Elevation Worship - Fullness - Spirit Come - Pour It Out Let Your Love Run Over Lyrics

Album: Beautiful Surrender
Released: 30 Sep 2016
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Lyrics

Fullness of eternal promise Stirring in Your sons and daughters Earth revealing heaven's wonders Spirit come, Spirit come

What You spoke is now unfolding All Your children shall behold it Dreams awaken in this moment Spirit come, Spirit come

Pour it out, let Your love run over Here and now, let Your glory fill this house Pour it out, let Your love run over Here and now, let Your glory fill this house

Now the world awaits Your presence And this power is within us We will rise to be Your witness Spirit come, Spirit come

Pour it out, let Your love run over Here and now, let Your glory fill this house Pour it out, let Your love run over Here and now, let Your glory fill this house

Tongues of fire, testifying of the Son One desire, Spirit come, Spirit come Speak revival, prophesy like it is done One desire, Spirit come, Spirit come

Tongues of fire, testifying of the Son One desire, Spirit come, Spirit come Speak revival, prophesy like it is done One desire, Spirit come, Spirit come

Let our hearts continue burning For our King is soon returning As we hold to this assurance Spirit come, Spirit come Spirit come, Spirit come

Pour it out, let Your love run over Here and now, let Your glory fill this house Pour it out, let Your love run over Here and now, let Your glory fill this house

Tongues of fire, testifying of the Son One desire, Spirit come, Spirit come Speak revival, prophesy like it is done One desire, Spirit come, Spirit come

Tongues of fire, testifying of the Son One desire, Spirit come, Spirit come Speak revival, prophesy like it is done One desire, Spirit come, Spirit come

Video

Fullness | Live | Elevation Worship

Thumbnail for Fullness - Spirit Come - Pour It Out Let Your Love Run Over video

Meaning & Inspiration

Elevation Worship’s "Fullness" is a track that threatens to collapse under the weight of its own repetition. From an editorial standpoint, the final third feels like a loop meant to exhaust the listener into a state of spiritual surrender rather than lead them into a nuanced theological space. There is a surplus of "Spirit come" here that, quite frankly, could be trimmed to make the argument more urgent.

However, amidst the repetition, there is a singular line that rescues the song from being mere atmospheric filler: “Speak revival, prophesy like it is done.”

That is your Power Line. It works because it forces a collision between the human will and divine timing. We usually view prophecy as a future-tense activity—a hope for what might eventually occur. But to "prophesy like it is done" is to treat the Kingdom of God as a current reality that simply hasn’t caught up to our physical senses yet. It echoes Hebrews 11:1, where faith is the substance of things hoped for. It’s a shift from begging God to show up to declaring that He is already here, and we are just waiting for our perception to align with His presence.

There is a strange, unsettling tension in that lyric. When you’re in a room of people singing it, you can hear the strain in their voices. We are singing about revival while looking around at our own broken, finite lives. There’s a discrepancy between the declaration and the reality of the morning commute or the fractured relationship at home. Yet, that’s where the song finds its pulse. It’s not a celebration of how good things are; it’s an assertion of what is true despite what we see.

The reference to "tongues of fire" pulls the track back to Acts 2. It’s a messy, violent, and disruptive image. We tend to sanitize the Holy Spirit in modern worship, treating Him like a calm breeze. But the lyrics here insist on fire—the kind that consumes, separates, and purifies.

I struggle with the song's insistence on the "house" being filled. It’s an easy metaphor, but it can feel claustrophobic. Are we filling the room, or are we being sent out? The lyrics briefly touch on being a "witness," but then immediately retreat back into the "pour it out" refrain. It’s safer to keep the glory inside the four walls of a venue than to carry that fire into the chaos of the street.

"Fullness" wants to be a movement. At times, it succeeds by focusing our attention on the now. At other times, it just circles the drain of its own melody. But when the bridge hits—that demand to speak revival into existence—it stops being a performance and starts being an act of defiance against the status quo. That’s enough to justify its inclusion in the catalog, even if the ending drags.

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