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Calvinist Holy Hip Hop artists: Ministers of

the Gospel?
I stumbled across T.C. Moore’s article on Holy Hip Hop and Calvinism the other day.

Let’s just say, I’m not impressed.

It’s not the style of the article that bugs me. It’s the content. Here’s a recap for those of you who
just tuned in.

Moore in his Calvinism and Hip Hop series starts off talking about his background as a white
urbanite.

As a kid, he was immersed in Hip Hop culture.

Anyway, one day, it happened. Bam. He


became a Christian in 1999. I guess he tells
us this to engender himself to the Christian
Hip Hop community.

Moore doesn’t delve into the details of his


Christ-encounter, in this article, but it
probably has something to do with him
“accepting” Christ.

Since he was Hip Hop all the way, he started


looking for Hip Hop methadone—you know
the Christian version of rap for recovering
Hip Hop addicts.

Unlike much of the dross in other Christian


genres, Moore was able to find some good
substitutes in Urban D and the Cross
Movement.

Moore said he began to be alarmed by all the


Calvinist theology Holy Hip Hoppers were
espousing.
And gee, even some Holy Hip Hop artists, such as the Ambassador, even have degrees in
theology.

Moore said that Calvinism teaches that God has already ordained everything that will come to
pass presently and in the future. And since He does that –foreordain things–those who preach
Calvinism are preaching the theology of the oppressed.

That pretty much sums of Moore’s article. If I left something out, let me know.

Anyway, like I said before, I didn’t think much of the article.

If God knows everything that’s going to happen, there’s an amount of foreordaining that is
implied since He let it happen knowing that it was going to happen.

I don’t know why Moore wants to beat down Holy Hip Hop artists for expanding on the
scriptures in an informed way.

If artists such as the Ambassador went to college and have studied, at least I can be assured that
they have informed opinions, especially since many Holy Hip Hop artists consider themselves
lyrical theologians.

Now on to the statement about the theology of the oppressed. The Bible makes it clear that things
happen, so that God can get the glory.

Consider John 9 where Jesus healed a man. The scribes and Pharisees ask who sinned to make
the man blind. Jesus said, “Neither this man nor his parents sinned," said Jesus, "but this
happened so that the work of God might be displayed in his life.”

That implies that suffering is in God’s plan. I know that sounds harsh, but God knows the way
He wants things to play out for His glory.

In the Beatitudes, Jesus Christ, who was God in the flesh, did not even promise that everything
was going to be happy –go-lucky for the poor. Jesus said in Matthew 5:3-12, that believers
would mourn, be meek, and face persecution.

Moore says that Calvinists tell people “‘You are God’s Elect.’ Simultaneously and secondly, you
tell the weak, the marginalizes, the oppressed…they are unchosen of God… God has elected
them to pain, misery, exploitation, and despair.”

First off, the Bible clearly illustrates the idea of Election. Ephesians 1 is just one of the chapters
in the Bible that deals with the issue.

Secondly, what does Moore want Calvinists to be? Prosperity preachers who promise pie in the
sky and jets the fly high (I just made that up)?
What is so wrong with God electing people to pain,misery, exploitation, and despair? Jesus was
clearly God’s elect, yet He grew up in Nazareth—a dirty, poor, and overpopulated place.

The Scripture says that the Messiah would be a man of sorrows acquainted with grief (Isaiah
53:3).

While we all want to live pain-free lives here and now, a lot of times, we just gotta get through
this.

Furthermore, if not for God’s allowing people to be in poverty, which Moore has a problem
with,there would be none of the Holy Hip Hop music he loves. For it, as Moore mentions in his
article, was born out of oppression.

I think Moore has a problem with God’s justice.

This is understandable since we don’t always understand the will of God right away.

However, since the Holy Hip Hop artists are just calling the Gospel like they see it, Moore
should really take up his problems with God, and leave the Calvinist Holy Hip Hop artists alone.

–Tiff Orr, the Underground managing editor

Tags: calvinism, christian rap, gospel, Holy Hip Hop, Music

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