J.J. Hairston - The Love Medley Lyrics
Lyrics
Oh, the overwhelming, never-ending, reckless love of God
Oh, it chases me down, fights 'til I'm found, leaves the ninety-nine
I couldn't earn it, and I don't deserve it, still, You give Yourself away
Oh, the overwhelming, never-ending, reckless love of God, yeah
There's no shadow You won't light up
Mountain You won't climb up
Coming after me
He loves, oh How He loves us
Oh how He loves us
Oh how He loves us
Oh how He loves us
My Halleluyah belongs to You
My Halleluyah belongs to You
My Halleluyah belongs to You
You deserve it, You deserve it
You deserve it, You deserve it
Say Hallelujah (Hallelujah)...
My Halleluyah belongs to You
My Halleluyah belongs to You
Oh oh oh oooh
Video
The Love Medley | JJ Hairston Feat. Greg Kirkland, Melissa Bethea, Leah Leach & Benita Jones
Meaning & Inspiration
J.J. Hairston and his vocal team bring us a powerful collision of worship anthems in this medley, pulling together themes that sit right at the core of the Gospel. It’s rare to find tracks that so effectively cut through the noise of our own self-sufficiency, but here we see a clear pivot toward the radical nature of divine grace. When the lyrics describe the love of God as reckless, they aren't suggesting God acts without wisdom, but rather that He operates without the boundaries of our human logic. It is exactly what Paul writes about in Romans 5:8, where he notes that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us. This is the kind of aggressive, relentless pursuit described in the song when it says He leaves the ninety-nine to go after the one. It forces us to reconcile with the reality that His favor isn't a wage we collect for being good enough; it’s a gift we receive because He is good.
The focus shifts toward the pursuit of the wandering soul, bringing to mind the shepherd in Luke 15 who counts every single sheep. If the creator of the cosmos is willing to light up every shadow and scale every mountain to reach us, then our struggle with shame has to lose its grip. We spend so much energy trying to tidy up our lives before we come to Him, yet this track insists that He comes after us right where we are. It’s an honest admission of our poverty of spirit, captured in the line that we couldn't earn it and don't deserve it. This theology of grace replaces the heavy yoke of performance with the light burden of total surrender. By the time the melody shifts into the declaration that our Hallelujah belongs to Him, it isn't just a catchy chorus; it’s a recognition of ownership.
We often try to compartmentalize our lives, but giving our praise to God means acknowledging that every breath and every victory is His property. When we sing that He deserves it, we are rejecting the lie that we are the architects of our own salvation. The repetition in these songs acts like a hammer striking an anvil, driving the point home until the wall of our pride finally crumbles. You see, true worship isn't about how we feel in the moment; it’s about responding to the objective truth that the King of Glory is actively seeking our hearts. He isn't a distant spectator watching our lives from the bleachers, but a determined seeker who refuses to let us stay lost. When you finally grasp that your praise is a debt owed to a Savior who bought you with His own blood, you stop trying to negotiate your way into His presence and start living like someone who has been found.