
The 100 Greatest Albums in Christian Music — #68: Iona, The Book Of Kells (1992)
Celtic‑progressive devotion—rivering whistles, widescreen guitars, and prayers that glow like illuminated pages.
Intro
Appearing at #68 in The 100 Greatest Albums in Christian Music, Iona’s The Book Of Kells (1992) captures a moment when craft and conviction aligned. It remains a touchstone for how faith can sing with both sincerity and skill.
The Album in Context
Iona emerged as a distinctive voice by braiding Celtic folk instruments with progressive‑rock dynamics. On The Book of Kells, that braid tightened into something both reverent and cinematic. You can almost see the vellum gleam in the air around the melodies.
Production paints with air and echo—room for whistles to arc, for pipes to keen, for guitars to crest like distant surf. The rhythm section understands pilgrimage: tempos that walk, then run, then kneel. Lyrics and melodies draw from Christian symbolism without didactic heaviness.
Within CCM, the album carved a lane for art‑music devotion that didn’t apologize for beauty. It welcomed listeners who wanted worship that felt historic, geographic, and spacious—like prayer in a stone chapel by the sea.
Standout Songs
- “Chi‑Rho” — A luminous motif built around the Christogram, marrying bodhrán pulse to soaring vocal lines. It became a shorthand for the band’s mission: marry ancient symbol to present‑tense praise.
- “The River Flows” — A pilgrim’s journey rendered in ebb‑and‑surge arrangement—tin whistles, Uilleann pipes, and tidal guitars. The composition invited listeners to travel, not just listen.
- “Eternity — No Beginning, No End” — An expansive closer that stretched the band’s progressive wings without losing Celtic earth. Its spacious dynamics offered a sonic doxology—stillness, swell, and surrender.
Why It Matters
Artistically, the album legitimized Celtic fusion as more than texture, making it the frame and grammar of devotion. Its arrangements later taught artists to let traditional instruments lead rather than decorate.
Culturally, it widened the sonic imagination of Christian audiences—demonstrating that worship could be contemplative, place‑aware, and art‑forward. Its influence lingers anywhere modern hymnody meets folk timbre and cinematic scope.
What’s Next
Tomorrow on The 100 Greatest Albums in Christian Music countdown, we continue with #67 — Charlie Peacock’s Lie Down in the Grass (1984), an art‑pop debut that seeded a producer’s future empire. Be sure to catch the companion podcast episode of The CCM Professor with Greg Rice, where we connect the dots between these landmark recordings.
Soli Deo Gloria!
This post is part of the series The 100 Greatest Albums in Christian Music, celebrating the artists and recordings that defined a generation of faith-filled creativity.
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Album Details
| Artist: | Iona |
| Album: | The Book Of Kells |
| Year Released: | 1992 |
| Record Label(s): | Forefront |
| Producer(s): | Dave Bainbridge |
Previous Post in the series:
| #69: Allies – Long Way From Paradise – November 1, 2025 |
Next in the series:
| #67: Charlie Peacock – Lie Down In The Grass – November 3, 2025 |
“The Book Of Kells” Is Not Available on Amazon Music
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