Jesus Image - Worthy Lyrics
Lyrics
Worthy is your name
Worthy is your name Jesus
You deserve the praise
Worthy is your name
Worthy is your name
Worthy is your name, Jesus
You deserve the praise
Worthy is your name
Worthy is your name
Worthy is your name Jesus
You deserve the praise
Worthy is your name
Worthy is your name
Worthy is your name Jesus
You deserve the praise
Worthy is your name
Video
Worthy | Jesus Image | John Wilds
Meaning & Inspiration
When John Wilds leads this track for Jesus Image, he strips away the distractions that often clutter modern worship, leaving nothing but a raw, vertical focus on the character of the Lamb. Sometimes we complicate our prayer life with flowery language or long lists of requests, but this song brings us back to the simple, heavy weight of who God is. It mirrors the vision John received on the island of Patmos, where the living creatures and the elders fall before the throne to cry out that the Lamb is worthy to receive power, wealth, wisdom, and honor. When we sing that his name is worthy, we are doing more than repeating a catchy line; we are participating in the eternal liturgy of heaven found in Revelation 5:12.
The repetitive nature of the lyrics is not a lack of creativity, but an intentional posture of surrender. In the same way the angels cry holy, holy, holy without ceasing, this song forces us to slow down and sit in the truth that Jesus alone is the standard for greatness. We often live as if our praise is a gift we offer to God, yet the reality is that he alone deserves the praise because he is the author of life and the conqueror of the grave. Psalm 18:3 tells us that the Lord is worthy of praise, and he rescues us from our enemies, which is exactly why we fix our gaze on him. By naming him Jesus, we anchor the abstract concept of holiness to the specific man who hung on the cross and rose again.
Everything hinges on the claim that his name carries weight. In the ancient world, a name represented the very essence of a person, so declaring him worthy is a total acknowledgment of his sovereignty over our lives. If we believe that he is the name above every name, as Philippians 2:9 states, then every knee should be bowing in our hearts as we sing. This isn't about how we feel when the music swells; it is about recognizing the absolute right of the Creator to be adored. When you strip away the production and the performance, you are left with the only response a broken human can offer to a perfect Savior, which is an unending admission that he possesses every bit of the glory we try to hoard for ourselves.