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Enkai – El Shaddai / God Almighty This song was originally titled Priestly Messiah, but as it took shape, it became clear that it needed space to breathe. What you hear here is the opening movement of that larger meditation—centered on the Names of God and on some of the final words spoken by Christ from the cross. Those words are not incidental. They are priestly. When Jesus says, “It is finished,” He is not speaking of defeat, but of completion. In the language of Scripture, the work given to Him has been fulfilled—fully offered, fully received. When He says, “Father, forgive them,” He stands between heaven and earth as intercessor, praying mercy even in suffering. And when He says, “Into your hands I commit my spirit,” He entrusts Himself completely to the Father, modeling the faith He invites all of us into. In the Gospel of John, Jesus speaks and acts as the One who comes from the Father and returns to the Father, carrying humanity with Him. In Romans and throughout the letters of Paul, this same Jesus is revealed as the risen Messiah who unites Jew and Gentile, heaven and earth, into one body. He is priest, sacrifice, and king—not according to the order of Aaron, but according to the order of Melchizedek, the eternal priesthood that precedes and fulfills the Law. This is the priestly Messiah the song gestures toward—not a figure of division, but of unity. The chorus names God as He has been known across Scripture and history: YHWH, the eternal name; Adonai, Lord; El Elyon, the Most High; and especially El Shaddai—God Almighty, the all-sufficient One. El Shaddai speaks of strength that sustains, power that nurtures, and faithfulness that does not fail. It is a name spoken to Abraham, carried through Israel, and fulfilled in Christ. Singing these names is not about labels or tradition for its own sake. It is about remembering who God has revealed Himself to be, and about joining the long chorus of worship that spans languages, cultures, and centuries. As a pastor and teacher, I wanted this song to invite reflection without requiring explanation. You don’t need to know all the references to feel the weight of the words or the peace they carry. If you listen simply as music, that is enough. If you listen as prayer, that is welcome too. The heart of the song is unity—the desire expressed by Christ that His followers would be one, so that the world might recognize Him. This music is not meant to draw people to my church, but to Christ, and to encourage people to go to church wherever they live, or to make church wherever they are. Enkai – El Shaddai (God Almighty) was completed on November 25, 2025. It stands as an opening meditation—an invitation into worship, remembrance, and shared faith.