NEW YORK — It is one of the most surprising music stories of the year. While streams of new music — releases from the last 18 months — were down from last year, one genre is on the rise: Christian and gospel music, according to industry data and analytics company Luminate's 2025 Midyear Report.
Jaime Marconette, Luminate's 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 ''younger, streaming-forward fan base'' that's 60% female and 30% millennial. In fact, for the first time in 11 years, two contemporary Christian music songs — Frank's ''Your Way's Better'' and Lake's ''Hard Fought Hallelujah'' with Jelly Roll — broke through the Billboard Hot 100's all-genre Top 40, placing them in direct competition with mainstream artists.
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 — the lines are blurring.
An evolving Christian music sound
''Christian music (is) unlike any other genre that's defined by a sonic component. Christian music is defined by its lyrical component,'' says Holly Zabka, the president of Provident Entertainment, a Sony Christian music subsidiary. ''It's not limited to a narrow definition. It's a lyrical component that can appeal to anyone's musical preference.''
From a label perspective, she's interested in pursuing artists that ''don't 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 that's appealing to a broader audience because it's what they're already listening to,'' she says. ''Very few people listen in a vacuum and only listen to one genre.''
But for many years, CCM jas held a reputation for being unimaginative — what writer John Jeremiah Sullivan infamously referred to as ''excellence-proof'' — for its tendency to mimic and water down popular, contemporary mainstream sounds for a religious audience.
''Absolutely there's been an improvement in quality,'' says Zabka. ''When all the music has to live side by side on these streaming platforms, we can't just be the cheap alternative. ‘Oh, you like Taylor Swift? You will like this lesser version offering in the Christian genre.' We want to be the greatest art.''