Tag Archives: Bobby Jones

08May/26

Snoop Dogg: 30 Years of Gin and Juice

Hallowed Ground or Open Doors? A Theological Review of Secular-to-Sacred Transitions in the Contemporary Black Church

1. Introduction: The Prodigal’s Return to the G-Funk Gospel

The historical relationship between the Black Church and secular music has long been characterized by a permeable yet rigorously policed boundary, a tension that reached a watershed moment with the “return home” of G-Funk pioneers. This transition, epitomized by Snoop Dogg, represents a profound subversion of traditional ecclesiastical hierarchies and a renegotiation of sacred space. In the field of liturgical musicology, this pivot is significant not merely as a celebrity conversion, but as an reclamation of a foundational identity. Snoop Dogg himself provides the sociological justification for this narrative, noting that “95 percent of the gangster rappers were born and raised in a church.” For these artists, the sanctuary provided the primary pedagogical environment for reading, acting, and performance—skills later utilized to navigate the profane world.In evaluating the intent behind his sacred projects, particularly the 2018  Bible of Love , one must engage with Snoop’s pneumatological claim: he asserts the album is a “spirit-driven” rather than a “money-driven” endeavor. His core theological argument—an ecclesiology of radical inclusion—can be distilled as follows: Continue reading