Denzel Prempeh - Pace Praise Lyrics

Album: Pace Praise (feat. Nana Amoah) - EP
Released: 28 Nov 2019
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Lyrics

Sons of God 

Lift Him up Lift Him up 

The son of God is coming again 

Let the people say Halleluyah 

The son of God is coming again 

Let the people say Halleluyah 

The son of God is coming again 

Let the people say Halleluyah 


Say (Halleluyah), Say (Halleluyah)

Say say Say (Halleluyah) 

Let the people say Halleluyah 


Sing unto the Lord a new song 

Sing unto the Lord all the eart 

Sing a holy song from your heart 

Oh Halleluyah the Lord is king 

Oh Halleluyah almighty king 

Oh Halleluyah is the king of kings


Oh wonderful wonderful wonderful 

Wonderful is the Lord 

Oh Halleluyah the Lord is king 

Oh Halleluyah almighty king 

Oh Halleluyah is the king of kings 

Oh wonderful wonderful wonderful 

Wonderful is the Lord 

...

Video

DENZEL PREMPEH - PACE PRAISE feat Nana Amoah

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Meaning & Inspiration

I was listening to Pace Praise (feat. Nana Amoah) from that 2019 EP, and it’s one of those tracks that just grabs you by the collar and tells you to look up. When the lyrics hit that bit about the Son of God coming again, it immediately took me back to Revelation, specifically that urgency that we don’t talk about enough. We get so caught up in the here and now that we forget the whole point of our faith is a return. It’s funny, because the song is so rhythmic and upbeat, but that specific line—"The son of God is coming again"—is actually pretty heavy if you stop to let it sink in. It’s the same expectation the early believers had, living like the sky could split open at any second.

Then there’s the call to "Sing unto the Lord a new song." It’s everywhere in the Psalms, right? Like Psalm 96 or 98. It’s a recurring command to stop singing the same old things and actually acknowledge what God is doing in the moment. I keep wrestling with that, though. Am I really singing a "new song" from my heart, or am I just repeating familiar sounds because it’s easy? The song demands a level of honesty that’s kind of uncomfortable.

It keeps circling back to Him being the King of Kings, which is obviously foundational, but it makes me think about what that actually looks like when I’m not in a worship space. Is He the King of my actual, messy life, or is He just a title I sing about? Calling Him "wonderful" over and over is simple, almost childlike, and maybe that’s the point. I wonder if we overcomplicate our theology while missing the basic reality that He is returning. Does the way I live actually match the lyrics I’m singing about His impending return, or am I just hoping He takes His time?

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