Danilo Montero - Ven a Este Lugar Lyrics

Album: Devoción
Released: 02 Oct 2009
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Lyrics

Tu que estas sentado sobre querubines
Tu que estas en tu trono, en medio de serafines
Tu que eres aclamado por angeles
Ven a este lugar

Tu que estas sentado sobre un trono de gloria
Tu que estas en el trono, de la alabanza de tu pueblo
Tu que eres aclamado por tu iglesia
Ven a este lugar

///Ven a este lugar///
Llena hoy mi vida senor

Tu que estas sentado sobre un trono de gloria
Tu que estas en el trono, de la alabanza de tu pueblo
Tu que eres aclamado por tu iglesia
Ven a este lugar

///Ven a este lugar///
Llena hoy mi vida senor )
Llena hoy mi vida, senor

Video

Danilo Montero Ven a este lugar

Thumbnail for Ven a Este Lugar video

Meaning & Inspiration

Danilo Montero’s 2009 release, "Ven a Este Lugar" from the album *Devoción*, stands as a powerful invitation to the divine, a musical petition rooted deeply in biblical imagery and theological truth. The song, at its core, is an act of worship, specifically a plea for the tangible presence of God within the lives of believers. Montero crafts a narrative that begins by acknowledging God's majestic position in the heavenly realms, referring to Him as seated upon cherubim and seraphim, acclaimed by angels. This imagery directly echoes passages like Isaiah 6:1-3, where Isaiah witnesses the Lord high and lifted up, with seraphim proclaiming His holiness. Similarly, Psalm 99:1 declares, "The Lord reigns; let the peoples tremble! He sits enthroned between the cherubim; let the earth be moved!" The song then transitions to recognize God's sovereignty within the gathered church, the place where His people offer praise and are acclamation. This shift highlights the biblical concept that God inhabits the praises of His people, as stated in Psalm 22:3. The repeated refrain, "Ven a este lugar, llena hoy mi vida, Señor," is a direct prayer, a yearning for God's indwelling power and transformative presence. It’s a humble request for the supernatural to intersect with the ordinary, for God to manifest Himself in the midst of the worshipper, fulfilling the promise found in Matthew 18:20: "For where two or three gather in my name, there am I with them." The entire composition is a profound expression of the desire for God’s nearness, a recognition of His glory both in the celestial court and in the intimate space of a believer's heart, urging for His filling presence to bring about spiritual renewal and transformation.

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