New Hillsong Songs _best_ -
Tracks like “Are We There Yet?” and “Hope of the Ages” trade stadium crescendos for ambient pianos and honest, almost whispered vocals. Lyrically, the certainty has faded. Instead of declarative praise (“You are great, You do wonders”), we get questions: “Are we there yet? / I’m tired of wandering.” This is a welcome shift for anyone who finds traditional worship glosses over doubt.
For decades, Hillsong has defined the sonic landscape of modern worship—for better or worse. Their recent output (2023–2025) marks a clear departure from the arena-rock anthems of “Oceans” and “What a Beautiful Name.” The new songs feel smaller, rawer, and more introspective. Here’s how they land. new hillsong songs
The biggest issue: memorability. Earlier Hillsong wrote choruses that stuck after one listen. On the new EP, several songs blur together—gentle piano, melancholic key change, repeat. There’s no clear “next Sunday setlist closer.” Also, the absence of overt Scripture citations (a previous Hillsong hallmark) may bother theological traditionalists. Tracks like “Are We There Yet
Some songs feel caught between their old instincts and new directions. “The Lord’s Prayer” (new setting) is hauntingly beautiful but almost too minimal for corporate singing. “Never Walk Alone” tries to fuse EDM drops with a folk chorus—it’s interesting but messy. Longtime Hillsong fans might miss the soaring, singable hooks of “Mighty to Save.” / I’m tired of wandering