What does "my song" signify in expressing gratitude and worship to God? The Phrase “My Song” in Scripture • Exodus 15:2 – “The LORD is my strength and my song, and He has become my salvation.” • Psalm 118:14 – “The LORD is my strength and my song, and He has become my salvation.” • Isaiah 12:2 – “Surely God is my salvation; I will trust and not be afraid. For the LORD, the LORD Himself, is my strength and my song, and He has become my salvation.” These three passages form a thread—Moses and Israel after the Red Sea, a psalmist returning from danger, and Isaiah anticipating future deliverance—yet all use the identical confession: “my song.” Why Call the LORD “My Song”? 1. Personal Ownership • Saying “my song” moves praise from the general to the personal. • It testifies that the relationship is not second-hand; the worshiper has experienced the LORD’s saving work firsthand (cf. Psalm 40:1-3). 2. Overflow of Gratitude • A song rises when words alone feel too small (Psalm 96:1-2). • Gratitude cannot stay silent; melody is the natural overflow of a rescued heart. 3. Continual Testimony • A song can be repeated, remembered, and shared. • Calling God “my song” turns every retelling of salvation into worship and evangelism (Psalm 40:3). 4. Source of Joy and Strength • The same LORD who rescued also supplies ongoing strength. • Joy becomes durable, outlasting circumstances, because its source is unchanging (Nehemiah 8:10). Layers of Meaning in Gratitude and Worship • Identity – My song = my story. Telling what God has done shapes who I am (1 Peter 2:9). • Security – If the LORD Himself is my song, no enemy can steal it (Psalm 27:1). • Community – Israel sang together (Exodus 15:1). Personal testimony fuels corporate worship, knitting hearts in shared praise. Practical Ways to Echo “My Song” Today • Keep a record of answered prayer and weave those moments into sung praise. • Let every gathering include personal testimonies that spark fresh songs. • Memorize one of the “my song” verses; sing or speak it when gratitude needs a voice. • Use music in private devotion—voice, instrument, or simple humming—to let thanksgiving linger beyond spoken prayer. When we declare “the LORD is my song,” we are saying He is both the reason we sing and the very song itself—our story, our strength, and our unending melody of gratitude. |