All Nations Worship Assembly + Chandler Moore + Rich Tolbert Jr - Fire Song Lyrics
Lyrics
Thank You for Your fire
Thank You for Your fire
We thank You...
Holy ghost come
We've been waiting on You
Make this place Your offering
we need You to move
Fire come burn inside our hearts
Fire at will, come do it again
Let heaven rush in
Holy ghost come
We've been waiting on You
Make this place Your offering
we need You to move
Fire come burn inside our hearts
Fire at will, come do it again
Let heaven rush in
Fire fire fire, fire fall on me
Fire fire fire, fire fall on me
On the day of Pentecost
Fire fall on me
On the day of Pentecost
Fire fall on me
Fire fire fire, fire fall on me
Fire fire fire, fire fall on me
On the day of Pentecost
Fire fall on me
On the day of Pentecost
Fire fall on me
Sound of heaven is rushing in
The cloud coming,
there is something changing
Sound of heaven is rushing in
The cloud coming,
there is something changing
Sound of heaven is rushing in
The cloud coming,
there is something changing
(repeat)
The power is coming
The power is coming
The power is coming
There is something changing
There is something changing
There is something changing
There is something moving
There is something moving
There is something moving
Video
Fire Song | All Nations Worship | Chandler Moore & Rich Tolbert Jr.
Meaning & Inspiration
When Chandler Moore and Rich Tolbert Jr. gather with the All Nations Worship Assembly, they aren't looking for a light show or a catchy hook to keep a crowd entertained. Their track, Fire Song, brings us back to the raw, unrefined urgency of the Upper Room. It is a direct appeal for the presence of God to invade the mundane spaces we inhabit, shifting our posture from passive consumers to active participants in the move of the Holy Spirit.
The lyrics cut straight to the bone by calling for the fire to burn inside our hearts, a request that mirrors the refinement of the believer through the Spirit. Malachi 3:2 speaks of the Lord as a refiner’s fire, and this track invites that exact process to take place. When they sing about the day of Pentecost, they are pulling from the imagery in Acts 2, where the rushing wind and tongues of fire signified the arrival of the Counselor. They aren't asking for a nostalgic recreation of a historical event, but for the same power that empowered the early church to disrupt the status quo today.
There is a bold expectation in the repeated line about the cloud coming. This links back to 2 Chronicles 7, where the glory of the Lord filled the temple so intensely that the priests could not stand to minister. The song suggests that when the Spirit moves, our neat, controlled agendas must give way to His sovereignty. When they chant that the power is coming, they are operating in the belief that God is not a distant spectator but an active force changing the atmosphere of our lives. It is a refusal to settle for a form of godliness that lacks the active, burning reality of the Holy Ghost. If we are genuinely asking for the fire to fall, we have to be ready for the fact that fire doesn't just warm us; it consumes everything in its path that doesn't belong to Him.