Thursday, September 16, 2010

The Crucible and the Response

The crucible of life always requires response. Sometimes our responses validate or represent God, and other times they do not. But whatever our situation, there is always the response. For those who are oppressed, the responses are more limited because of reduced resources or fear of retribution. For those who suffer from disease, the response can be either God-honoring or not so God-honoring.

When I look at the birth of Hip Hop, I see a response to life in the Bronx in the 1970's. The response was born out of destroyed neighborhoods, a destroyed infrastructure, and fear. Fear for the long term well-being of the family but also the well-being of myself...NOW. Hip Hop's inception was a response to the desire to avoid violence in the Bronx and take the street competition from the "rumble" the dance floor. The Bronx Crucible demanded the response of Hip Hop.

Only God's timing and hand will determine whether the Hip Hop response to the 1970's Bronx crucible will honor God or not. But as we watch God's plan unfold, should we simply sit and watch or engage in the discussion? do we leave the Hip Hop discussion to the secular world? What will our response be? As I ask the question, I also wonder what my children and their children will see in our response. Will our response to Hip Hop honor God or not? Some things of God are difficult to understand, but I am sure that God does not sit on the sidelines and turn a deaf ear. God is engaged, because redemption is real.

Let us be a people of redemption who aren't afraid to engage Hip Hop. And may our response honor God.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

When Hip Hop Went to the Church

I've had a strange relationship with the music I create and perform. I don't actually like addressing it directly. I sort of address it within the lyrics from time to time.

You see I came in the double doors of Hip Hop and gospel music. What a strange entrance. Traditionally one of the doors should be marked entrance and the other exit since it seems you can't do both at the same time. I don't subscribe to terms such as "holy hip hop" (because I think that is corny and something Robin from the old Batman series would say as in "Holy Hip Batman, to the Bat mobile!) and I don't subscribe to the definitions "christian hip hop" and "christian rap" because I think the word Christian is a bad adjective and a better noun. Even the term "gospel rap" just doesn't totally feel authentic to me. If you subscribe to any of these terms please don't shoot me, I'm not dissing anyone else for doing so. It's just a personal thing to me. Don't mind me with my personal opinions! Lol.
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