Harry Styles has featured occult imagery in album artwork, worn gender-bending outfits that many Christians find spiritually and culturally provocative, and incorporated mystical themes in his music. Is this artistic expression or something darker?
Harry Styles' Aesthetic and Its Christian Concerns
Harry Styles, the former One Direction member turned solo artist, has built a post-boyband career around gender-fluid fashion, overt sexuality, and a brand of inclusive "love is love" messaging that has made him one of the most culturally prominent figures in entertainment. Christian concerns about his content are legitimate, though the specific concern about Satanism requires careful evaluation.
Harry Styles is not Satanic in the sense that Lil Nas X or Doja Cat's recent work is explicitly Satanic. His content does not feature pentagrams, explicit devil imagery, or occult ritual. The Christian concerns about his content center primarily on different but still significant issues: the explicit sexuality of his music videos and stage persona, his prominent advocacy for LGBT lifestyles, and the gender-fluid aesthetic he promotes as normative and aspirational.
The Sexual Content of His Work
Harry Styles' "Watermelon Sugar" music video is explicitly sexual. "As It Was" and the accompanying visual work presents a melancholy but thoroughly secular worldview in which human connection is the highest available good. His live shows are characterized by sexually explicit choreography and crowd interactions. His film work, including "Don't Worry Darling," contains explicit sexual content.
Ephesians 5:3 says "among you there must not be even a hint of sexual immorality." Harry Styles' public persona is not characterized by hints — it is built around the public performance of sexuality as a central artistic and personal identity.
Gender Ideology and Christian Values
Harry Styles has been one of the most prominent mainstream advocates for the normalization of gender-fluid presentation, wearing dresses on magazine covers and in public appearances and framing this as a broader rejection of gender norms.
Genesis 1:27 — "male and female he created them" — establishes the biblical framework in which gender is a created gift, not a social construct to be deconstructed.
The cultural influence of figures like Harry Styles on young people's understanding of gender and sexuality is real and substantial. His enormous popularity with teenage girls gives this content particular significance for Christian parents.
Our Verdict
Harry Styles scores 18/100. His content is not explicitly Satanic but combines significant sexual content with prominent LGBT advocacy and a secular humanist worldview that presents the rejection of Christian sexual ethics as liberation. Christians should avoid his music, and parents of teenage girls should be specifically aware of his cultural influence.