Amen
“Amen” is a worship song for the moment you have confessed everything and need to know mercy is waiting. It is.
About this song
“Amen” means so be it. Agreement. This song takes six minutes and eleven seconds because real agreement takes time—you don’t rush from confession into praise. It released July 1, 2026 on Mercy’s Seat, and it holds two postures at once: the low place of repentance and the high praise our King is owed. That’s the whole arc. Contrition that doesn’t stay on the floor, because God lifts the head of the one who confesses.
The album is called Mercy’s Seat for a reason. That’s the place where guilt meets grace instead of judgment—not because we earned it, but because Jesus stood in for us. So this “Amen” isn’t a formality at the end of a prayer. It’s the soul saying yes to a mercy it could never deserve. Take the full length. Don’t rush it.
On Scripture: our catalog pairs this song with the promise of 1 John 1:9 and the broken honesty of Psalm 51, then lifts it toward the summons of Psalm 95 and the throne room of Revelation 4–5. Honest note—that pairing is editorial, matched by theme and still awaiting ministry review, not a claim about how the song was written. But it walks the same road the song walks: honest about sin, ending in the presence of the One who receives the penitent.
Bringing it into worship
If you’re building a set: “Amen” opens a service well as a call to worship, and it carries the confession moment. It also lands as a response after the Word, or inside a longer exaltation set. The six minutes are a gift, not a problem—room for kneeling, for silence, for the Lord’s Table—before the room comes up into agreement. Follow it with a quiet psalm of penitence that resolves into praise, and let contrition give way to adoration.
Scripture & use
- Scripture anchors (editorial · unconfirmed): 1 John 1:9, Psalm 51, Psalm 95, Revelation 14:1-5, Revelation 4-5
- Emotional tone: contrition, hope
- Service placement (editorial): Call to worship; exaltation; Confession; response
- Genre / length: Inspirational · 6:11
Questions
What is “Amen” about?
It is a prayer of agreement sung straight to God — confessing sin, receiving mercy, and ending in praise of the King. The tone moves from contrition into hope.
What scripture is “Amen” paired with?
We pair it by theme with 1 John 1:9, Psalm 51, Psalm 95, Revelation 14:1-5, Revelation 4-5. Honest note: that is an editorial pairing, not yet confirmed against the lyrics — the scripture field is still under ministry review.
Where does “Amen” fit in a worship service?
Our editorial suggestion: open with it as a call to worship or exaltation, or let it carry the confession and response moments.
Who made “Amen”?
Thomas Perry Jr. wrote it under the Gospel Protocol ministry (144k Records). It released July 1, 2026.