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All These Blessings is a song built around Deuteronomy 28, where God lays out what it looks like when His people listen to His voice and walk in His ways. It’s not a shallow idea. It’s not “everything always goes perfect.” It’s the picture of a life that’s covered, helped, guided, and strengthened because obedience keeps you close to the Lord. Deuteronomy 28 starts with a clear condition: if we “diligently obey the voice of the Lord” and are careful to do what He says, God promises to “set you high above all nations of the earth” and that “all these blessings shall come upon you and overtake you” (Deuteronomy 28:1–2, NKJV). That phrase “overtake you” is what shaped this song. It’s the idea that God’s goodness doesn’t just show up in one place. It follows you. It catches up to you. It keeps moving toward you as you keep walking with Him. This song touches the same blessings the chapter lists: blessed in the city and blessed in the field, blessed when you come in and blessed when you go out (Deuteronomy 28:3, 6, NKJV). It talks about family, land, work, and provision because Deuteronomy 28 talks that way. It’s very practical. God speaks about children, crops, herds, baskets, storehouses, and the work of your hands (Deuteronomy 28:4–5, 8, NKJV). In other words, He cares about everyday life. He cares about what feeds your home. He cares about what you’re building, what you’re trying to sustain, and what you’re carrying. That’s why the song keeps returning to the line, “in the common, simple days.” Because obedience isn’t just a big moment. It’s kneading and baking. It’s meetings and calls. It’s driving and working. It’s the normal grind where most people either drift from God or learn how to walk with Him for real. This song is meant to put faith right there, in the middle of real life. The chapter also talks about protection and victory. “The Lord will cause your enemies who rise against you to be defeated before your face… they shall come out against you one way and flee before you seven ways” (Deuteronomy 28:7, NKJV). That doesn’t mean you never face opposition. It means you’re not facing it alone. God goes before you. He doesn’t just bless you with provision. He blesses you with help, with defense, with strength, and with wisdom. Deuteronomy 28 also speaks about God’s “good treasure,” the heavens opening to send rain in season, and blessing the work of your hands (Deuteronomy 28:12, NKJV). That’s why the lyrics talk about God opening the sky and sending rain at the right time. In an agricultural world, rain is life. It’s timing. It’s survival. It’s harvest. And spiritually, that picture still lands. We need God’s timing. We need His supply. We need His favor on what we can’t control. And then there’s the identity piece. God says He will “establish you as a holy people to Himself” as we walk in His commandments (Deuteronomy 28:9, NKJV). This isn’t only about what we get. It’s about who we are. Set apart. Marked by God. Living in a way that makes people notice the hand of the Lord, not just our effort. The song’s outro leans into that because it matters. Blessing is not meant to make us independent from God. Blessing is meant to keep us grateful, steady, and close. Just to be clear, Deuteronomy 28 also contains warnings later in the chapter about what happens when God’s voice is rejected and His ways are abandoned. This song stays focused on the opening promise, but the context still matters. Obedience is not a lever we pull to force God’s hand. It’s the path where we stay under His covering and in step with His heart. That’s what this song is celebrating. God is faithful. God keeps His word. And when we listen and obey, His goodness doesn’t just touch us, it follows us. Lyrics written by me. Music created with Suno. If this song encourages you, please like, subscribe, and share it with someone who needs a reminder that God is faithful to what He has spoken. Scripture focus (NKJV): Deuteronomy 28:1–14 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