'Chapel' is about reclaiming your spirituality from those who are deceivers and would wish you harm. It's about creating a religion of your own built from the ruins of what came before. Sacred, pure, and internal[eternal]. Suffering through the stigmata and burning cross of sainthood and martyred through crucifixion - blossoming through the transfiguration. Growing wings despite the non-believers, and reclaiming what has been stolen from your heart. Angels as ghosts, perpetually in battle for heaven and your glittering soul.
Anyone who claims to have forbidden, mystical knowledge is actually a person so far from the truth they are drowning in their own ego. God is personal, spirituality is within the beholder - not a sermon to be preached by someone who cannot understand the holy tongue.
These are hymns for the fallen, for the witches burning at the stake, for the saints and martyrs who have been forgotten as people - only remembered as dead ornaments holding up a gilded cross.
This is my confessional where I bare my soul to God for redemption. This is my sanctuary where I can pray in peace. This is my funeral pyre from which I will be reborn.
My one problem with Star Trek is that no one is ever consuming contemporary media. As in media that's contemporary for their time period. Everyone is always reading old novels and practicing classical music. They study Klingon Opera or read old Cardassian mysteries. No one is ever like really into obscure Klingon Nightcore. Nobody is reading shitty Ferengi pulp novels. There's no kids media of any kind. Where is space Sesame Street or junior novels about gaining superpowers from a warp core accident? What about comic books? Nobody is playing crappy indy holodeck games. It's always some recreation of a historical battle or just lounging in a mud pit at some alien spa. Someone give me angsty Bajoran protest music. I need some rebellious teens producing the worst most cacophonous death metal techno that they recorded in an empty cargo bay. I need contemporary pop culture in Star Trek.
So, apropos of 1990's techno remixes (which have been used for anime music videos), I just discovered that Harajuku (who did the Phantom of the Opera remix) has done a lot of remixes of Broadway songs, and pop songs, and ... Disney songs?
Maybe worth looking up, if you like that sort of thing? Available on iTunes, and on vintage CDs.