Fall Into Your Grace (Cinematic Version)
“Fall Into Your Grace (Cinematic Version)” is a soundtrack worship piece from Gospel Protocol — for the moment you stop holding yourself up and let God's mercy hold you.
About this song
I released “Fall Into Your Grace (Cinematic Version)” on June 18, 2026, as its own single. It runs a little over five minutes, and that’s on purpose. Some songs need to hit fast. This one needs room. It’s built to give a room time to soften — time to stop performing and get honest before God. The music walks one road, from the weight of contrition to the lift of hope, and it doesn’t rush a single step between them. Neither should you.
This song lives in mercy and repentance. And hear the title right: you don’t climb into grace. You fall. Grace is not something we earn or hold ourselves up to reach — it’s the gift God gives in Jesus, and it catches us when our arms finally give out. That’s the posture of this piece. Surrender. It’s why the song carries weight without ever getting heavy-handed — it stays tender, the way mercy is.
When I look for where this points in Scripture, two places come to mind: 1 John 1:9, the promise that He is faithful and just to forgive, and Psalm 51, David’s cry for a clean heart. I’ll be straight with you — that pairing is my suggestion for worship planners, not something confirmed yet; it’s still under ministry review. But it names where I believe this song wants to take you: from confession into the relief of being received by God.
Bringing it into worship
Use it in confession, or right after as the response. It’s instrumental and cinematic, so don’t force it into congregational singing — lay it under spoken prayer, under silence, under a reading of Psalm 51. And let it run its full length. The arc from contrition to hope is the same arc your people are walking, from repentance to mercy received. Give them room to sit in it. Don’t rush them out of the moment the Spirit is working in.
Scripture & use
- Scripture anchors (editorial · unconfirmed): 1 John 1:9, Psalm 51
- Emotional tone: contrition, hope
- Service placement (editorial): Confession; response
- Genre / length: Soundtrack · 5:08
Questions
What is “Fall Into Your Grace (Cinematic Version)” about?
It's a worship piece addressed to God about mercy and repentance. It starts in contrition and ends in hope — that's the whole journey.
What scripture is “Fall Into Your Grace (Cinematic Version)” paired with?
1 John 1:9 and Psalm 51. Being straight with you: that’s my theme-based pairing, not yet exegetically confirmed — it’s still under ministry review.
Where does “Fall Into Your Grace (Cinematic Version)” fit in a worship service?
Confession, or the response right after — that's my editorial suggestion; you know your room.
Who made “Fall Into Your Grace (Cinematic Version)”?
Thomas Perry Jr. wrote it, under the Gospel Protocol ministry (144k Records). It released June 18, 2026.