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Lenny Kravitz
Child Of God
*Article from
Christianity Today*
"I don't want to know
emptiness/Take me down to the water/Wanna be
baptized in your love/Far away from the
loneliness/Take my heart and wash away the
fear/Let me be baptized in your love"
— from "Baptized"
Considering his widespread media coverage
and musical success, it's surprising that
Lenny Kravitz's prominent declarations of
Christian faith go largely unnoticed.
Accepting Jesus into his life after a
conversation with a friend at the age of 13,
Kravitz proudly wears a cross around his
neck, along with a Star of David (referring
to his father's heritage, as well as his
Savior's). A tattoo on his back declares, "My heart belongs to Jesus Christ."
His 1993
hit
"Are You Gonna Go My Way?"
was
apparently sung from Christ's perspective,
and his 1995 album Circus included
songs that would be at home on most modern
worship recordings. Check out
Spiritual Journeys
and
The Rock & Roll
Rebellion
for other examples of Kravitz's Christian
beliefs.
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Unfortunately, those
outspoken beliefs are often blurred by mixed
messages. General themes of secularized love
are common in Kravitz's songs, sometimes
alluding to the sexual. He's also been known
to shoot some racy videos over the last
decade, and profanity occasionally slips
into his songwriting. It's a confusing
combination for Christians and
non-Christians alike, and Kravitz's new
album Baptism is no exception.
Ditching much of the funk and R&B for a more
laid-back approach to soulful '70s rock/pop,
the music is often subtle, sometimes
infectious, and just as often clichéd.
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After years of grieving over his divorce
with actress Lisa Bonet, Kravitz seems to
have found new love, as heard in the banally
worded "California," "Lady," and the
awkwardly titled "Sistamamalover," in which
he expresses how a new woman fulfills all
his needs.
Some tracks beg the question of whether
Kravitz is using spiritual imagery to
deliver rock clichés. For example, in
"Calling All Angels," is he praying for
romance or Jesus to fill his emptiness? He
sings of healing and saving souls in
"Minister of Rock 'n' Roll," but is he using
spiritual jargon to express the power of
music, or rock jargon to express the power
of Jesus? That leads to another mixed
message with "I Don't Want to Be a Star," in
which Kravitz shuns materialism and fame,
yet in "Flash," he seems to embrace his role
as superstar, though recognizing it as
temporary success.

Such contradictions appropriately lend
themselves to the questions asked in "Where
Are We Runnin'?" and "What Did I Do With My
Life?" The first asks what we strive for in
life's rat race, noting that,
"The road is
paved but narrow/I hope we all get home."
In
the other, Kravitz asks if he's lived the
way he should, failing to draw a strong
conclusion:
"Did I exercise giving and forgiveness with
all my might?/Did I honor my freedom and did
I live in the light?"
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In
"Storm," Kravitz's faith is more prominent:
"At night, I pray before I sleep in hope of
finding you/I've opened up my heart, I want
to come through/I close my eyes, I'm
searching for your love." He continues the
conversation with God in "The Other Side,"
praying, "Father, can you tell me again that
I'm livin' 'til I meet you on that day on
the other side."
In the acoustic ballad "Destiny," he
perplexingly sings that there's no right or
wrong, but then adds that
"There's a magic in my
heart that I feel/Don't you know that God is
love and it's real."
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Then there's "Baptized" (excerpted above), a
strong declaration of Kravitz's need for
Jesus in his life—"I
would be a fool to let you go/With you I'm
reborn, I'm no longer torn/Yeah, I refuse to
lose my heart and soul/I have to be strong."
Mainstream critics are still blind to
Kravitz's beliefs, and that's perhaps
understandable considering his artistic
dichotomy. One critic noted that the new
album cover finds Kravitz "bathing in some
kind of red liquid," but with an album
called Baptism, knowing the rock
star's background, Christians can't help but
note that he seems to be washing in a pool
of blood (with his guitar). Determining
whether it's Christ's blood or merely "some
kind of red liquid" will likewise affect
your interpretation of Lenny Kravitz and his
faith.

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