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Another Day is a song built from Psalm 1. It’s about choices that don’t feel dramatic in the moment, but shape your whole life over time. Psalm 1 doesn’t start with a miracle story. It starts with a path. Who you walk with. Where you stand. Where you sit. What you let influence you. What you refuse to join, even when it’s common. The opening of Psalm 1 describes a person who won’t take counsel from the wicked, won’t stand in the path of sinners, and won’t sit in the seat of mockers (Psalm 1:1, NKJV). That’s the heart behind the first verse of this song. It’s not trying to sound better than anyone else. It’s just deciding, “I’m not building my life on that.” There are voices that pull you away from God without yelling. They do it slowly, through normal conversations, entertainment, cynicism, and habits that keep you numb. Psalm 1 calls that out by showing how drifting happens. First you walk near it. Then you stand in it. Then you sit down and settle into it. But Psalm 1 also shows the better way. It says the blessed person delights in the law of the Lord and meditates on His word day and night (Psalm 1:2, NKJV). That doesn’t mean living in a bubble or acting religious. It means God’s Word becomes a steady place you return to, over and over, until it starts shaping how you think, how you react, and what you want. That’s why the lyrics say, “I take joy in the law that He gave to guide… I think on His words as the day rolls by.” It’s everyday faith. Morning, afternoon, and night. Another day of choosing what’s true. The main image in Psalm 1 is the one that carries this whole song: “He shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that brings forth its fruit in its season, whose leaf also shall not wither” (Psalm 1:3, NKJV). That’s where the chorus comes from. A tree doesn’t look strong because it tries hard in public. It looks strong because its roots go deep where nobody claps. That’s what I picture when I sing “Roots down deep where the waters run long.” It’s a life that stays close to the Lord, stays fed, stays grounded, and keeps producing fruit at the right time. Not forced. Not fake. Just steady. Psalm 1 doesn’t ignore the other side either. It says the wicked are “like the chaff which the wind drives away” (Psalm 1:4, NKJV). That’s where the bridge comes from. Chaff has no weight. It can’t hold its place. It gets moved by whatever wind shows up. Psalm 1 is honest about that. If you build your life on what’s empty, you will feel it later. But if you build your life on God’s Word, you’ll have something that holds when seasons change. Psalm 1 closes with a promise that I love: “For the Lord knows the way of the righteous” (Psalm 1:6, NKJV). That doesn’t mean the righteous never struggle. It means you’re not unseen. God watches your path. He guards it. He’s involved in what you’re becoming, even on the days that feel ordinary. That’s why this song is called Another Day. Because most of our spiritual life is made of normal days. Getting up. Making decisions. Choosing what you’ll let shape you. Choosing what you’ll meditate on. Choosing the path you’ll walk. And when you keep doing that, Psalm 1 says you won’t just survive. You’ll grow. You’ll bear fruit. You’ll stay green. Lyrics written by me. Music created with Suno. If this song encourages you, please like, subscribe, and share it with someone who needs strength for today. Scripture focus (NKJV): Psalm 1 Thanks for watching. If you want to go deeper and stay connected with what Michelle and I are building, you can find everything about our ministry, events, and resources here: acts29mi.com For weekly training and discipleship content through our Foundations Training Center on Substack, join us here: acts29.substack.com