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Posted: 2020-05-04T21:44:39Z | Updated: 2020-05-04T21:44:39Z

Gospel singer Kierra Sheard says her music and acting careers blossoming at once was all Gods plan.

In early April, Twitter praised her splitting image portrayal of her mother, Karen Clark Sheard, in the Lifetime film The Clark Sisters: First Ladies of Gospel. The biopic chronicles the origin, rise and success of one of gospel musics greatest acts, and it was the highest-rated original movie for the network since 2016. Then on April 17, the 32-year-old singer released her eighth album, Kierra, which debuted at the top of the Billboard Top Gospel Albums Chart. It replaced Kanye Wests Jesus Is King (Soundtrack) after a 25-week reign at the top of the chart.

I sat on this music for a year and sitting on the music for that long I was beginning to be frustrated, she told HuffPost.

This is Sheards first project under a new partnership between RCA Inspiration and Karew Entertainment, a record label and entertainment company launched by her parents (her father is J. Drew Sheard) in 2009. When business took longer to finalize than she expected, she turned to God for relief.

So, I prayed and I felt like God was showing me I have a specific time [for you] to release this, she said.

Sheard wanted the timing to be right for her self-titled opus, an album that further highlights her musical duality: love for both gospel roots and secular music genres, such as pop, R&B and hip-hop.

I am this woman who loves the Lord, she said. And Im hoping to inspire others who are listening to know that you can be a believer and still have balance.

Sheard, who recorded her debut album when she was 14, said it took years for her to comfortably showcase her musical range, whether it was stirring vocals for worshipers in church or upbeat tracks to bump in the car with her friends. She has gospel legends to thank for paving the way for her to explore it all, especially her mom and her aunts group, The Clark Sisters.

I looked at The Clark Sisters and Kirk Franklin and (gospel group) Mary Mary, The Winans, and especially The Clark Sisters because they had a lot of opposition when it came to their performance on the [1983] Grammys or just their music being released into different genres, she said.

The Clark Sisters, along with their mother, Mattie Moss Clark, performed You Brought The Sunshine at the Grammy Awards ceremony 27 years ago fulfilling a longtime dream. But the leadership of the Church of God in Christ, where matriarch Clark was a high-ranking official, was displeased to see them perform the song and then banned Clark from singing on stage with her children.

In 15 tracks, Kierra brings the balance. For instance, her chipper pop-dance track Dont Judge Me features Missy Elliott, whom she calls a family friend. Its all about freedom of expressing herself without holding on to other peoples opinions.

Please dont judge me by the clothes I wear (I wear)/ Please dont judge me by the songs I sing (I sing)/ Please dont judge me by the way that Im dancing, she pleads.

On Human, Sheard takes a snappy R&B beat and encourages people to find their own definition of success that isnt centered on living up to other peoples expectations.

The Word of God will really see you through. Having a prayer life and having people around you and who encourage you to hang in there helps.

Kierra Sheard

Her traditional gospel selections, recorded live in Detroit, include It Keeps Happening For Me, which she wrote to never lose sight of her blessings, and Follow, featuring Todd Dulaney, in which she proudly submits to Gods path for her life.

The album also celebrates her musical family. Her brother, J. Drew Sheard II, is a producer on the majority of the albums cuts. Then there is her live cover of The Clark Sisters My Redeemer, a personal favorite from their catalog that brings back childhood memories.

Although Sheard grew up witnessing her familys musical genius, taking on the role of her mother in the Lifetime film brought her new understanding about The Clark Sisters journey from Detroit girls singing in church to crossover pop and the Grammy stages.

I didnt know that my (maternal) grandmother had such challenges with her love life and I didnt know that she had such opposition from leaders in the church, Sheard said of Clark, who served as president of the international music department for the Church of God in Christ, a Pentecostal Christian denomination.

Sheard didnt want to seek the role at first, but auditioned after her manager and parents encouraged her to reconsider. After landing it, she spent three to four months watching videos of her mothers performances and studying her voice. One of the most challenging scenes to perform was when her mother went to the hospital for a procedure that left her with only a 2% chance of recovery.

I had to put myself on her side of the fence when it came to that part because if you let her tell it, she said she was in a peaceful place while us out here, we were going crazy, Sheard recounted. It gave me a new level of respect for actors because it can be super draining, you know, having to activate those emotions.

The other challenge was doing her mothers high notes justice.

Shes a true soprano. Im like an alto who can sing some soprano notes, she said. It did stretch my vocal ability.

Sheard is one of many entertainers releasing projects during the coronavirus pandemic. Unfortunately, she lost her paternal grandmother to the disease in April. As she and her family cope with the loss, she said she is relying on her loved ones, studying Gods word, and embracing this moment of stillness to get through.

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Were used to being busy to where we dont know how to isolate and just chill out and be by ourselves, she said. I take breaks from social media from time to time. The Word of God will really see you through. Having a prayer life and having people around you and who encourage you to hang in there helps.

Support Free Journalism

Consider supporting HuffPost starting at $2 to help us provide free, quality journalism that puts people first.

Thank you for your past contribution to HuffPost. We are sincerely grateful for readers like you who help us ensure that we can keep our journalism free for everyone.

The stakes are high this year, and our 2024 coverage could use continued support. Would you consider becoming a regular HuffPost contributor?

Thank you for your past contribution to HuffPost. We are sincerely grateful for readers like you who help us ensure that we can keep our journalism free for everyone.

The stakes are high this year, and our 2024 coverage could use continued support. We hope you'll consider contributing to HuffPost once more.

Support HuffPost