Worthy of It All
Bethel Music
"Worthy of It All" operates in a different register than most modern worship songs — it strips the production to almost nothing, building its entire emotional weight on repetition and restraint. The instrumentation is sparse: piano, minimal atmospheric texture, a gentle rhythmic pulse that never rushes. What defines the piece is its liturgical patience — the same phrases cycle back with the intention not of variety but of deepening, the way a mantra becomes more meaningful the longer you hold it. David Brymer's vocal is low-key and almost conversational in its delivery, avoiding the soaring runs that dominate the genre, which paradoxically makes it feel more reverent. The lyrical content draws from ancient doxological language — the imagery of seas and rivers declaring praise positions the singer within a vast, cosmic act of worship rather than a personal emotional moment. It's one of the defining songs of the contemplative worship movement, a counter to the arena-rock energy that dominates much of the CCM landscape. This is a song for stillness — for early mornings, for the last moments of a church service when people linger, for private prayer. It doesn't ask to be felt so much as inhabited.
very slow
2010s
sparse, still, liturgical
American contemporary worship (Bethel Church)
Christian, Contemporary Worship. Contemplative Worship. serene, reverent. Cycles through repetition with deepening reverence, not building toward climax but toward inhabitation and cosmic stillness.. energy 2. very slow. danceability 1. valence 6. vocals: low-key male, conversational, non-performative, liturgically restrained. production: sparse piano, minimal atmospheric texture, gentle rhythmic pulse, nothing stacked. texture: sparse, still, liturgical. acousticness 7. era: 2010s. American contemporary worship (Bethel Church). Early mornings, private prayer, or the lingering last moments of a church service when people stay and go quiet.