This Sunday, we’re introducing a new song called Earth and Heaven Roar. And while the melody may be new to us, the truth behind it is not.
All throughout Scripture, we see that worship is not something that only happens when the church gathers on Sunday morning. Right now, in this very moment, Jesus is being worshiped. Not just by believers across the world, but by saints who have gone before us and by angels who never stop declaring what is eternally true. Worthy is the Lord.
When we gather to sing, we are not starting something. We are stepping into something that is already happening.
Revelation gives us a glimpse of this reality as a countless multitude from every nation, tribe, people, and language stand before the throne of God in unified praise. Heaven is loud with the worthiness of Jesus, and one day all of earth will be too. This song helps us remember that our worship is connected to something far bigger than our own voices or our own experiences.
Because if we are honest, worship does not always feel powerful in our everyday lives. Some weeks are filled with distractions, doubts, grief, or exhaustion. Sometimes our circumstances feel louder than God’s goodness. And yet none of those things change what is true about Him.
Jesus is still worthy.
Not because our week went well.
Not because we feel spiritually strong.
But because He died our death, broke the grave, and nothing can separate those who call upon His name from His love.
This is why we sing songs like this. Not simply to express how we feel, but to remind our hearts of what is true. When we sing, “All the honor, all the power, all the praise is Yours forever,” we are aligning our lives with the reality of heaven and declaring that Christ’s worthiness does not change based on our circumstances.
As you come this Sunday, come ready to do more than observe worship. Come ready to join in the eternal song that is already being sung.
Questions to Consider Before Sunday
What has been shaping your perspective of God this week?
Have your circumstances been louder than His worthiness?
Where has your awe of Him grown familiar or distracted?
What would it look like for you to sing this Sunday as someone who believes Jesus is worthy no matter what this week has held?
We cannot wait to worship with you.

