”Each of you has a psalm” (1 Cor 14:26) ignites the flame of divine intervention that reverses the domino effect even before the consequences can be felt. This is the eleemosynary genius that feels the pain where the need is the call, to bring resolution to conflict to restore equilibrium and justice. This is the “song” or “hymn” of the ecclesia that commemorates the finished work of the Lamb of God on the cross, the mother of all atonement that renders all sacrifice redundant in comparison. Here is true agape love, the incarnation of the highest of all expressions of unconditional love for the sinner who looks to the cross of Jesus for salvation.

It is in this "song" that the ecclesia finds its unique voice, a voice that is not of its own, but a voice that echoes the heartbeat of the Divine. This is not a song of despair, but a song of hope; not a song of bondage, but a song of freedom. It is a song that sings of the dead being raised to life, the lost being found, and the old being made new. This is the song of the ecclesia, a song that is sung on the bended knees of humility and the lifted hands of victory.

Therefore, when the ecclesia gathers, it is not merely a congregation of individuals, but a symphony of transformed lives, each member a unique note in the grand melody of God's redemptive plan. As they lift their voices in worship, they do not simply sing about God, but they sing to God and with God. In this act of worship, heaven and earth converge, and the ecclesia becomes a foretaste of the coming Kingdom, where every tear will be wiped away, and mourning will be turned into dancing.