MP3 Download ONLINE TV 30/30 TAPE CLUB



SEARCH

 

WATCH
TV PROGRAM

LISTEN TO
RADIO PROGRAM

2000
ARTICLES

ORDER
CURRENT OFFER

ONLINE
CATALOG

VIDEO CLIPS
LIBRARY

 

HOW DO I BECOME
A CHRISTIAN

TV & RADIO LISTING  

 DAILY DEVOTIONALS

ATRI JOURNAL ONLINE

DONATION INFORMATION

 
Ankerberg Theological
Research Institute
P.O. Box 8977
Chattanooga, TN 37414 USA
(423) 892-7722
For credit card orders only:
1-800-805-3030

QUICK LINKS

BLOGS:

Click for
Jim Virkler's
SCIENCE BLOG

Click for
Michelle's
MINISTRY HAPPENINGS

Click for
Dillon
Burroughs'

BLOG

Click for
Billy Pratt
Billy Pratt & Darrell Boan's
TOUGH QUESTIONS ANSWERED

CLICK HERE TO VISIT JOHN'S

SEARCH

ABOUT JOHN ANKERBERG

NEWS FROM THE MINISTRY

THIS WEEK ON THE JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW (TV)

RADIO

RESOURCE CENTER:

CURRENT OFFER
MINISTRY GIFT
30/30 CLUB
APOLOGETICS
BIBLE
BOOKS
CULTS

  JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES
  MASONIC LODGE
  MORMON CHURCH
  NEW AGE
DEATH AND DYING
FACTS ON SERIES
HISTORICAL JESUS
ISLAM
PRACTICAL CHRISTIANITY
PROPHECY
ROMAN CATHOLICISM
SCIENCE
SEXUAL ETHICS
WORLD RELIGIONS
  ISLAM
  OTHER GROUPS
  OTHER PHILOSOPHIES

  ROMAN CATHOLICISM

VIDEO CLIPS LIBRARY

ARTICLES

INDEX
APOLOGETICS
BIBLE FOR DUMMIES

DA VINCI CODE
EDITOR'S CHOICE
ISLAM
MEDIA WISE

MORMONISM
NEW AGE
PRACTICAL CHRISTIANITY
PROPHECY
QUEST FROM MAILBAG
ROMAN CATHOLICISM
SALVATION
SCIENCE

SOCIAL ISSUES
STREAMS OF LIFE
THEOLOGICAL DICTIONARY
VERSE BY VERSE

SEND A MESSAGE TO STAFF
VIEWER COMMENTS
STATEMENT OF FAITH
MINISTRY PURPOSE
FACT A DAY
DAILY JOURNEY
QUESTION OF THE WEEK
FAQs
RECEIVE JAS EMAIL NEWSLETTER
NEWS RELEASES
MAKE A GIFT TO MINISTRY
HOW DO I BECOME A CHRISTIAN?  
 

    
E-MAIL THIS PAGE
Enter recipient's e-mail:


    

 

 
THE JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW CAN BE SEEN ON THE FOLLOWING SATELLITE NETWORKS:

SUNDAY 9:00 p.m. ET
         Channel 369
SUNDAY 8:30 p.m. ET
         Channel 378

SUNDAY 11:00 p.m. ET
SUNDAY 8:00 p.m. PT
SUNDAY 10:00 p.m. PT
MONDAY
1:00 a.m. ET

           Channel 262
SUNDAY 9:00 p.m. ET
SUNDAY 6:00 p.m. PT
           Channel 263

SUNDAY 9:00 p.m. ET
Europe, Asia, Middle East, & North Africa, Daystar is now on the EUTLESAT HOTBIRD 6 SATELLITE (Channel HB6 TR 154) United Kingdom on BskyB channell675, South America on NSS606 -- T12A, Australia & New Zealand on Optus B3 - TR5, South Africa on VIVID -- 68.5 degrees
Africa on PAS 10, Israel on HOT Cable System Channel 98

SUNDAY 9:30 p.m. ET

SUNDAY 11:00 p.m. ET
SUNDAY 10:00 p.m. PT
MONDAY
1:00 a.m. ET

SUNDAY 11:00 p.m. ET
SUNDAY 10:00 p.m. PT
MONDAY
1:00 a.m. ET

           Angel One
Now in Canada on ShifTV

SUNDAY 8:30 p.m. ET

CLICK HERE FOR
LOCAL TV LISTINGS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

                             
Rock Replies

Promoters of 'anything and everything goes' rock constantly cite "freedom of artistic expression" and First Amendment protections as justification for their promotion of sex, violence, drugs, nihilism, and more. And as it currently stands, the Courts have been unwilling to protect societies moral welfare at the expense of its "artistic" interests:

In this country the great bulk of offensive popular music does not fall under the narrow purview of obscenity law as derived from the 1973 Supreme Court decision, Miller v. California. There will always be experts willing to defend the "serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value" of material like the rap group 2 Live Crew's "The F*. Shop." And there will always be performers like Madonna who know how to dehumanize sex even before they take off their clothes. And, as fundamentalists and feminists have learned the hard way, the First Amendment stands solidly in the way of any attempt to expand the scope of the law.78

Part of the problem is the frequent, if reprehensible, intimidation people often encounter from those who promote rock's excesses. No one wants to be considered prudish, mentally unbalanced, anti-freedom or a Nazi sympathizer. The authors of The New Book Of Rock Lists referred to "Tipper Gore and her asshole buddies" because they attempted the mildest possible form of regulation, voluntary album labeling of explicit lyrics.79 There's just no reasoning with some people. This can usually be discerned among people who use such phrases as "F* the police" and "F* society."80 Thus, virtually any response can be offered to critics of rock, no matter how distorted, as long as the money keeps rolling in:

...industry spokesman [are] all too willing to call their critics Philistines as well as prudes. This strategy was employed by Danny Goldberg of the American Civil Liberties Union and its offshoot, the Musical Majority, when he equated [Tipper] Gore's proposal of a voluntary labeling system with the banning of Ulysses, and warned of a new "McCarthyism" bound to have a "chilling effect" on "artists."81

Perhaps the question is whether or not there needs to be some kind of a chilling effect upon artists who have contributed to the damning of society? Surely we can recognize the difference between banning literary masterpieces and voluntarily choosing, as a society, to restrict cultural excesses that harm our children. Since no society allows total freedom, all societies have the right to limit freedom as they see fit. Our priorities are, characteristically of late, skewed. Thus, we spend billions of dollars trying to place restrictions upon the tobacco industry to keep our kids from smoking, yet as a matter of national will, we will not contribute positively to their moral life, something infinitely more valuable and cost-effective. They get the message. Indeed, we spend equal amounts in sex education programs informing them that sexual freedom and experimentation is entirely their own business—oh, and, by the way, here are the condoms to prove it. In a slight twist on this argument: "It is a familiar irony that governments have been ferocious in their attack on the right to smoke cigarettes, while totally permissive in their support for homosexual rights. If the issue is one of health, then the consequences of sodomy are far more terrifying than those of cigarettes. Money and passion were hurled into the work of finding a cure for AIDS. No such attention was paid to lung cancer. How can we explain this remarkable contradiction?82

Again, as a people, do we really think it wise to endorse "artistic expression" whose sole or major purpose is perversity? Having a baby's dirty diapers hung in a major museum as a piece of "art," as was done years ago, is one thing. The only consequence is great sympathy for the mental state of the artist, museum director and viewing public. But perverting music is far more consequential:

Heavy metal,...regards itself as an abject failure if all hell doesn't break loose. Since heavy metal lacks aesthetic sophistication in the realms of music, language, visual art, and theater, its sole claim to artistic seriousness lies in its perversity. "Some art is perverse; heavy metal is perverse; therefore, heavy metal is art."...[unfortunately] the assault is mounted against a more vulnerable target: angry, troubled adolescents.... As the record producer, Tom Werman put its it to the Los Angeles Times, young people "need to be angry, they need to have music they can clench their fists by, to pump themselves up by....they need an outlet like hard rock..."83

So, not only do we accept perversity, we foist it on our children and the unstable elements in society that are least able to resist the impact:

Werman implies that heavy metal works by allowing its adherents to vent negative feelings that would otherwise cripple and distort their personalities. In other words, heavy metal can be defended (as pornography sometimes is) as an escape valve, an "outlet" that keeps already anti-social types from engaging in even more anti-social behavior. This argument sinks beneath the weight of examples such as Jeffrey Dahmer of Milwaukee, the serene young psychopath whose constant indulgence in heavy metal did nothing to prevent his indulgence in murder, necrophilia, and cannibalism...at the very least, it's worth pondering that such a person found heavy metal a suitable accompaniment to his deeds....

Does heavy metal offer a release for anger that is already there? Or does it whip up even more anger? And does whipping up more anger offer greater release? And what happens afterward? Does the head banger go home after the concert with his troubled emotions under control, ready to face the sometimes tedious demands of daily life? I don't think so.... Heavy metal...[is geared to] arousing many of the troubling passions and treacherous currents of contemporary life, with the sole aim of immunizing the young against shared values -- that is, of preventing their socialization.84

If society has no interest in upholding moral values, even if it means restricting certain artistic expression, even when it's understands something as serious as the fact that "neo-Nazism was partly nurtured in the poisonous atmosphere of punk," then how can society uphold any values at all?85

It seems to us of the burden of proof lies with those who would repeal laws against violence and obscenity, not with those that would enforce them for societies greater welfare.

Noted author William Burroughs (Junkie, Queer, etc., known affectionately to rockers as "the Godfather Dope"86a) is arguably one of the most decadent figures around -- a homosexual sadomasochist, drug addict and probably worse. Even when, initially, most rock critics actually loathed heavy metal he could only praise it as "magical and evocative."86 Eventually, somehow, the critics came around to seeing things Burroughs way. So where do we get off? Even Spin magazine, who lists Burroughs as a contributing editor, in a June 1991 article on "Grindcore" added the subtitle: "Heavy Metal Goes Too Far."

Again, the question is raised, Can we go too far with "artistic freedom"? Who but the most extreme libertarian would deny it? If, as a society, we say "no", that there are limits, then everything is permitted and we have no right to complain about anything. If we say "yes," there are limits, it is incumbent upon us to define those limits in the best interests of societies welfare and the welfare of future generations. After all, if we don't decide now where music can go with rock stars " bored with serial murder and cannibal feasting on the private parts of little children,"86aa then perhaps we deserve what we get. Unless art and culture are once again connected to the realm of the moral and ethical, we are all the losers-- just as many of our children have already been lost. The sad realization is that we should never have sacrificed them in the first place. As painter, actor and avid rock 'n roll fan, Duncan Hannah once commented, over the perverse impact of rock on a friend, "So I guess it's true. Rock & roll is a bad influence, isn't it?"86b

The other sad realization is that a vicious cycle has begun. A generation of rockers will breed another generation of rockers, only one with more daring appetites. This can be illustrated in the lives of Iggy pop and Sid Vicious. It was, after all, Sid Vicious' own mother, who lived up to her son's name, as she sat serenely next to him, while blood flowed freely, encouraging his failed suicide attempt. Later, she finally gave him the heroin that killed him. A mother-- who gives the greatest gift of all, life, and who is to nurture life-- chooses instead to give death. (How comforting for us all that we live in an age when mothers routinely do this with abortion.) In part, Vicious was suffering from an inherited legacy: "On February 2 1980, in honor of the first anniversary of Sid's death, 1,000 punks marched from London's Sloan Square in Chelsea[?] to Hyde Park. Ma Vicious and Beverly, was supposed to have taken part in the proceedings--instead she was taken to a hospital due to a drug overdose."86c But the legacy for good or ill continues from generation to generation. Iggy Pop confided in 1981 "that his reputation as a philanderer was leaving deep emotional and psychological scars." Yet, in 1993 he described his own son, Eric, with the following words: "His pitchin's a little bit suspect, but all the girls want to f* him and that's 80 percent of the deal taken care of right there."87 A generation of rockers has begotten a generation of rappers, punkers and skin/metal heads. What they beget remains to be seen. Perhaps the 1956 Encyclopedia Britannica description of rock as "instant savagery" is a description that will become even more apropos.

Whatever happens in the short run, the verdict is certain in the long run. How many punk, rap, metal, and grunge records were ever that important? How many were socially or spiritually relevant? How many will be remembered with fondness by a future generation? The author's of The New Book of Rock Lists tells us that, even in all its perversity, rock has "a hopeful future."86d Perhaps. But then again, perhaps rock as we know it, is approaching it's eve of destruction.

The conclusion, when all is said and done is this: music is far too valuable to trash. Those who care about it should do something. Maybe we could start with our kids. But then again, before too long, rock as we know it may be approaching its own eve of destruction.


For more specific information see our Resource Center or call 1-800-805-3030:

Books

Videos


FOOTNOTES

78. Bayles, p. 14.

79. Marsh and Bernard, p. 18.

80. Ibid.

81. Bayles, p. 59.

82. Kenneth Minogue, "Id Control" National Review, November 10, 1997.

83. Bayles, p. 259.

84. Ibid., pp. 259-61.

85. Ibid., p. 357,cf., pp. 251-52, 63-64, 76-77, 326.

86. Ibid., p. 316.

87. Kent, p. 265.

86a. McNeil, McCain, p. 381

86b. Ibid., p. 432

86c. Des Barres, p. 274

86d. Marsh, Bernard, p. xix

     

 

 


 

 

THE JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW

Make a donation to

The
John Ankerberg Show

If you have been ministered to today, please help us minister to others by making a contribution to the ministry.

Please enter gift amount then press "Make a Donation"
 

Ministry Gift
Price:
$

THIS WEEK

Step by Step Through the Book of Revelation

CLICK HERE
TO WATCH ONLINE


DR. JOHN ANKERBERG'S RESPONSE TO CREATION QUESTIONS

Dr. John Ankerberg answers your questions on creation in the following article available both as a downloadable PDF and broken down into individual questions for online reading.  Click the link below to read:

Does Scientific Evidence Today Show that God Created the Heavens and the Earth? And What Does the Bible Say About When He Created?

 

 

Copyright 2006, Ankerberg Theological Research Institute