
But you have to think about whether you would use it for corporate worship. This song is unique, creative, and everything that makes a great worship song. Yep, I’ve personally witnessed all of these. But then Carnes follows with I’ve seen families reunited / I’ve seen prodigals return / I’ve seen troubled souls delivered / I’ve seen addicts finally freed. I believe I have seen mental health restored, so all good there.

So I might skip this line if I sang it in front of a congregation. Exactly how real is my faith? I personally haven’t seen a resurrection. I’ve seen real life resurrection / I’ve seen mental health restored. I have seen cancer disappear (my mom) and broken bodies healed (many examples). Here’s what he says: I’ve seen cancer disappear / I’ve seen broken bodies healed / Don’t you tell me He can’t do it. Ok this is where I have to stop and say, before I sing this, is this true for me? Well, so far so good. And then Carnes makes you stop and analyze how real your own faith is. When you hear the beginning of this song, you’ll assume it’s just another solid song. CCLI #7174874Ĭody Carnes is another artist who is pushing the boundaries of worship music. This will bless your church and you personally as well. The song is simple enough for congregations to learn, but it’s not so simple that it’s uncreative, like many worship songs today. Surprisingly, even though it was released in early 2021, I don’t see it on CCLI’s top 100 list yet. I fell in love with this song the first time I heard it. While there is a place for all tempos and styles in today’s church services, here are some slow songs that will ignite an attitude of power and worship in your church or youth group. Some songs start off very laid back - but then you get to the middle of the song and suddenly there’s unstoppable power coming from the midst of the worshipers. There’s also an unexplained power hiding within many slow worship songs. The Holy Spirit seems to dwell in slower songs in a different, more intimate way compared to upbeat music. Slower songs are so popular because they give the congregation a chance to rest in Christ’s presence.
