Saw this story the other day
Christian teens are stealing Jesus music.
They’re doing it through Internet downloads and CD burnings at nearly the same rate as secular music is being pirated, according to a new study done for the Gospel Music Association.
The findings were a jolt to many in the evangelical music industry, who expected churchgoing teens to be mindful of the commandment that states, “Thou shalt not steal.”
“I’m surprised and disappointed that the behavior isn’t that ardently different between Christians and non-Christians,” said John Styll, president of the Gospel Music Association, the leading trade group for evangelical music.
But not everybody thinks the pirating is a bad thing. After all, some church leaders say, isn’t getting the Gospel out more important than getting paid? How can it be wrong if it saves souls?
“That’s convoluted logic,” said Barry Landis, president of Word Records, a major Christian label. “You would never steal Bibles to give them away. You shouldn’t steal Christian music to give away either.”
I’ve been downloading a lot of music lately (eek) but I don’t have much of a problem with it. If I like it, I buy it, if I don’t, I don’t listen to it. I still buy a reasonable amount of CD’s, if anything more than I otherwise would, and my tastes are more diverse. My opinion of the RIA and RIAA are at an all time low, and I’m not sympathetic to their “Your killing our industry” arguements (CD sales are going UP you idiots!) but nor am I sympathetic to the “Arists only get $1 so why buy it?” arguement (uhh, to support the retailers, promoters, marketers & the band), so I still buy music.
However I imagine this would be a big issue in youth ministry, I was always a bit of a pirate back in the day (arr!) but the joys of $$ and growing up have changed a lot of that. But have others had to think through the issue for themselves, or for the teens/others they’re ministering too?




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