| The
following article contains an exclusive
Dubroom interview with Christafari about
their decision to no longer use the Name of
the Most High JAH in order to describe the
god they serve.
US-based Christian Reggaeband Christafari
recently made an announcement on their
website which could stir up both the
Christian and the Rastafarian community
until a great extend. Their new album
“Gravity” marks a shift in their
approach and target audience, as they
explain in their section of Frequently Asked
Questions on their website.
The most significant change is that
Christafari will no longer be using the Name
“JAH” when they sing about the Most
High.
On the Christafari website, founder Mark
Mohr gives two reasons for this decision.
The first one is that Christafari will no
longer be targeting their music primarily to
a Rastafarian and Reggae loving audience.
Mohr claims that the Name of Jah is
mentioned only once in the Bible and that he
wants to “focus my ministry approach on
the numerous other names for God that are
found far more frequently and would make our
message even more clear to the listener”.
Whether this analogy means that Christafari
simply wants to reach a wider and bigger
audience or that there were other reasons
too remains unclear.
The second reason is presented as the most
important one and probably is. On the same
page, Mohr explains why he used the Name of
Jah in previous releases: “You see, we
have always used Jah as a culturally
sensitive way to reach Rastas, (and still
will individually), yet so many young gospel
reggae artists are using our same ministry
approach in trying to reach a completely
different audience--the Christian church.”
Mark Mohr is worried that the frequent usage
of the Name of Jah in Gospel music will lead
into a situation in which it becomes unclear
Who actually is meant when the Name is
expressed. He sees Christafari’s leading
role in the Christian Reggae and World as a
reason to set an example to his fellow
artists and writes: “When I started
Christafari and Lion of Zion ent., my
primary goal was to see the Rasta church
become Christian, yet one of the regrettable
fruits of my labour, (due to uneducated
imitation by other artists) is the Christian
church becoming more Rasta. This was never
my intention.”
Christafari’s decision will undoubtedly
cause a lot of debate in the Rastafarian and
Christian community. The message of their
website raised some questions and the
Dubroom asked them to Mark Mohr of
Christafari:
DUBROOM: “Does this mean you are also
going to change the name Christafari and the
usage of Rastafarian cultural expressions
such as the flag et cetera as they are
installed with the same reasoning in mind as
the usage of the Name of Jah?”
CHRISTAFARI: “Absolutely not. The name
Christafari means three things in three
different languages, of which the primary is
the Greek definition for "Christ
Bearers." Whether you look at our name
in English, Amharic or even Spanish, it is
very clear WHO we represent. That is all
that I am trying to do—urge artists to
clarify. The days too short for enigmatic
music that merely entertains and speaks of
an ambiguous God that could be interpreted a
host of different ways.”
DUBROOM: “Can you specify
"universalists" and can you give
an impression of the concept of
"God" in universalist circles?”
CHRISTAFARI: “I go into full detail on
this in the 13th day of Gravity (that will
be posted at lionofzion.com only on June
1st). A portion of my commentary reads:
"In 2001, after the tragic fall of the
twin towers in NY City America turned to
God, and weekday church attendance reached a
pinnacle as scared and confused citizens
flooded into churches. In the midst of
adversity we had truly become one nation
under God."
"But then I remember on the 14th of
September, I was sitting at home flipping
through the channels on TV, and I came
across a church service (it was on almost
every station). It was a memorial service
for 9/11 in Washington DC and in this
cathedral, each of the major religions was
represented by their own spiritual leader,
each behind his own pulpit and each one was
speaking of and praying to an ambiguous
God—a God that many believe is the same
Lord that just goes by different names
depending on which nation you are
from."
"It is my opinion that there was only
one clear religion being preached that day
and it was blatant universalism—the whole
many names one god theory. You know, the all
rivers flow into the same sea principle?
This concept, even in the simplest of forms
doesn’t agree with the foundational
doctrines of Christianity, Catholicism,
Judaism, or even Islam. For according to
each of their texts there is only one God—
It can’t be both this religion and that
belief are right (for they are inherently
contradictory). It has to be either this
one, or that one is the only way. So while I
was encouraged to see such a tremendous
unity during this tumultuous time, I was
disgusted by the blurring of lines and
revelatory compromise that was taking
place."
Inspired by this, I wrote the chorus
"Christ is the Only Way..." If it
had been 4 years ago, I probably would have
penned, "Jah is the only way," but
given the present apocalyptic setting, and
the overwhelming tolerance in the world for
all religions except "Narrow Minded
Christianity," I refused to veil my
references of Christ any longer.
Let’s face it, in this secular society,
using the name Jah can often be the easy way
out. It is not as offensive as the name
Jesus and much less censored. Do you
honestly think that a band like POD would
have gotten as much respect in the
mainstream if they said Christ in place of
Jah? Probably not. This name is the
stumbling block for all mankind, yet it is
the fruit of all true salvation.”
DUBROOM: “Is the following summary
correct: "We're not gonna sing the name
of Jah anymore because the fruit of such a
thing is the 'Rastafarization' of
Christianity”?”
CHRISTAFARI: “Yes, it is correct,
depending on your interpretation. I will use
the name when singing my past songs on stage
and when personally ministering to a Rasta.
I have not used this name in my recent
recordings as an attempt to set a positive
example for the plethora of young aspiring
artists that I teach at music seminars in
places like Trinidad and Tobago or Barbados,
who think the best way to start off every
song is by singing Jah, Jah, Jah, Jah... Now
keep in mind, these guys are not dreads, nor
do they know the Rasta culture intimately.
They are not using this term to reach the
Rastas, but to stroke the sheep. If they
ever do talk about Selassie or Rastas, it is
in a disrespectful manner that may make
Christians laugh, but is at the expense of
the ones that I am trying to save. Seen?
DUBROOM: “Can you specify this "Rastafarization"
(for lack of a better word)? How does it
reveal itself and how can it be
recognized?”
I would liken it to a secular urban R&B
artist doing a token black gospel song when
their lifestyle does not follow the message
that they are singing. They simply sing the
song in that style to add more diversity to
their repertoire, not because of a
conviction of the heart. I wear my dreads,
sport ites gold and green, and use the name
Jah so that I can become all things to all
men—to reach the Rastas. This is not a
fashion style or a ploy to sell more
records. Yet there are some that view it as
such. They try and sound just like artists
like Capleton (minus a few words and there)
and take this sound to the local foursquare
gospel church! Whereas my intention is to go
straight to the Bobo Shanti commune (and I
have).
I just think that there is a lot of
unnecessary cross-pollenation going on that
is simply causing more confusion. You must
understand that your typical protestant
church and your regular Rasta Nyabinghi are
two completely separate audiences and each
require their own unique approach when it
comes to ministering the Lord's Word.”
DUBROOM: “Thank you for the interview.”
CHRISTAFARI: “I will also post these
questions and answers in the Christafari
forum because I feel that they will answer a
lot of questions.”
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