All You Have Planned
“All You Have Planned” is a quiet one — a worship song about drawing near to God, and staying near.
About this song
This one came from the quiet. I released it June 24, 2026, as a standalone single under the “Walking in Love” heading, and it stays low the whole way — three minutes and fifty-two seconds of drawing near. It’s not devotion for a crowd. It’s the kind you pray when nobody’s watching: a soul turning toward God and staying turned. Trust spoken soft, not shouted.
The title says it plain: all You have planned — not all I have planned. That’s surrender. Receiving what God has already prepared instead of writing my own script. When we set scripture beside it, we reached for the thirsting psalms — Psalm 42, panting after God like a deer for water, and Psalm 63, seeking Him in the night watches. I’ll be honest: that pairing is ours, matched by theme, still under ministry review. But the ache is the same ache. Wanting to be close. Drawing near for its own sake.
If you lead worship, here’s what this song gives you: restraint. It doesn’t build to a climax and it won’t rush anybody. It just holds a space open. When your people need a moment where devotion can breathe — where reverence gets room and nobody’s hurried to the next thing — this one will hold that moment for you.
Bringing it into worship
Reach for it at Communion, or in a set-apart moment of personal devotion — it settles a room. Put it next to slow, prayerful songs, not up-tempo praise. Honestly, it may serve best as a listening piece: playing under quiet response at the Table, or over a prayer station, while people meet with the Lord. Once your congregation knows it, they can sing it softly into that same hush.
Scripture & use
- Scripture anchors (editorial · unconfirmed): Psalm 42, Psalm 63
- Emotional tone: reverence
- Service placement (editorial): Communion; personal devotion
- Genre / length: Inspirational · 3:52
Questions
What is “All You Have Planned” about?
It’s a prayer more than a performance — devotion and intimacy, drawing near to God and trusting what He has planned. The tone is reverence, all the way through.
What scripture is “All You Have Planned” paired with?
Psalm 42 and Psalm 63 — the thirsting psalms. Being straight with you: that’s our pairing by theme, not yet exegetically confirmed, and it’s still in ministry review.
Where does “All You Have Planned” fit in a worship service?
Our suggestion: Communion, or personal devotion — anywhere the room needs to slow down and draw near.
Who made “All You Have Planned”?
Thomas Perry Jr. wrote it, under the Gospel Protocol ministry on 144k Records. It released June 24, 2026.