Jelly Roll and Billie Eilish

Jelly Roll, Billie Eilish, and Jesus

6 February 2026

5.6 MINS

From chaos and self-destruction to bold faith, Jelly Roll’s public testimony echoes the Gospel story of the delivered demoniac—unashamedly declaring Jesus as the true source of transformation and hope.

A complete trainwreck of a man, whom the devil has complete control of, and whose behaviour is making even those around him despair, is suddenly delivered from the oppression that has wrecked his life.

He was a dead man walking, and was weaving his life in and out of the most deathly places he could. He was even given a new, tortured name that reflected his ongoing demons.

And suddenly Jesus meets him and delivers him from all of that stuff, puts him in his right mind, turns his life around and sets him on the path to life.

And what does he want to do about it? He wants to tell everyone! He wants to tell everyone what Jesus has done for him. He wants to tell everyone to the point of embarrassment.

Even his name is a witness to the disaster, the lack of self-control, that his life had been up until the point that he met Jesus.

His previous embarrassment had been his very public train-wrecking of his life. Of the lives of those close to him. Everyone knew him. He was legendary in the scandal around his life! No one could control a man with no self-control.

And now? He is more than happy to declare – to that point of embarrassment – what Jesus (who many around him actually disdain and fear) has done for him!

Well, that’s enough about Legion, the demoniac delivered by Jesus that we read about in the synoptic Gospels, let’s talk about Jelly Roll, the music artist who made a big splash this year at the Grammys after winning three gongs.

What’s In a Name?

Interesting name, huh? His momma gave him the name Jelly Roll as a kid because, unlike the evidence from the picture above, he was huge! He was well on his way to obesity, and mum decides it’s good for a laugh. And the name stuck – stuck like a particularly jammy/jelly doughnut when hurled at a wall.

There’s at least two years with a therapist talking about parenting issues in all of that, for sure, let me tell you.

But check out Jelly Roll’s progress in weight loss since 2023. Have a look online. Jelly Roll has lost something like 120kg in the past few years. Something musta gotten into him.

Oh, that’s right, the Holy Spirit has gotten into him! Jelly Roll (ok, let’s use his real name just once), Jason Bradley DeFord, has been delivered from his metaphorical – along with any actual demons – by Jesus.

And during his acceptance speech at the Grammys, he did the unthinkable (to anyone who has not been transformed by the grace of Jesus), and declared loudly and proudly his love for Jesus and his amazing power to change.

Just like the demoniac, he explained to that crowd just how much Jesus had done for him, how his past life of debauchery and cheating on his wife were over, and that Jesus was the one who did that. By the way, I think some of the hostility from the crowd was that he named and shamed not only his own sin, but the very sins that the Grammy crowd is known for.

But notice, unlike Billie Eilish and her comments about ICE and immigration – valid or otherwise – he is not speaking to a home game crowd. That’s why I italicised the word “that” in the paragraph above. These are not Jesus’ people. At least not in the way that Jelly Roll is a Jesus person.

And more than that, in his speech, Jelly Roll was not pointing his finger out there, saying “The fault is with you, or you, or you!” He is not saying that other people are the problem (well, people outside the self-declared righteous attendees of the Grammys).

And even more than that, in the cultural epicentre of a philosophy in which people point to their hearts and say “The solution is in here”, he points somewhere else. He knows the problem is “in here”.

The Jesus Flag

Jelly Roll does the exact opposite of the Grammy crowd and their expectations of those who stand before that very public podium. He stands up at an away game where all sorts of flags, of every colour and description (though not the Iranian flag) are flown and flies the Jesus flag.

He waves that flag around unashamedly to those who, with a high level of self-declared expertise, plus an equally high level of undeclared inexperience, and declares the solution is not us. Or not him, at least.

Now this is a crowd that is all keen for a Jesus who whales on others (thank you, Don Lemon), but a Jesus who turns the spotlight on your own sin and self-destroying ways and attitudes? No thanks! That’s why Jelly Roll said that Jesus is not for any political party. Which is almost a heresy among some.

But most of all, it’s the complete lack of shame in what Jelly Roll did that most astonishes me. As Jesus said to another insider, Simon the Pharisee (who is just an early form of Billie Eilish), while speaking of another social outcast, “She loves much because she has been forgiven much.” (Luke 7:47).

Why does it astonish me? Because – like many of you good folk reading this, I either deny or forget just how much I have been forgiven by Jesus. And let’s be honest, that makes me just a teensy, weensy bit ashamed to big note Jesus and who he is and what he has done for me, especially in front of the self-righteous crowd. It’s easy to be ashamed of Jesus when we are not ashamed enough of our own sin that got him crucified.

We shrink back from that among our hostile crowd, or we theologically “Third Way” it away, to the point that people walk away from us in our social settings none the wiser as to the actual problem (us) or the actual solution (Jesus).

I’m sorry, but once again, true to form at such occasions, Eilish’s statement was performative. She is a performer after all. It cost her nothing. It was a public display of virtue before an impressive and impressive-loving crowd. It was the exact opposite to what Jelly Roll did. And it pinned the problem on other people, exactly the opposite place to where the true problem lies.

It was a classic case of amazing grace. Jelly Roll’s eyes are opened, and Eilish’s eyes remain closed. As do the eyes of all the adoring types at the Grammys. At the very time that tens of thousands of Iranians were massacred for their love of freedom, and for a nation of downtrodden for whom a famous voice would have been a boon, a solace, a balm, we get the sound of crickets at the Grammys.

The Self-Flag

Was it virtue signalling all the way down from someone who is happy to live on stolen land as long as it is within a gated community? I can’t judge her heart, but it doesn’t counter the ongoing narrative at such events. Sorry to say it, it was a “Self-Flag”

The same silence was just as pronounced at the Emmys just after Charlie Kirk was murdered. Not a skerrick, not a mention, not even a mere “We didn’t agree wth him, but we cannot keep doing this.” So you can forgive my cynicism at the silence over Iran.

But back to Jelly Roll. He got some stick for what he said, from the virtuous, of course. Probably a little like the former Legion got from those who had either suffered at his hands, or were sceptical about his change. Or – just as likely – who were not fans of Jesus and had not experienced his grace.

Let’s not rant on, let’s leave you with some words from Jelly Roll’s own lyrics from his last album. This is a song called, funnily enough, Born Again:

I was born into struggle, born to survive
Born in a place that you don’t make it out alive
They thought it was over, thought I was dead
But you can’t kill a man that was born to be born again

Like Legion, Jelly Roll tells everyone about Jesus because even if you kill his reputation or his career for saying that, you can’t actually kill him. Jelly Roll’s name – whether it be Jelly Roll, or Jason Bradley DeFord, is written in the Lamb’s book of life.

___

Republished with thanks to Stephen McAlpine. Images courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

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2 Comments

  1. 5088d005092eb79d788d2488fd329c398f9d4ca058f62ed38e136b35c84f504d?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Jon D 7 February 2026 at 10:44 am - Reply

    Wow, just wow that this guy gets a mention. Have you ever read his lyrics Stephen?
    I advise people not to. Suffice to say he uses some of the worst language at times.
    I checked to see what all the fuss about him was having not heard his music. I have heard many secular groups that don’t swear like him, many that don’t swear at all in their songs.
    Many contain profanity as he sings about the Lord and one even has him smoking weed and talking to the Lord as he does it.
    This isn’t Christian music. It normalises profanity and worse, the use of profanity is in the same conversation, song, about God!
    These songs are an abomination and teach the exact opposite to the teachings of the Lord in His Bible.
    Gods Word over and over tells us not to use profanity, which is described in places as evil corrupted communication!
    He tells us to put it away, not to let it come out of our mouths. Yet this guy uses profanity when singing about the Holy Lord!
    His music is an utter disgrace and I am dumbfounded by the amount of people who profess to be Christians that listen to him.
    Practice a bit of discernment people, try actually reading the Bible.
    And don’t promote foul mouths to Christians.

  2. de4197a19304e210a686d4b4efcd0f3bdf14c3a720a1f5e51ecf191793da0d4c?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Paul Shirt 9 February 2026 at 12:00 pm - Reply

    I have read the bible and according to Paul in Romans 10:9 “that if you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved.” and Revelation 12:11
    “And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony”
    Then according to that I’m fully convinced that the man Jason is saved and he is one of our brothers.
    Why do you attack a man who is clearly working out his salvation with fear and trembling?
    Even Paul did not think of himself as righteous but as he says in Philippians
    12 Not that I have already attained,[c] or am already perfected; but I press on, that I may lay hold of that for which Christ Jesus has also laid hold of me. 13 Brethren, I do not count myself to have [d]apprehended; but one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forward to those things which are ahead, 14 I press toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.

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