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Fear has a way of convincing you that movement is the only answer—until God tells you to stop. This song lives in that moment, right at the edge, when standing still feels harder than running. Stand Still at the Water’s Edge is a Delta Gospel Blues worship song inspired by Exodus 14:13–14, set against the grit and faith of a 1930s Mississippi Delta river town. It leans into the tension between fear and trust, between the pressure to act and the command to wait. This isn’t a polished victory anthem—it’s porch-worn faith, tested by long nights and narrow choices. The blues have always been about telling the truth, and this song tells it plainly: sometimes deliverance doesn’t start with movement, noise, or force. Sometimes it starts when you finally stop trying to fight battles that were never yours. The river in this song isn’t just water—it’s every obstacle that feels too wide, every future that feels blocked, every moment when fear says hurry and faith says hold your ground. Built on warm slide guitar, foot-stomp rhythm, and gospel testimony, the song draws from deep Southern roots while carrying an ancient promise straight into the present moment. It’s for anyone who’s exhausted from pushing, striving, and proving. It’s for the ones standing at the edge, unsure what comes next. You don’t fight this one. You stand still. And you see what the Lord will do.