ere he called his friend
hen, a lot of scholars
ks later after Lazarus
ad that Jesus himself
h and resurrection, and
ther side of the tomb,
e whole world for all
g of both sides of the
had that phrase before
the song, and one of
going to be a tough
as a long road, we rehree
or four times with
different verses, different bridges, but we were
able to finish it in time to be able to teach it
to our church in the weeks leading up to our
Easter celebration. It was a huge rally moment
for our community, our pastor preached using
the concept of the song, so it was an honor for
us to be able to provide language to our church
in that way.
[WM] Wonderful. Can you tell us about the
song and recording of “All of Me”?
[Ryan] The best way to talk about the origin
of that song is worship music in general. I
think it’s very important to remember that
congregational music, whether you write it,
or you just lead it, is meant to serve people.
It’s to help people and serve people. It’s not a
performance-based genre of music. It exists to
point people to something, to Someone. So,
because of that, most of our songs really do
start from a lyrical perspective. They start from
Subscribe for Free...