Chance the Rapper, Christianity, and Blackness
It鈥檚 hard to talk about this year鈥檚 Grammys without also talking about Chancelor Bennett鈥攂etter known as Chance the Rapper. His mixtape, Coloring Book, was the first stream-only project to win the category of Best Rap Album. He also took home two additional Grammys: one for Best Rap Performance, and one for Best New Artist. His hardware victory wasn鈥檛 too unexpected, seeing as how Coloring Book spent the majority of 2016 receiving widespread acclaim.
But what came as a shock was Chance鈥檚 performance: To a viewership of 26 million, he used his platform to rap about God and Christianity and blackness in a way that the mainstream too often misinterprets.
To understand Chance鈥檚 unique brand of Christianity, and why it mattered especially at the Grammys, it鈥檚 worth rewinding for a moment. When in late December 2015 he became the , he had already started settling into a new gospel-inspired sound that would propel him into the mainstream. His first mixtape effort, 10 Day, was inspired by a 10-day suspension for smoking marijuana. His second mixtape, Acid Rap, was influenced in part by drug use and in part by a feeling of indestructibility. Both saw critical acclaim and put Chance on the map. But they also reflected rough moments in his life鈥攎oments that鈥檇 eventually lead to a .
It wasn鈥檛 until Surf, an album by Chance-affiliates Donnie Trumpet and the Social Experiment, that fans would see how Chance鈥檚 family shapes his music. His heavy involvement with the project, released in the summer of 2015, made Surf feel both like an extension of Chance鈥檚 musical will and a sign of things to come. 鈥淪unday Candy,鈥 Surf鈥檚 lead single on which Chance was featured exclusively, contributed to the latter. More of an evolution than an extension鈥攁 combination of piano, soul, and nostalgia鈥攊t introduced a Chance that had finally come into his own, and it hit a note that resonated with fans and critics alike. Chance used his first performance on SNL to debut a new single, but his performance of 鈥淪unday Candy鈥 would debut something else: the gospel-influenced, authentically joyful, and familial style that would give birth to Coloring Book.
Sitting on a barstool in front of Jamila Woods, Donnie Trumpet, the Social Experiment, and an all-black church choir, Chance gave a that was slower and more deliberate than the mixtape version. He told us of his grandmother and her love, of Christmas dinners, and of Sundays at church, all wrapped in the harmonies of Jamila Woods and the church choir鈥檚 refrain. The link between Chance鈥檚 grandmother and religion鈥攖he clear theme of the performance鈥攃arried the rapper to the end of the song, where he stood up and began free-styling to the musical collective鈥檚 now spirited improvisation. It was at this point during the performance that he name-dropped Jason Van Dyke, an , before finishing an impressive flow and bringing the performance to an end.
You don鈥檛 have to read between the lines to get the point: Chance wasn鈥檛 afraid to go onto a stage as wildly popular as SNL鈥檚 and be his authentic self鈥攁nd this included rapping about his Christianity.
The performance did more than signal the trajectory of Chance鈥檚 musical evolution: It gave us insight into his unique brand of Christianity. It isn鈥檛 the stuff of coffee shop devotionals and megachurches. It鈥檚 not practiced in weekday young adult services. It isn鈥檛 hipster holiness, either; it doesn鈥檛 aspire to be cool or convenient, but vital. It looks like a grandmother, descended from slaves, at a black church in her Sunday best. And it鈥檚 precious and resilient in the same way an heirloom is. Chance鈥檚 religion is inextricably linked to blackness via family and community, and to an enduring hope through the uniquely black suffering that necessitates it.
In Chance鈥檚 music, the themes of Christianity, blackness, and hope/joy take many forms. Sometimes they鈥檙e brilliantly bound together in a single line as in 鈥淗ow Great鈥 (鈥淕ood God, the gift of freedom / Hosanna Santa invoked and woke up slaves from Southampton to Chatham Manor鈥). Other times one of the themes stands out above the others, like in the joyful anthem 鈥淣o Problem.鈥 But seldom are they ever separated.
That last part is important. Like a number of other rap artists who have brought Christianity to the forefront of their art, Chance finds his songs co-opted by mainstream Christian thought, particularly by young Christians who appreciate that he鈥檚 unafraid to praise God in front of large audiences. But this praise often lacks depth, crumbling when it鈥檚 confronted with nuance. For instance, the idea of rejecting rap as art but loving what Chance does is flawed鈥攊f you don鈥檛 like rap and its complexities, his message isn鈥檛 for you. If you find yourself reflexively saying, 鈥淎ctually, all lives matter,鈥 any time someone says that black lives matter, or asking, 鈥淲ell, what about black-on-black crime?鈥 whenever someone talks about police brutality, but then cheer on Chance because he mentioned God at the Grammys, you鈥檙e deluding yourself. Of course, just because it鈥檚 not made for everyone doesn鈥檛 mean that everyone can鈥檛 acknowledge it. But giving Chance鈥檚 Christianity nuance is important for whom it reaches.
Mainstream Christian writers and magazines tend to celebrate Chance鈥檚 gospel as a phenomenon of evangelism that has seeped its way into spaces where . The truth, however, is that Chance鈥檚 gospel is just as powerful for an increasing number of Christian millennials finding it harder and harder not to join their . The complexity of Chance鈥檚 Christianity puts it at odds with the shifting鈥攁nd arguably deteriorating鈥攍andscape of mainstream Christian thought. For disenchanted Christian Millennials鈥攕pecifically those of color鈥擟hance鈥檚 profound faith is a reminder that there鈥檚 a place where we belong, because it was made for us, labored over for us, bled over for us鈥攏o matter what the rest of it looks like.
This idea explains Chance鈥檚 popularity among his secular fans, too. In many ways, the same idea applies to the American experiment, and on a larger scale, to life. Chance shows us that being authentic and belonging aren鈥檛 mutually exclusive, and that faith isn鈥檛 neat and tidy.
So the next time you see Chance rap about God鈥攁nd trust me, he鈥檒l do it again鈥攔emember that this is what makes him, and his brand of Christianity, worth talking about.