In 1970, the year marked by
Roberto Carlos's transition from
Jovem Guarda to romantic music, the album
Roberto Carlos was released, in which the single "Jesus Cristo" became the most popular song, becoming the third most-played song of the year in Brazil. Roberto Carlos's biographer, Paulo Cesar de Araújo, stated in his book
Roberto Carlos em Detalhes that "no other Brazilian singer had until then evoked the name of Jesus Christ in a popular music chorus." “Jesus Cristo” was unprecedented in Brazilian pop music, as no singer had previously invoked Jesus name in a danceable pop song; this sparked major controversy, especially among conservative sectors: the song was subject of television debates, accused of containing blasphemous subliminal messages, and federal deputy even campaigned to ban the song, claiming it was offensive to religious principles, and asked federal authorities to prosecute Carlos under the National Security Law. Carlos denied any hidden messages, insisting the lyrics were clear and purely religious, but avoided naming Jesus in any of his religious songs of the 1970s, using more indirect references instead; he eventually reintroduced the name in "Ele está pra chegar" (1981), where "Jesus" appears only at the end of the final verse. == Other versions==