Sinach - All Things Are Ready Lyrics
Lyrics
It’s already done
Everything is ready is for me
All that i need
Everything for life
Is ready for me
As I look in the Word and I speak
I become as I see
Oh oh oh
All is ready for me
It’s already done
Everything is ready is for me
All that I need
Everything for life
Is ready for me
It doesn’t matter what is going on around
Your Word all that l see
Oh oh oh
All is ready for me
Increase
I see me
Favour
I see me
Rejoice Rejoice
It’s Already done
Promotion
I see me
Peace and Joy
I see me
I rejoice it’s already done
Shinning
I see me
Winning
I see
Rejoice rejoice
It’s already done
All I ever require for life and godliness is already done
Can you see it
3x
Rejoice 3x
It’s already done
Rejoice 3x
All things are ready for me
It’s already done
All things are ready for me
Video
All Things Are Ready | SINACH
Meaning & Inspiration
Sinach’s lyrics in "All Things Are Ready" act like a stubborn anchor. When you strip away the melody, you are left with a text that reads less like a request and more like a forensic report of a reality the singer is insisting exists.
I am fixated on the phrase: "I become as I see."
At first glance, it feels like the kind of self-help jargon we’ve become allergic to—a "manifestation" trope wearing a Sunday suit. It sounds like the modern obsession with vision boards or positive visualization, the idea that if you simply stare at a goal long enough, the universe bends to your gaze. But when you place this against the weight of the earlier line, "As I look in the Word," the tension shifts.
The Word, in this context, is the Bible. In 2 Corinthians 3:18, Paul writes about beholding the glory of the Lord and being transformed into the same image. The "seeing" here isn’t a creative act where I invent my own reality; it’s a receptive act where I let the reality of God’s nature overwrite my own.
This is where the discomfort hits. If I am honest, my eyes are usually fixed on the bank balance, the fractured relationship, or the ticking clock of personal inadequacy. If I become what I see, then my current state of anxiety is merely a symptom of where my gaze has been resting. Sinach is suggesting that my reality is a reflection of my focal point.
Is this a cliché? Perhaps. We hear "change your perspective" until the phrase loses its teeth. But there is a haunting quality to the repetition of "I see me" paired with words like "Increase," "Promotion," and "Winning." It sounds almost desperate, doesn't it? It’s as if the singer is trying to shout these things into existence because the physical room she is standing in suggests the exact opposite.
There is a distinct gap between "It’s already done" and the breakfast table, the mounting bills, or the exhaustion of a Tuesday afternoon. We live in the tension of the "already but not yet." The lyrics refuse to acknowledge that gap, choosing instead to close it through a shift in perception. It’s not just a declaration; it’s a discipline.
When Sinach repeats, "Can you see it?" she is challenging the listener to stop looking at the wreckage and start looking at the Promise. It’s an unsettling exercise. To claim something is "already done" when the evidence points elsewhere requires a kind of lunacy that faith often demands. You aren't just believing; you are actively choosing to ignore the obvious to prioritize the unseen.
I’m left wondering: if I truly saw what the Word says about my life, would I be different? Or is this just a way to cope with the silence of God? The song doesn't answer that. It just leaves the question hanging in the air, insisting that the only thing keeping me from the "already done" is my insistence on looking at what is "right now."