Worthy of It All Introduction

Introduction

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Intro

F G F/A G/B
                                                                
F G C/E F G C
                                                                   

Verse 1

F G
All the saints and   angels
F/A G
They   bow before your   throne
F G
All the elders   cast their crowns
C/E F G C
Be fore the   Lamb of   God and   sing

Chorus

C G
You are worthy of it   all You are worthy of it   all
F G
For from you are all   things and to you are all   things
C
You deserve the   glory

Intro

F G F/A G/B
                                                                
F G C/E F G C
                                                                   

Verse 1

F G
All the saints and   angels
F/A G
They   bow before your   throne
F G
All the elders   cast their crowns
C/E F G C
Be fore the   Lamb of   God and   sing

Chorus (2X)

C G
You are worthy of it   all You are worthy of it   all
F G
For from you are all   things and to you are all   things
C
You deserve the   glory

Instrumental

C Em Am F
                                                                   
C/G G Dm F
                                                                   

Bridge

C Em
Day and night night and day let   incense rise
Am F
Day and night night and day let   incense rise
C/G G
Day and night night and day let   incense rise
Dm F (F)
Day and night night and day let   incense rise            

Chorus (3X)

C G
You are worthy of it   all You are worthy of it   all
F G
For from you are all   things and to you are all   things
C
You deserve the   glory

Devotional

Worthy of It All

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Worthy is the Lamb who was slain, to receive power and wealth and wisdom and might and honor and glory and blessing! (Revelation 5:12)

 

In a Book of stunning visions of God himself seated on the throne of heaven, none surpasses the one given to the apostle John in Revelation 4 and 5.

 

Jacob saw angels ascending and descending, with God standing above (Genesis 28:12–13). Moses asked to see God’s glory on the mountain, and was given a glimpse of his trailing afterglow, while hiding in the cleft of the rock (Exodus 33:23). Isaiah saw the Lord seated on his throne, with the hem of his garment filling the temple (Isaiah 6:1). So too Ezekiel caught a glimpse of God on his chariot throne as he departed from Jerusalem (Ezekiel 1:26). 

 

In perhaps the most revealing vision prior to the coming of Christ, the prophet Daniel, exiled in Babylon, saw the Ancient of Days on his throne, with an enigmatic figure called the “son of man” coming forward to receive power (Daniel 7:13–14). Then, in Acts, after Christ’s ascension, the first Christian martyr, Stephen, looked into heaven and the saw the glory of God, with Jesus standing at his right hand (Acts 7:55). 

 

Still, the greatest sight of heaven’s throne in all of Scripture was kept for the final book of the canon.

 

Worthy Are You

 

Jesus’s beloved disciple, exiled on the isle of Patmos, received a vision of “a door standing open in heaven” and heard the summons, “Come up here” (Revelation 4:1). There he saw “a throne stood in heaven, with one seated on the throne” (4:2), with twenty-four elders and four living creatures praising “the Lord God Almighty” (4:8). The four creatures declare him to be “Holy, holy, holy,” and the elders fall down in worship and “cast their crowns before the throne” and tell of God’s infinite value:

 

Worthy are you, our Lord and God, 

to receive glory and honor and power, 

for you created all things, 

and by your will they existed and were created. (4:11)

 

Who Is Worthy?

 

John then sees a sealed scroll in the right hand of God. Such a scroll represents God’s will and purposes for all of history, to be executed upon its opening. 

 

A mighty angel, with a loud voice, asks, “Who is worthy to open the scroll and break its seals?” (5:2). John’s commentary is striking: “And no one in heaven or on earth or under the earth was able to open the scroll or to look into it” (5:3). None is worthy for this critical task — not the four creatures, not the elders, not the angels, not any mere human. The apostle senses the drama, and tragedy, of the moment, and says, “I began to weep loudly because no one was found worthy to open the scroll or to look into it” (5:4).

 

One of the elders then turns to John to announce the good news: “Weep no more; behold, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Root of David, has conquered, so that he can open the scroll and its seven seals” (5:5).

 

Worthy Is the Lamb

 

Finally John’s vision unveils its single greatest detail, advancing the “son of man” prophecy in Daniel 7, and echoing Stephen’s shocking peek at heaven’s throne where Jesus stood. John writes, “I saw a Lamb standing, as though it had been slain” — but not in weakness, but with great power: “with seven horns and with seven eyes” (5:6). Like the “son of man,” the Lamb approaches the throne of heaven. He takes the scroll from the hand of God Almighty. 

 

And the four creatures and twenty-four elders of heaven, who had declared the worth of God Almighty, now fall down, singing a new song, to declare the worth of the Lamb:

 

Worthy are you to take the scroll

and to open its seals,

for you were slain, and by your blood you ransomed people for God

from every tribe and language and people and nation,

and you have made them a kingdom and priests to our God,

and they shall reign on the earth. (5:9–10)

 

At this moment, John hears the voices of tens of thousands of angels, too many to count, in what must have been an overwhelming chorus, declaring with one loud voice, “Worthy is the Lamb who was slain, to receive power and wealth and wisdom and might and honor and glory and blessing!” (5:12).

 

He Deserves the Glory

 

First, the worship of heaven declared the worth of God Almighty. Now heaven’s praises focus on this lamblike Lion of Judah, this lionlike Lamb who was slain. 

 

Not only is the regal Lion the long-anticipated ruler, rising from the royal tribe of Judah, with the strength and power of heaven itself, but he is also the gentle, lowly, self-giving Lamb, who gladly lays down his own life that his people might live. This lionlike Lamb is worthy, like no other, to receive the wealth of the nations. He is worthy to receive wisdom, even greater than Solomon’s. He is worthy to receive honor and glory and blessing from the holy worshipers of heaven, all the saints and angels bowing before him.

 

He deserves the glory. He deserves the honor. He deserves the praise. He deserves the very worship that God Almighty is due. He is worthy of it all.