Let My People Flow

Let My People Flow


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What if God has been speaking through voices the religious world was too quick to ignore?

In Let My People Flow: Hip Hop and the Black Prophetic Tradition, author, rapper, and lifelong hip hop artist Cellus Hamilton makes a bold but careful claim: God has always made sure His people could hear His voice, even when religious leaders failed.

Drawing from Isaiah 28, Scripture, history, Black music, and hip hop culture, Hamilton explores how God often speaks through what the religious establishment considers strange, foreign, or unworthy. When Israel's priests and prophets became corrupt, God promised to speak through "strange lips and a foreign tongue." And throughout America's history, especially in the face of religious corruption, racial injustice, and anti-Blackness, that strange and foreign tongue has often sounded like music.

From spirituals to blues to hip hop, Black music has carried a prophetic thread: telling the truth, exposing injustice, lamenting suffering, confronting hypocrisy, and calling people back to what is right. This audiobook traces that thread across history and shows how it reflects the biblical patterns of prophecy, lament, witness, and liberation.

Narrated by Cellus Hamilton himself, this audiobook carries the passion, rhythm, conviction, and cultural insight of an author who is not only writing about hip hop from the outside, but speaking from within it.

This is not an argument that music is Scripture. It is an invitation to learn how to listen.

Listeners will discover how Isaiah 28 offers a powerful lens for hearing God's voice in unexpected places, how Black music has functioned as a prophetic witness throughout American history, how spirituals, blues, and hip hop have carried truth, resistance, lament, and hope, and how the liberating voice of Christ can still be heard through voices many have dismissed.

Because if God is still speaking today, you don't want to miss His voice.