True Worship

Treat This Moment as Sacred

If you truly want this to matter—treat it like it matters. Set aside every distraction: silence your phone, turn off notifications, and pause any calls or chores that can wait. Let this be your offering of intentionality to the Lord. Unless the house is on fire, nothing else should interrupt. This is holy ground.

Don’t Be Fooled by Familiarity

This worship session may look like others you’ve seen, but something deeper is unfolding. You’re entering into the final 30 minutes of an ongoing, Spirit-led worship gathering. What you’re witnessing isn’t performance—it’s overflow.

Jeremy Riddle Isn’t Performing—He’s Responding

I’ve followed Jeremy Riddle’s worship ministry for over 15 years. He carries the weight of someone who knows how to get out of the way so Christ can be seen. You’ll notice his posture, his restraint, his brokenness—they testify to a heart that’s not chasing applause. I’ve even seen miracles unfold during worship he’s led, yet he never shifts focus away from Christ. Even when glory manifests, Jeremy keeps pointing it back to Jesus.

The Miracles You’ll Miss with Closed Eyes

You may not see outward signs and wonders here, but listen closely: transformation is happening. Look into the faces—watch the tears, the lifted hands, the surrender. These are echoes of the Spirit moving. Hearts are softening. Chains are falling.

He Falls… Because Heaven Is Near

Midway through the session, you’ll see Jeremy drop to his knees, face to the ground. Don’t overlook this—it mirrors the heavenly scene in Revelation 4:

“The twenty-four elders fall down before Him… They cast their crowns before the throne, saying, ‘Worthy are You, our Lord and God…’” (Rev. 4:10–11)

If elders in Heaven fall before the King, why would elders on earth merely observe worship? Too many churches exalt titles over trembling. But here, Jeremy sets the example—we don’t lead worship with our voices alone. We lead with our surrender.

The Spirit Will Meet You Where You Are

More than anything else, expect to be met. Expect peace that doesn’t make sense. Expect laughter that rises like praise, or tears that flow like repentance. Whether it’s joy or brokenness, the Spirit will confirm His presence—not by spectacle, but by nearness.

Let’s Worship Together

Please send me a quick text before you begin. I want to join you—in worship and in prayer.