RAND researchers surveyed 1,461 adolescents ages 12 to 17, asking about their sexual behavior and how often they listened to music by various artists. From the Rand Corporation's news release:
As I read the results of the study, I realized that the Rand people were vindicating Martin Luther, who ruminated on the connection between music and behavior centuries ago:The study found that the more time adolescents spend listening to music with sexually degrading lyrics, the more likely they are to initiate intercourse and other sexual activities. This holds true for boys and girls as well as for whites and nonwhites, even after accounting for a wide range of other personal and social factors associated with adolescent sexual behavior.
Researchers found that only sexually degrading lyrics – many quite graphic and containing numerous obscenities – are related to changes in adolescents' sexual behavior. These lyrics depict men as sexually insatiable, women as sexual objects, and sexual intercourse as inconsequential. Other songs about sex do not appear to influence youth the same way.
...Adolescents typically listen to 1.5 to 2.5 hours of music per day, which does not include the amount of time they are exposed to music through music videos. Studies show that about 40 percent of popular songs contain references to romance, sexual relationships, and sexual behavior... Researchers found that adolescents who listened to a lot of music containing objectifying and limiting characterizations of sexuality progressed more quickly in their sexual behavior than did adolescents who listened to less of this kind of music.
For whether you wish to comfort the sad, terrify the happy, encourage the despairing, humble the proud, calm the passionate, or appease those full of hate — and who could number all these masters of the human heart, namely, the emotions, inclinations, and affections that impel men to evil or good? — what more effective means than music could you find?Here's a question for discussion around the family dinner table or in youth group. What makes a song “Christian”? Is it Christian music if it's created and/or performed by a follower of Jesus? Or do the lyrics alone determine if music is Christian? What about the rhythms and melodies of the song, regardless of lyrics? Read the following statements and decide which one of them, if any, you might endorse: