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What you didn’t know about Donna Summer and her journey of faith

Headshot of Donna Summer, US singer-songwriter, posing in a studio portrait, with her hands raised, open-palmed, either side of her head, wearing gold-sequinned cuffs and collar, 1976.
Headshot of Donna Summer, US singer-songwriter, posing in a studio portrait, with her hands raised, open-palmed, either side of her head, wearing gold-sequinned cuffs and collar, 1976. | Getty Images/Redferns/Fin Costello

Disco diva Donna Summer, who launched her Grammy Award-winning career with the lascivious “Love to Love You Baby” in 1975, was raised in a devout Christian home. Her father was the pastor of a church; Summer said God first spoke to her when she was 10 years old.

She had just finished singing a solo in the choir when she heard an inner voice. “It sort of knocked everybody out of the pews. When I looked up through my tears, everyone in the whole church’s eyes were downcast and they were crying, and I thought, ‘Oh my God’. I looked at my dad and he was crying,” she recalled in the final years of her life. “It was that, on that first time I ever sang, that I heard God speak to me, and He said to me that I was gonna be famous, and that I was not to misuse the power that He was giving me.”

“Famous” doesn’t even begin to describe Summer’s stratospheric rise to popularity. Her mezzo-soprano voice, a slew of disco hits, and unparalleled ability to get people on the dance floor made her an icon. But with fame came temptation, aggravation, and insecurity.

Summer developed a very heavy dependence on antidepressants and sleeping pills because of the demands of her white-hot career. She also became embroiled in a $10 million lawsuit with Casablanca Records owner Neil Bogart. Bogart countersued for even more money, citing breach of contract. Summer was a bundle of nerves and breaking down from the inside. She developed stomach ulcers and would barely touch her food. She had occasional thoughts of suicide despite appearing to the world that she was on top.

Summer returned to the Lord and her roots of faith in 1979 after a period of “spiritual darkness and confusion.” She recommitted her life to Christ and yielded to God’s will. Instantly, she experienced a sense of elation and relief.

“I was finally filled by God’s Holy Spirit and gloriously born again,” she later reflected.

The change in Summer was almost instant. She began attending a weekly Bible study and stopped performing “Love to Love You Baby” and “Bad Girls” at the peak of her fame.

As Summer explained:

I never stopped being a Christian. Being born-again is an affirmation that the person is going to make a personal effort to walk closer to God and bring Him into one’s life and start following His way. There are parts in your life where you can look back and laugh: “I can’t believe I did that; how could I have said that; where’s my head at?” I’m sad that all the running I did was only running; it didn’t get me anywhere. The spirit of rebellion in myself and in my songs would not let me rest. But I’ve chosen to stay in the world’s eye, to give a positive image. It’s a very spiritual and a very helpful place to be. I love it.

The wanderer had come home.

I spoke at a Bible study some years ago in Beverly Hills where Donna was present. Her face was beaming, and I could see she had genuine faith in Christ. Not long after that, I was rallying people for a huge Harvest Crusade at Dodger Stadium. I was trying to make my way over to Donna afterward to have a conversation with her, but another person kept bending my ear, and I could not break free. Donna left shortly thereafter, and I always regretted not being able to speak with her.

In what was to be her final album, Crayons (2008), Donna sang passionately about her faith in the song “Bring Down the Reign.” She went to be with the Lord in 2012.

Other rockers of faith found the same hope Donna had — performers like Lou Gramm of Foreigner, Byrds lead singer Roger McGuinn, lead singer of Buffalo Springfield Richie Furay, and Kerry Livgren of Kansas, who shared with fans, “May you all find the miracles in your own lives. Look for them, for they are surely there, and especially the greatest miracle of all — God’s love and provision for mankind.”

These ’70s icons all learned the same lesson in the end, but they came to the answer through vastly different journeys. Some of them lost their stardom, some almost lost their lives, wives, or families, while others were fortunate enough to go down smoother roads. But in the end, they all realized that, through repentance and humility, God had a special song for them, if they were willing to listen.

At some point in that decadent decade, they were all dazed and confused. And now they are all redeemed. I write about this and much more in my new book,Lennon, Dylan, Alice and Jesus.

The takeaway of this book is: No one is beyond the reach of God.

Greg Laurie is the pastor and founder of the Harvest churches in California and Hawaii and of Harvest Crusades. He is an evangelist, best-selling author and movie producer. His newest book Lennon, Dylan, Alice & Jesus released May 17, 2022.

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