Amen
“Amen” is an inspirational worship song by Gospel Protocol, centered on repentance and receiving mercy.
About this song
“Amen” is a word of agreement, and Thomas Perry Jr. lets it breathe across a full six minutes and eleven seconds—time enough for a congregation to move from the ache of confession toward the settled hope of being heard. Released July 1, 2026 as part of the Mercy’s Seat collection, this inspirational setting holds two themes in one hand: the low posture of repentance and the high note of adoration owed to a King. The emotional arc is exactly that tension—contrition that does not stay downcast, but is drawn upward.
The name of the parent album, Mercy’s Seat, is telling. This is music that lingers at the place where guilt is met by grace rather than judgment, and “Amen” functions less as a closing formality than as the soul’s own consent to that mercy. The unhurried length invites reflection instead of resolution on demand.
Thematically the piece pairs with the promise of 1 John 1:9 and the broken honesty of Psalm 51, then lifts toward the enthroned worship of Revelation 4–5 and the summons of Psalm 95—an editorial pairing offered by the label, not a stated basis for the writing. Together they trace the same movement the song seems to make: honest about sin, yet ending in the presence of the One who receives the penitent.
Bringing it into worship
Well suited to a call to worship or as the confession moment in a gathering, “Amen” also works as a response after the word or a longer exaltation set. Its patient six-minute length favors reflective, listening use—space for kneeling, silence, or the Lord’s Table—before opening into congregational agreement. Pair it tonally with quieter psalms of penitence that resolve into praise, letting contrition give way to adoration.
Scripture & use
- Scripture anchors (editorial · unconfirmed): 1 John 1:9, Psalm 51, Psalm 95, Revelation 14:1-5, Revelation 4-5
- Emotional tone: contrition, hope
- Service placement (editorial): Call to worship; exaltation; Confession; response
- Genre / length: Inspirational · 6:11
Questions
What is “Amen” about?
It is a worship song addressed to God on the theme of mercy / repentance, adoration / kingship. Emotional tone: contrition, hope.
What scripture is “Amen” paired with?
Editorial, theme-based pairing (not yet exegetically confirmed): 1 John 1:9, Psalm 51, Psalm 95, Revelation 14:1-5, Revelation 4-5. The catalog’s scripture field is pending ministry review.
Where does “Amen” fit in a worship service?
Editorial suggestion: Call to worship; exaltation; Confession; response.
Who made “Amen”?
Written by Thomas Perry Jr. under the Gospel Protocol ministry (144k Records). Released July 1, 2026.