Prince and his conversion to Jehovah's Witnesses

by Dogpatch 11 Replies latest jw friends

  • Dogpatch
    Dogpatch
    Prince and his
    Conversion to
    Jehovah's Witnesses
    Prince on the cover of Entertainment Weekly,
    one of the many recent magazines using his
    picture on the front cover.

    Prince fans have recently become aware of his conversion to Jehovah's Witnesses, but few are aware of just how much that is affecting his music and lifestyle as well. According to Rick Ross, nationally known cult expert, he has even re-written some of the lines to his old songs, not just inserting religion into the new ones:

    Four years ago the funkster converted reportedly to satisfy his mother?s dying wish, but since then Prince has gone so far as to add religious lyrics to his theme song ?Purple Rain.?

    The new line in the song goes, ?Say you can?t make up your mind? I think you better close it and open up the Bible.?

    According to the Mirror (UK),

    Her dying wishes were for him to become a Jehovah's Witness, as she had been for most of her life, and to see him married. He tied the knot with Mani weeks before his mother passed away and six months after the death of his father, pianist and bandleader John L Nelson.

    Prince is also active in going door-to-door, and in unusual style for a Jehovah's Witness, according to a blog at atheism.about.com:

    Evidently, Prince proselytizes door- to-door just like other Witnesses - but unlike other Witnesses, he participates in the "System" in ways that would normally be shunned. When he does proselytize, according to Ross, he goes in a limo with four bodyguards and tailor-made suits. Pity that all Witnesses aren't given the same latitude - but they can't contribute millions to the cause like Prince can. You don't suppose that has anything to do with it, do you?

    There is an unofficial Prince fan community site that is quite active in discussing this issue.

    A recent issue of Entertainment Weekly provides some insight into the new Prince:

    Two nights after the L.A. concert, Prince is backstage before a sound check at the Glendale Arena outside Phoenix, a city named, appropriately enough, after the fiery, feathered avatar of resurrection. Clad in a black sleeveless tunic and cranberry pants, Prince takes a plate from his bodyguard and loads it up with fruit, pasta slathered in cream sauce, and salad. Yes, Prince eats. He also goes to the multiplex. Last night, after his show in Bakersfield, Calif., he and his band unwound by checking out Kevin Smith's latest flick, Jersey Girl, a so so departure from his usual lewd-and-crude comedies. Prince was unimpressed. Not that the 45-year-old, happily married, devout Jehovah's Witness can't appreciate a cleaner act; he himself has scrubbed from his set list staples like "Head" and "Jack U Off." It's just that according to Prince, Smith didn't replace it with anything interesting. "We walked out after an hour," he sniffs. "Guess that's what happens when the potty mouth don't work for you anymore."

    ....

    Hearing him talk about ordinary things is almost a shock. He speaks in hushed-voice gushes-megabyte downloads of wit, logic, and Christian evangelism.

    The second off-limits topic is Prince's past...which rules out almost everything else you'd want to discuss with him. "I've changed. I'm a different person. I'm about the present and moving forward. New joke, new anecdote, new lesson to be discovered," he says." "You know that old lady in Sunset Boulevard, trapped in her mansion and past glories? Getting ready for her close-up? I don't run with that." Even so, Prince begins concerts with a self-venerating video quoting extensively from a speech by Alicia Keys at his Hall induction.

    Much of what has changed in Prince's life has occurred in the several years since he committed to the Jehovah's Witness faith. His music has always wrestled with Christian-tinged spirituality, but Prince says he didn't start reading the Bible until he'd become a Witness. His religious fervor was evident in the 2001 concept album The Rainbow Children, which was roundly knocked by critics. (Prince also attempted to produce an evangelical video based on the album directed by...Kevin Smith, whose surreal tale of working with Prince can be found on the DVD An Evening With Kevin Smith. "I'm cool with him not liking Jersey Girl," says Smith. "I f---ing hated his album Crystal Ball, so now we're even.")

    As a result of his faith, Prince has developed an uncharacteristic modesty. In concert, he's taken to changing "I'm your messiah and you're the reason why" in "I Would Die 4 U" to "He's your messiah..." Still, it appears he has some kinks to work out in squaring his dogma with his golden-god persona. Asked if he feels he's alienated his fans over the years, Prince says: "No. The love has never left. I've always felt that there were people in my corner. It's a gift, that God gives us the chance to feel such love. Arid it's all for His glory: I don't believe in idol worship. That's why I don't sign autographs. When I get asked for my autograph, I say no and tell them why, because I'm giving them something to think about." This from a man who often prompts his concert audiences to scream his name. Ironies, contradictions, and exceptions escape Prince like doves from a cage.

    There is also the predicament of his own potty-mouthed past-the one where he sang of erotic cities and a love that is soft and wet. But Prince has this problem solved as well. He doesn't perform those songs anymore. The founding father of the warning label freely concedes he's come full circle since he scandalized Tipper Gore with the word masturbating in "Darling Nikki." "Look at this situation with the FCC after Janet: We've gone too far now. We've pushed the envelope off the table and forgotten there was a table. You can't push the envelope any further than I pushed it. So stop! What's the point?"

    partial quotes from Entertainment Weekly, April 23, 2004, p. 29-32

    Rolling Stone magazine offers some additional insights:

    It's hard to tell precisely what counts for the more easygoing Prince. He refuses to speak about any aspect of his private life, but his becoming a Jehovah's Witness a few years back has seemingly brought him a good deal of spiritual calm. The religion's combination of absolute certainty and convoluted interpretive zeal suits him perfectly. He began his remarks at the Hall of Fame induction by offering "all praise and thanks to the most high Jehovah," and his additional declaration there that "too much freedom can lead to the soul's decay" should be read as his acceptance of the strict tenets of that faith. In consequence, he has expunged all profanity from his language and refuses to perform any of his racier songs - no "Darling Nikki," no "Head," no "Gett Off."

    And speaking of sexual decorum, Musicology, among its other subjects, is a paean to monogamy ("Eye see U picked me out like U want something/But shame on U, baby, can't U see this ring?"). And Prince has even become an unlikely advocate for cleaning up the airwaves. "This culture is in big trouble," he insists. "All you see on television are debased images...."

    ....

    More personally, Prince's marriage to twenty-seven-year-old Manuela Testolini in 2001 seems also to have settled him. Beautiful, slender and soft-spoken, she was by his side virtually every moment he wasn't on-stage in Cleveland. The past seven years or so have not been easy for Prince. The child he had with his first wife, Mayte Garcia, died from a rare illness after living for only a week. The couple's marriage ended not long after that. Both his parents passed away. Amid all that loss, remarriage and faith appear to have come as great, restorative gifts.

    partial quotes from Rolling Stone, May 27, 2004, p. 56-60

    All the signs are present for a typical conversion to Jehovah's Witnesses: disaffection with the system of things (the world and especially its entertainment), the intolerance of other religions or world views, disassociation with one's previous persona and habits, and an active evangelistic tone. Prince has revealed much of this in interviews. He goes door-to-door, albeit in a fashion unlike any other Jehovah's Witness, but that was also the case with Michael Jackson, a former Witness himself. (Michael used to go in disguise however, Prince does not.)

    How long will Prince remain a Witness? If he is still down deep as independent as he has been in the past, he may ruffle some feathers with the big boys in Brooklyn. Perhaps he will "reach an agreement" with the Watchtower leaders to quietly disassociate himself once they are tired of trying to explain him to the outside world. Or perhaps he will just become too conflicted with his past and retire from the stage someday. Will he become another victim of cult mind control breakdown? At any rate, for now it looks like he is "dug in" for the long haul. Perhaps when he becomes aware that the Watchtower is run by psychopaths, he may reconsider his devotion to this self-styled "one true church."

    from http://www.dannyhaszard.com/prince.htm

    Randy Watters

    http://www.randytv.com

  • heathen
    heathen

    That does sound aweful strange that he goes out in feild service with body guards . I have heard some of his new stuff , it doesn't sound so bad . I almost expect him to go gospel or something .

  • Valis
    Valis

    What!? No more P Control?

    *LOL* He is no more of a witness than I am!

    Sincerely,

    District Overbeer

  • Undaunted Danny
    Undaunted Danny

    Prince Don't you get it? ''Prince" is ahead of his time.He's already coronated to be a JW elder "prince'' when Joseph Rutherford enthrones Magic Wand him with regal power in the Watchtower paradise. Crown 2

  • Dogpatch
    Dogpatch

    What's interesting is that Prince used to sing gospel!

    Randy

    http://www.freeminds.org

  • TresHappy
    TresHappy

    I tell people I know that Prince became a Jehovah's Witness. Most people can't believe it!

  • heathen
    heathen

    I had no idea prince sang gospel . There is a market for it . The stuff I heard was more in the nieghborhood of alternative , I like some alternative .I think it's great that prince is getting away from the bad boy stuff and settleing into something a little more for the mellowed out crowd . The guy is 45 yrs. old .

  • Country Girl
    Country Girl

    In one of the books I read, it was mentioned his Mother was a Seventh Day, and he was raised like that.

    CG

  • hemp lover
    hemp lover

    I went to both of Prince's Dallas shows and he's almost as naughty as he ever was. He's replaced his overtly explicit material with innuendo laden songs and he's better for it. He's the sexiest JW alive.

    He did and said and sang a lot of things that would have average Joe publisher in the back room within minutes. I'd love to see a R&F JW show up at the meeting wearing an electric blue suit with matching stiletto heeled boots, shirt unbuttoned to reveal a square of chest hair, huge medallion hanging to the waist and diamond earrings.

    Here's my favorite line from his show: "Are there any sexual ladies in the house tonight?" (The answer was yes.)

  • CountryGuy
    CountryGuy

    Maybe it's a career move... didn't Michael Jackson claim to be a JW at the peak of his career?

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