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Q: What are your thoughts on Michael Tait, DC talk, how the industry should respond, and what CCM listeners should do as far as keeping music in rotation?
Summary
In this episode, Dr. E addresses a thoughtful question about contemporary Christian music (CCM) artists who fall into moral failure. Should believers continue listening to their music? Should the Christian music industry respond differently when artists face scandals?
Dr. E and Hanna discuss how these questions are not new. From Amy Grant to Sandy Patty, the industry has long wrestled with balancing ministry and business. While some organizations once pulled music from the shelves, today financial interests often outweigh ethical concerns.
At the heart of the issue is Paul’s instruction in 1 Thessalonians 5:21–22: “Examine everything carefully; hold fast to what is good; abstain from every form of evil.” Dr. E encourages believers to take this personally and seriously. If supporting a particular artist or listening to their music troubles your conscience, don’t do it. But at the same time, he reminds listeners that we live in a fallen world where every industry—including Christian music—will reflect sin.
Takeaways
Believers must examine carefully and hold fast to what is good (1 Thess. 5:21–22).
If listening to certain music troubles your conscience, it’s wise to avoid it.
The CCM industry is often driven by profit more than ethics.
Moral failure among Christian leaders and artists is nothing new.
God can still use flawed ministries to spread the gospel.
Our trust must rest in Christ, not in celebrities or cultural figures.
Find more episodes of Ask Dr. E here.
If you've got a question for Dr. Easley, call or text us your question at 615-281-9694 or email at [email protected].
By Michael Easley4.8
6969 ratings
Q: What are your thoughts on Michael Tait, DC talk, how the industry should respond, and what CCM listeners should do as far as keeping music in rotation?
Summary
In this episode, Dr. E addresses a thoughtful question about contemporary Christian music (CCM) artists who fall into moral failure. Should believers continue listening to their music? Should the Christian music industry respond differently when artists face scandals?
Dr. E and Hanna discuss how these questions are not new. From Amy Grant to Sandy Patty, the industry has long wrestled with balancing ministry and business. While some organizations once pulled music from the shelves, today financial interests often outweigh ethical concerns.
At the heart of the issue is Paul’s instruction in 1 Thessalonians 5:21–22: “Examine everything carefully; hold fast to what is good; abstain from every form of evil.” Dr. E encourages believers to take this personally and seriously. If supporting a particular artist or listening to their music troubles your conscience, don’t do it. But at the same time, he reminds listeners that we live in a fallen world where every industry—including Christian music—will reflect sin.
Takeaways
Believers must examine carefully and hold fast to what is good (1 Thess. 5:21–22).
If listening to certain music troubles your conscience, it’s wise to avoid it.
The CCM industry is often driven by profit more than ethics.
Moral failure among Christian leaders and artists is nothing new.
God can still use flawed ministries to spread the gospel.
Our trust must rest in Christ, not in celebrities or cultural figures.
Find more episodes of Ask Dr. E here.
If you've got a question for Dr. Easley, call or text us your question at 615-281-9694 or email at [email protected].

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