cheering FAW: And "there" is like no
other service. These churchgoers here are lured by
raffles. During services, free CDs and hats are
dispensed to loosen things up. There's the hip-hop
version of bobbing for apples
Rev. JACKSON (To Participants Putting Faces in
Whipped Cream): One, two, three ... go!
FAW: Scoff if you will, but it's working. On
Saturday night, when many kids wouldn't dream of
going to church, they flock to this one: 500 seats
filled, standing room only.
PBS.Org -© 2005 Educational Broadcasting
Corporation. All rights reserved.
Gospel from A to holy hip-hop
Gospel from A to holy hip-hop
July 25, 2004
As gospel music has grown, it has absorbed
influences from other musical genres. According to
Al Hobbs, vice chairman of the Gospel Music Workshop
of America, gospel music has developed three main
styles under the gospel umbrella.
Traditional gospel. Modern gospel music was created
during the 1930s, when traditional church hymns and
spirituals were coupled with the ragtime, rhythm,
and blues styles that were popular at the time,
employing simplified chordal progressions popular in
blues. Traditional gospel songs were written
specifically for worship in church services and
speak about the role of God in a person's life. They
sometimes involve call and response, where a leader
sings a line and the group answers.
Contemporary gospel has a close relationship to
jazz, but with a church flavor. The writing style
gives direct praise to God. The music is artistic
and experimental, blending jazz, R&B, Latin,
classical, and rock, yet is clearly identified as
the gospel music of the modern black church.
Urban contemporary gospel integrates the gospel
message with secular musical styles and is geared to
a hipper crowd. Called ''the sound and beat of the
street," it would not typically be heard in church.
Holy hip-hop is a sacred style that chronicles the
writer's life with God. Gospel rap spreads the
gospel message, but is more indigenous to the
mainstream culture. Reggae gospel (reggae rhythms
with a gospel message) is also beginning to grow.
JIMMY CRONIN
� Copyright 2004 Globe Newspaper Company.
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