A transformative movement is sweeping through faith-based music as emerging artists blur the lines between worship and contemporary urban sounds. Lecrae Moore’s groundbreaking Grammy win in 2013 opened doors, and now a diverse collective of rappers, R&B singers and Afrobeats creators are building on that foundation, attracting young global listeners who crave substance without sacrificing style.
James Trig Rosseau Sr., CEO of Holy Culture Radio, describes the shift as audiences seeking something soul-feeding and forward-looking. They discover sonic coziness paired with messages that fulfill deeper needs, he explains.
Since 2022, streaming platforms like Spotify and Amazon Music have witnessed explosive interest in these genres. Yet breaking into mainstream spaces remains challenging for predominantly Black and African artists creating music that defies easy categorization and has historically lacked representation in Christian music circles.
Breaking Sound Barriers
Angela Jollivette, former overseer of the Grammy Awards’ Gospel and Contemporary Christian categories who now runs Moonbaby Media, sees momentum building. Over the last two years, something underground is gaining the visibility it deserves, she observes.
Lecrae’s influence continues rippling through the industry. Florida rappers Caleb Gordon and Alex Jean experiment with rap subgenres and Afrobeats, while Nigerian pioneer Limoblaze joined Lecrae’s Reach Records label. Artists like CalledOut Music and The Voice UK winner Annatoria are rising alongside them.
Lecrae emphasizes the global nature of this shift. The world can now hear themselves represented, he says, calling it a picture of faith’s universal reach.
Crafting Authentic Sound
Ryan Ofei, a Dallas-based Ghanaian Canadian artist and former Maverick City Music member, pivoted to Afrobeats-R&B fusion for his 2024 solo debut. He characterizes this growing music vein as less preachy but still a massive evangelistic tool for people outside church walls. Listeners can enjoy long drives while feeling edified and sensing spiritual presence, Ofei explains.
Rapper Jackie Hill Perry describes providing sounds that are ghetto and cool without profanity, noting Christian rap today feels more vibe-driven than the intellectual approach from a decade ago.
Childlike CiCi started as a secular artist recording in trap houses before her 2019 conversion. She wanted music rooted in faith but inspired by trap and drill’s aggressive energy. When people think of Christian hip-hop, they expect Kidz Bop, she says. The Bible is not Kidz Bop.
Platform Recognition
London-based Limoblaze credits Lecrae’s music for transforming his faith from religious practice to an actual relationship with Jesus. Inspired by Lecrae’s success in bridging faith and mainstream music, Limoblaze met with major streaming platforms three years ago. Amazon subsequently launched its first Afrogospel playlist, a move Limoblaze says Lecrae would applaud for expanding the reach of Christian music.
Christian Afrobeats is slowly heading toward mainstream level, at least in the African music scene, Limoblaze predicts.
Lauren Stellato, programming lead for Christian and gospel music at Amazon Music, highlights how young artists and fans are bringing faith into sounds and spaces where they already live. Audiences respond because it feels natural, she says.
Christian rappers Gordon, Jean, nobigdyl., Hulvey, Jon Keith and GAWVI performed at the 2024 Rolling Loud Miami festival. Rolling Loud later gave Christian rapper Miles Minnick a solo set, who then spoke on a Grammy panel and performed at a Super Bowl event. Lecrae’s influence on the genre continues to inspire these artists and audiences alike.
Navigating Industry Challenges
Emmett G. Price III, dean of Africana studies at Berklee College of Music, draws parallels to Kirk Franklin’s modern gospel sound facing resistance in the 1990s. Although resistance persists, newer artists matter because Black churches are not homogenous, Price adds.
Lecrae argues nothing is ungodly about wanting God in other music when traditional worship songs fail to resonate.
R&B artist CèJae explores personal themes like heartbreak and struggling to pray regularly while staying biblically rooted. Traditional gospel sometimes lacks the feeling part or seems like a recycled message, she reflects.
Alternative artist Sondae from the U.K. sees sonic diversity helping people find music they connect with. God has blessed his harvest with different flavors of fruits popping up everywhere, blessing everyone, he says.
Industry Evolution
Jollivette works with the Recording Academy to develop a rhythm and praise Grammy category as Christian rap, R&B and Afrobeats artists still lack the industry support, financial resources and radio exposure their counterparts enjoy.
Christian rapper Torey D’Shaun shared on nobigdyl.’s podcast how a Kendrick Lamar lyric from good kid, m.A.A.d city led him to faith after hearing his East St. Louis upbringing reflected. We should be allowed to make denser music than youth group music, says D’Shaun.
CèJae reports streaming representatives say more platform playlists would help the genre explode, but there is not enough Christian R&B music yet. Mat Anderson from Sony Music’s Provident Entertainment confirms that is starting to change.
Hill Perry advises artists to avoid obsessing over numbers and practice daily humility, which will translate into their careers. Limoblaze shares that resolve, knowing whatever happens stems from the Spirit of God, not personal power or talent.
Source: The Associated Press

