Your Gateway to Music and More from a Christian Perspective
     Slow down as you approach the gate, and have your change ready....
SubscribeAbout UsFeaturesNewsReviewsMoviesConcert ReviewsTop 10ResourcesContact Us
 
Home
Subscribe
About Us
Features
News

Album Reviews
Movies
Concert Reviews

Top 10
Resources
Contact Us

 

 
Sacred Love
Artist: Sting 
Label: A&M Records 
Length: 10 tracks

With a title like Sacred Love, one has to wonder if there might be some religious flavor to Sting’s seventh solo studio album. Well, the answer is very much yes. There will be few albums released this year with more religious references than this. It is riddled with the word prayer, with Biblical quotes, and Jesus turns up a few times, too. What is going on? Has Sting had a Damascus Road experience? “Dead Mans Rope” certainly shows a change of direction from the early songs:

Walk away IN emptiness, 
Walk away IN sorrow and 
Walking away from Jesus’ love to the ending 
Walk away FROM emptiness, 
Walk away FROM sorrow 
And a walking in his grace line too.
The title track has him thinking bout religion, what we believe, the Bible, Adam and Eve, the tree of knowledge and the forbidden fruit. 

Elsewhere, though, there are still hints of the familiarly secular and cynical Sting. On “Send Your Love,” which could be an inspirational byline to a sermon on bringing in the kingdom, he sings: 

There’s no religion but sex and music
There’s no religion that is right or winning
There’s no religion in the path of hatred
Ain’t no prayer but the one I’m singing.
In the explicitly autobiographical “The Book Of My Life” he puts it maybe pretty conclusively: “There’s a chapter on God but I don’t understand.” It could well be that U2 have done to the 00s what they did in the 80s; bring religious-speak back into the vocabulary of the rock song. It is maybe trendy again and though there may be an honest wrestling with the spiritual in these songs he might be using it to find something to write about. 

Musically, a conversion would do Sting no harm. Yes, this is not a bad album. How could it be? Sting has always taken the wise maxim of making sure your band is better than you and here the playing is immaculate and of course, Sting’s voice is an instrument in itself. There are a lot of list songs, which has always been a trait of the Sting craft but one wonders if Sting is also wrestling with his ability to write great songs. Coming in the trail of his live best of All This Time maybe highlights the gulf between these efforts and his best work. You wonder where are the “Fragile’s,” “Fields Of Gold’s,” “Shape Of My Heart’s” or ”Every Breath You Take’s?” You just cannot see the next Eva Cassidy covering these. 

Steve Stockman 10/20/2003
 

Steve Stockman is the Presbyterian Chaplain at Queens University, Belfast, Ireland, where he lives in community with 88 students. He has just finished a book on U2, Walk On; The Spiritual Journey of U2, is the poetic half of Stevenson and Samuel who have just released their debut album Gracenotes, and he has a weekly radio show on BBC Radio Ulster (listen anytime of day or night @ www.bbc.co.uk/ni/religion/rhythmandsoul). He has his own web page--Rhythms of Redemption at http://stocki.ni.org. He also tries to spend some time with his wife Janice and daughters Caitlin and Jasmine.
 
 
   
 Copyright © 1996 - 2003 The Phantom Tollbooth