Skip to main content

'I'm With You - Live' by We Are Compass Worship: Discover Your True Identity


'I'm With You - Live' by We Are Compass Worship reminds you that in Jesus, you're never lost, broken, or alone. Those harmful whispers of inadequacy are replaced by the affirmations in this song, that your true identity is in Christ alone.

We Are Compass Worship - I'm With You - LiveEvery verse sings about the truths of being found, whole, and loved in His presence. There's a powerful message waiting for you. It's about looking beyond your failures, and embracing the freedom and security that comes from being His.

You're encouraged to shift your focus to the joyful reality of being forgiven, secure, and absolutely cherished by Jesus. That is what makes this song an anthem for anybody who feels unworthy or alone, and is in need of a gentle reminder they can always find the strength to rise above their doubts in His love. Yes, you 'can' find it, but if you're not looking in the right places… you're not going to find it. So this song is also a call to action… start looking, and look to Jesus. 

Give this live rendition of 'I'm With You' a listen. Enjoy the melody, let the lyrics ignite a desire to find your identity in Jesus, and hear Him whispering to you, 'You are mine.'

(Related scripture: Isaiah 41:10; 2 Corinthians 5:17; Romans 8:38-39)

Connect with We Are Compass Worship


You can listen to the track directly on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/track/26AXFNmIjGrh7MxR2OZ7HG

Here is a link to the video on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TPKIKrNY1EA

Would you like to hear more CCM music? Then check out our Christian playlists on: https://www.christiandance.eu/playlists

Popular posts

"When I Saw The Light" by Tyler Philip Ratcliffe: Folk, Grace, and the Moment Everything Changes

“When I Saw The Light” captures something painfully familiar — the trap that routine can bring. Tyler Philip Ratcliffe wrote this folk anthem as a follow-up to “This Little Light of Mine,” drawing on his bluegrass roots and the spirit of Bill Monroe’s classic to tell a story many will recognize in themselves. The verses don’t sugarcoat it. “Same faces, same mistakes, same places // Promise that I change it all tomorrow”  — the trap we need to be aware of… The routine masquerading as life. But Ratcliffe doesn’t leave the listener there. The chorus lifts everything: “I traded fake for something honest // Finally doing something right.” That’s the turning point! What makes this song land is its honesty about the moment before a breakthrough. When numbness sets in, when you’ve exhausted every other option — that’s when the light (His light) breaks through. Ratcliffe captures the surprise of grace: “I wasn’t looking for religion // Wasn’t searching for the truth.” Nobody ever is. And ye...

"Psalm 10 (Do You See)" by Red Letter Society: Honest Faith, Bold Trust, and the Hope of God's Reign

Injustice is hard to sit with. When evil goes unchecked, and the vulnerable are overlooked, even the most faithful hearts may be wrestling with silence from heaven. Red Letter Society's "Psalm 10 (Do You See)" is about that struggle. This song is part of the band's ongoing psalm project and gives the church honest language for prayer. Instead of wrapping pain in comfortable platitudes, it voices the raw cry found in Psalm 10: "Why, O Lord, do You stand so far? Why hide Yourself so I can't see?" That's not a crisis of someone's faith; it's faith being real, and there is a big difference between the two. Featuring Jordan West, the lyrics move through the frustration and toward a confession. In the chorus, you'll hear the weight shifting: "To You the helpless commits himself, in You the orphan finds their help." This is trust that is forged under pressure. In the bridge of the song, you'll hear the resolution, a resolution th...

"Hard Times" by Matt Rees: Finding Faithful Ground When Life Comes Apart

Hard times have a way of stripping everything back. Matt Rees knows this well — and "Hard Times" was came out of one of those seasons. The Michigan-based singer-songwriter has spent years writing music that builds up the church and glorifies God, and this song carries that same honest, unpolished faith. What makes it remarkable is the posture Rees takes. Rather than crying out from the pain, he's thanking God for it. "I thank You for the hard times // when You test what's in the depths of my heart." That's not wishful thinking… That's hard-won conviction coming from the slow & dark times, and the confusing times when everything comes apart at the seams. Rees names them all, and then he names what happens next: God shows up! The chorus wraps it together…. "This life ain't always easy // but You're always faithful and true." Simple, true, and more important…. it's enough! Because when you've lived through the kind of sea...