Recent conversations regarding the introduction of staff notation into the hymnal of the Celestial Church of Christ (CCC) reflect sincere concern for the Church’s prophetic and spiritual heritage. Such engagement should not be viewed as opposition, but as stewardship. However, for our discussions to remain constructive, they must be grounded in verifiable historical and musicological facts.
It is important to clarify that staff based documentation in the CCC is not a recent development. As early as the 1960s, Pa Nathaniel Yansunu began documenting hymns using sol-fa notation to preserve melodic stability beyond oral transmission. This effort was strengthened in the mids 1960’s, under the leadership of the late Supreme Head, Baba Bada of blessed memory.
Following his investiture in 1987, a formal mandate was given to the Central Choir to pursue structured musical staff notation for the Church’s hymns. This directive came from ecclesiastical authority within the Church and not from external academic influence.
The vision for structured hymn preservation was championed by leaders such as VSE Olu Ogunsanya and significantly advanced by Baba Oluwole Adetiran. His work in compiling the hymns in staff notation was a major step toward safeguarding melodic integrity and preventing distortion, tonal drift, and regional inconsistencies as the Church expanded across cultures and nations.
In furtherance of the mandate given by Baba Bada, and in order to fulfill and honour the great works of Baba Oluwole Adetiran, the Executives of the Central Choir, led by Sup. Evang. Gboyega Adeyeri, carried forward his vision of publishing the Hymnal compiled by him. To ensure scholarly precision and fidelity to the original documentation, Professor Femi Faseun was engaged to coordinate a team of 12 musicologists who are members of the CCC to carry out the finishing musicological review of Baba Adetiran’s compiled work. This process reflects continuity, respect for legacy, and institutional responsibility.
Earlier, in 2009, the Pastor had inaugurated the Hymn Technical Review Council. This body included musicologists, theologians, hymn custodians, experienced choirmasters, and prophetic vessels through whom many hymns were revealed. From 2009–2019, the Council carefully reviewed, authenticated, and standardized hymn texts and melodies, leading to the publication of the Revised Standard Edition of the CCC Hymnbook. The aim was restoration and preservation and not reconstruction.
From an ethnomusicological perspective, concerns about spiritual authenticity deserve thoughtful reflection. As Blacking (1973) noted, music operates within shared cultural systems. Celestial hymns, though spiritually revealed, are culturally expressed through Yoruba tonal inflections, pentatonic patterns, call-and-response structures, and parallel harmonic movements. Documentation does not create these features rather, it preserves them.
As Nketia (1974) observed, African musical traditions, though historically oral, increasingly adopt notation to safeguard heritage in changing social contexts. In this light, staff notation functions as preservation technology, not cultural displacement.
The real question, therefore, is not whether documentation is appropriate, but whether it faithfully reflects prophetic origin and melodic integrity. When theologians, prophets, hymn custodians, and trained music scholars work together, documentation strengthens sacred authenticity rather than weakens it.
Celestial hymns remain revelation, heritage, doctrine, and spiritual power. Responsible documentation ensures that future generations encounter them in forms that are melodically stable, theologically sound, and spiritually rooted.
Preservation, when approached with unity, prayer, and scholarship, is not compromised, it is continuity.
Yours in Christ
*Ope Olaore*










