Bethel Music - Padre Nuestro Lyrics
Lyrics
Padre nuestro en los cielos
Santo es Tu nombre
Que venga Tu reino
Tu voluntad también
Aqui como en el cielo
Que el cielo venga
Aquí como en el cielo
Que venga aqui
El cielo aquí, el cielo aquí
El cielo aquí, el cielo aquí
Tuyo es el reino, tuyo el poder
Tuya es la gloria, por siempre, Amen
Tuyo es el reino, tuyo el poder
Tuya es la gloria, por siempre, Amen
Tuyo es el reino, tuyo el poder
Tuya es la gloria, por siempre, Amen
Tuyo es el reino, tuyo el poder
Tuya es la gloria, por siempre, Amen
Tuyo es el reino, tuyo el poder
Tuya es la gloria, por siempre, Amen
Tuyo es el reino, tuyo el poder
Tuya es la gloria, por siempre, Amen
El cielo aquí, el cielo aquí
Video
Padre Nuestro - Bethel Music (Ft. Marco Barrientos & Jenn Johnson)
Meaning & Inspiration
Bethel Music’s "Padre Nuestro," released on February 16, 2019, and featuring Marco Barrientos and Jenn Johnson, offers a profound reimagining of the Lord's Prayer, anchoring its message in the immediacy of God's presence and reign. This track doesn't merely recite the prayer; it transforms it into a fervent declaration, a tangible aspiration for heaven's reality to manifest here and now. The core of the song is its powerful plea, echoing Matthew 6:10, "Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven." Bethel Music crafts this into a passionate cry, emphasizing that the Father's rule is not a distant hope but an active force meant to break into our present circumstances. The repeated phrase, "Que el cielo venga, aquí como en el cielo" (Let heaven come, here as in heaven), becomes the anthemic heart of the song, translating the disciples' request into a dynamic prayer for divine intervention and transformation in our daily lives, much like Jesus taught in the Parable of the Sower, where the seed of God's word brings forth fruit in receptive hearts (Mark 4:1-20).
The brilliance of "Padre Nuestro" lies in its conviction that God's kingdom isn't just a future destination but a present possibility. The lyrical assertion, "Tuyo es el reino, tuyo el poder, Tuya es la gloria, por siempre, Amen" (Yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen), directly draws from the doxology often appended to the Lord's Prayer in biblical tradition, aligning with passages like 1 Chronicles 29:11 which states, "Yours, Lord, is the greatness and the power and the glory and the majesty and the splendor, for everything in heaven and on earth is yours." This isn't just an acknowledgment of God's sovereignty; it's a foundational belief that empowers the prayer for His will to be done on earth. The repeated emphasis on God's eternal dominion underscores a faith that transcends earthly limitations, reminding us that the power that raised Christ from the dead is at work in believers (Ephesians 1:19-20). The song's fervent repetitions of this declaration build an atmosphere of worship and expectation, creating a space where listeners are invited to engage not just intellectually with the prayer, but with their entire beings, surrendering to the reality of God's all-encompassing reign and power. This is more than a song; it's an invitation to live in the present reality of God's kingdom, actively seeking its manifestation in our world.