Blood of the Lamb
This one is for the fight nobody else can see. “Blood of the Lamb” is about standing covered, not standing alone.
About this song
I released “Blood of the Lamb” on June 24, 2026, as a standalone single. It holds two things gospel music has always carried together: the fight is real, and mercy is near. I didn’t write it loud. It’s reverent on purpose, and that restraint is the whole point of the recording. Across its just-under-four-minute run, the song stays weighted and unhurried — less a battle cry, more the settled quiet of somebody who already knows where the victory comes from. Not from me. Not from you. From the blood of Jesus.
That doubleness is the heart of the song. Breakthrough songs usually get loud. This one braids the warfare with repentance, so that standing firm and being washed clean become the same motion. The fight costs something — I won’t pretend it doesn’t — but the song refuses to leave you there, because Christ doesn’t leave you there. If you want Scripture to sit alongside it, I’d point you to the armor of Ephesians 6:10–18 and the weapons “not of the flesh” in 2 Corinthians 10:3–5, with the broken honesty of Psalm 51 and the promise of cleansing in 1 John 1:9. Let me be straight with you: that pairing is our editorial read of the song’s emotional grain, not something the ministry has formally confirmed yet.
If you’re carrying a struggle nobody else can see, hear me: standing firm doesn’t come from trying harder. It comes from being covered. Jesus already shed the blood. This song just gives that truth room to breathe.
Bringing it into worship
Don’t open the set with it. Put it in the reflective middle — confession, the response or altar moment, or underneath intercession while people are contending in prayer. Keep the instrumentation spare and set it next to quieter, cross-centered songs. It works well as a listening or ministry piece, and the unhurried pacing lets your people lean in and sing without feeling rushed through what the Spirit is doing in the room.
Scripture & use
- Scripture anchors (lyric-confirmed): Revelation 12:11; Isaiah 54:17; Ephesians 6:10–18
- Emotional tone: reverence
- Service placement (editorial): Confession; response; Response & altar; intercession
- Genre / length: Gospel · 4:00
Questions
What is “Blood of the Lamb” about?
It is a worship song sung to God about spiritual warfare and breakthrough, held together with mercy and repentance. The tone is reverence — the fight is real, and so is the covering.
What scripture is “Blood of the Lamb” paired with?
We would point you to 1 John 1:9, 2 Corinthians 10:3-5, Ephesians 6:10-18, and Psalm 51. To be honest with you: that is our theme-based editorial pairing, not yet exegetically confirmed — the scripture field is still under ministry review.
Where does “Blood of the Lamb” fit in a worship service?
Our editorial suggestion, not a rule: confession and response, the response & altar moment, or intercession. Somewhere reflective — not the opener.
Who made “Blood of the Lamb”?
Thomas Perry Jr. wrote it under the Gospel Protocol ministry, on 144k Records. It released June 24, 2026.