NEW YORK β It is one of the most surprising music stories of the year. While streams of new music β releases from the last 18 months β were down from last year, one genre is on the rise: Christian and gospel music, according to industry data and analytics company Luminateβs 2025 Midyear Report.
Jaime Marconette, Luminateβs vice president of music insights and industry relations, said the shift is led by acts like Forrest Frank, Brandon Lake and Elevation Worship, who are connecting with a βyounger, streaming-forward fan baseβ that's 60% female and 30% millennial. In fact, for the first time in 11 years, two contemporary Christian music songs β Frankβs βYour Wayβs Betterβ and Lakeβs βHard Fought Hallelujahβ with Jelly Roll β broke through the Billboard Hot 100's all-genre Top 40, placing them in direct competition with mainstream artists.
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It's also why traditionally secular artists like Jelly Roll, Killer Mike and T.I. are nominated in Christian music categories at the forthcoming 2026 Grammys β the lines are blurring.
An evolving Christian music sound
βChristian music (is) unlike any other genre thatβs defined by a sonic component. Christian music is defined by its lyrical component,β says Holly Zabka, the president of Provident Entertainment, a Sony Christian music subsidiary. βItβs not limited to a narrow definition. Itβs a lyrical component that can appeal to anyoneβs musical preference.β
From a label perspective, sheβs interested in pursuing artists that βdonβt have to fit within that narrow lane of Christian bookstore and Christian radio. It can be rap, hip-hop, it can be rock, it can be country, and thatβs appealing to a broader audience because itβs what theyβre already listening to,β she says. βVery few people listen in a vacuum and only listen to one genre.β
But for many years, CCM jas held a reputation for being unimaginative β what writer John Jeremiah Sullivan infamously referred to as βexcellence-proofβ β for its tendency to mimic and water down popular, contemporary mainstream sounds for a religious audience.
βAbsolutely thereβs been an improvement in quality,β says Zabka. βWhen all the music has to live side by side on these streaming platforms, we canβt just be the cheap alternative. βOh, you like Taylor Swift? You will like this lesser version offering in the Christian genre.β We want to be the greatest art.β
βYou have to imitate before you innovate,β Chris Brown, singer and worship leader at Elevation Worship, jokes. βThereβs not as many rigid lines stylistically within Christian music as maybe there was 10 years ago or certainly like 20, 30 years ago.β
βThere was a period of time where people idealized Christian music as like, βOK, weβre going to have this look, weβre going to sound like this,ββ says two-time Grammy-winning Christian and pop musician Lauren Daigle. βThereβs so much more artistry now. People are very expressive. Theyβre able to share their creativity. And that also comes with different types of people represented.β
Why Christian music is connecting now
Zabka says her genre is experiencing βa special moment and β¦ a perfect storm.β Streaming and the ability to connect on social media have democratized music discovery, she says, allowing CCM to compete with secular music. That, partnered with what she views as βa resurgence of faithβ in young people, is responsible for the interest.
The number of Americans who identify as Christian has declined steadily for years, but that drop shows signs of slowing, according to a 2025 survey from the Pew Research Center. A new class of millennial and Gen Z Christian influencers, too, are aiming to connect with young people.
βChristian music has also shifted in its authenticity of the lyrics,β Zabka adds, making the music more relatable than previous iterations of the genre, which often featured a neat message of βeverything is going to be OK, just follow Jesusβ in 3 Β½ minutes. Now, she says, βtheir songs are much more authentic and real and honest. βLife is hard. Breakups are hard. Bad things happen,β and that provides a level of hope that other music doesnβt provide for the listener.β
Daigle points out that artists like Lake are performing in huge stadiums β categorical proof that Christian artists are growing in popularity.
βI think a lot of people are looking at the world and β¦ they find fortitude in this music, and they find a sense of strength in this music, and they find truth in this music,β she says.
Daigle also theorizes that because βChristian music points to something elseβ β to God β instead of focusing on individual issues or the ego of the performer on stage, it evens the playing field between listener and artist, while giving both a sense of purpose.
βIn a world that has become so self-focused and self-centered, the freedom of saying βWow, I can actually lean on someone else for a while,β or βThereβs something that is actually greater than me,ββ she says. βAnd the purpose of Christian music, for me, is to bring hope to people.β
Brown theorizes that people relate to his Charlotte, North Carolina-based CCM collective because of βhow fundamentally we're rootedβ in their local church.
βItβs easy to connect because weβre just church people,β he says.
A crossover moment
Lake, who is nominated for three Grammys in 2026, including βHard Fought Hallelujah,β believes people are connecting with Christian music now because that's simply the purpose of religious music.
βThe reason why people are turning their ear toward those kinds of songs right now is because thatβs what they were made for,β Lake says. βPeople are finding in these songs β theyβre finding themselves, their spirit, connecting with the spirit of God. β¦ Those songs aren't just entertainment; they tee up an encounter.β
βI love all kinds of music,β he continues, βbut if you have a song that carries that kind of message, itβs just super charged, you know? It does something deeper.β
He also believes this may be the start of a crossover moment, where more Christian artists will be welcomed into other genres and mainstream spaces. βI pray itβs just the beginning,β he says. βAnd I pray that it takes over.β
Jelly Roll agrees. βI think there really is a revival happening in America right now where people are being re-presented the Gospel in a digestible way. And it doesnβt seem as finger-waggy and βYouβre all going to hell,β you know?β he says.
βI really donβt care when the organized religions wave their finger at me,β he continues. βIβm just glad to see the message, the Gospel getting presented.β
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The 68th Grammy Awards will be held Feb. 1, 2026, at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles. The show will air on CBS and stream on Paramount+. For more coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/grammy-awards.