Monday, August 6, 2007

Jamaica's Anglican church to modernize hymnals with reggae songs

KINGSTON, Jamaica: Songs by late reggae legends Bob Marley and Peter Tosh — both devout Rastafarians — will be included in a new collection of Anglican church hymnals in Jamaica.

Marley's "One Love" and Tosh's "Psalm 27" will be the first reggae tunes to appear in songbooks alongside traditional worship music on the island that gave birth to reggae, said church leaders preparing a new collection of hymns.

Church spokesman Rev. Ernle Gordon said on Friday that members of the Anglican Church of Jamaica were enthusiastic about including the reggae musicians' music in the hymnals, despite their sometimes vocal opposition to Christianity.

"They may have been anti-church, but they were not anti-God or anti-religion," said Gordon, adding that including the songs would help modernize Jamaica's hymnals.

Marley and Tosh, who both died in the 1980s after becoming international music stars, practiced Rastafarianism, a faith founded by descendants of slaves in response to black oppression.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

That is very interesting news. I would love to check out that church just to hear the reggae. Selassie himself was not even a rasta, he was an orthodox ethiopian christian by faith. I wish all religions would be as accepting as the jamaican anglican church. I am sure God sees the good in all religions and never meant for wars to be fought over differences in faith.