Jerusalem

Photo by Robert Bye

by Vince Wright | November 6, 2022 | 11:59 am

CityAlight, in the same structure as Hillsong, Elevation Worship, and Bethel, is a band run by a church organization. They hail from St Paul’s Castle Hill in Castle Hill, Australia.  They aim to reach a larger audience with theologically accurate lyrics based on Scripture, realized in my glowing CityAlight reviews!

CityAlight released three albums and one EP, including:

  • Yours Alone (2014)
  • Only a Holy God (2016)
  • Yet Not I (EP; 2018)
  • There is One Gospel (Live) (2022)

Check out my other CityAlight reviews.

Lyrics can be found at https://genius.com/Cityalight-jerusalem-lyrics.

Note to new users: This is a different kind of review site!  Read About the Berean Test and Evaluation Criteria prior to reading this review.  I strongly encourage you to consider the potential blessings and dangers of this artists theology by visiting Resources.

1. What message does the song communicate?

CityAlight calls us to behold the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus, filling in details that are contained throughout all the Gospels.  These events include:

  • Jesus’ royal entry into Jerusalem
  • The crowd’s demand to crucify Jesus
  • Christ as the recipient of torment, humiliation, mockery, and death
  • Christ’s walk to Golgotha
  • Earthquake and split veil
  • Resurrection

It also proclaims the acts and attributes of Jesus, including:

  • Ruler of current and new Jerusalem
  • Creator
  • Saving us from the Father’s judgment

Score: 10/10

2. How much of the lyrics line up with Scripture?

All of it does.

[Verse 1]

Lines 1 and 2: References Jesus’ triumphant arrival in Jerusalem (Matthew 21:1-11, Mark 11:1-11, Luke 19:28-44, and John 12:12-19).

Lines 3 and 4: A different crowd, though perhaps includes some of the same people in the crowd referenced in lines 1 and 2, call for Jesus’ crucifixion (Matthew 27:16-26, Mark 15:7-15, Luke 23:18-46, and John 19:4-30).

Lines 5 and 6: Christ’s frailty was finalized by succumbing to beatings, suffering, and death (Matthew 27:27-50, Mark 15:16-32, Luke 23:26-43, and John 19:16-27).  He also felt abandoned (Matthew 27:46).

Lines 7 and 8: References Jesus’ walk while carrying the cross beam to His eventual death (Matthew 27:31, Mark 15:20, Luke 23:26, and John 19:17).

[Verse 2]

Line 1: See Scripture on Verse 1, lines 5 and 6.

Lines 2-4: This is contextually possible.  If we follow the timeline from Verse 1 up to this point, and later in this Verse (see Matthew 27:32-34, Mark 15:21-23, Luke 23:33-34, and John 19:16-18), this point would have been after Jesus climbed to the crucifixion site, but not yet crucified.  Although Scripture doesn’t record any mockery or quiet praying at this specific moment, both would be consistent with the crowd (Matthew 27:16-26, Mark 15:7-15, Luke 23:18-46, and John 19:4-30) and the character of Jesus (Matthew 26:36-46 and Mark 14:32-42), respectively.

Lines 5 and 6: Christ is both King (Isaiah 9:6, Isaiah 11:10, Micah 5:2, Matthew 2:1-6, Luke 1:32-33, John 12:15, John 18:37, 1 Timothy 6:13-16, Revelation 17:14, and Revelation 19:11-16) and Creator (John 1:1-3 and Colossians 1:15-16).

Lines 7 and 8: Jesus allowed Himself to be crucified as His obedience to the Father’s will (Matthew 26:39, Mark 14:36, Luke 22:42, and John 6:38).

[Verse 3]

Lines 1 and 2: See Scripture on Verse 1, lines 5 and 6.

Lines 3 and 4: This reminds us that we originally came from dust (Genesis 2:7, Genesis 3:19, Job 34:15, Psalm 104:29, and Ecclesiastes 3:20).

Lines 5 and 6: Both events followed Jesus’ death (Matthew 27:51-54, Mark 15:38, and Luke 23:45).

Lines 7 and 8: Jesus’ payment for sins saves His followers from the Father’s wrath (Romans 5:9 and 1 Thessalonians 1:10).

[Verse 4]

Line 1: References the empty tomb (Matthew 28:1-10, Mark 16:1-8, Luke 24:1-12, and John 20:1-10).

Line 2: Jesus defeated death (Isaiah 25:8, Hosea 13:14, Luke 20:35-36, 1 Corinthians 15:24-26, 1 Corinthians 15:55-57, 2 Timothy 1:10, and Hebrews 2:14).

Line 3: He came into the world to serve (Matthew 20:28).

Line 4: See Verse 2, line 5.

Lines 5-8: CityAlight calls their audience to worship Christ as the ruler of New Jerusalem (Revelation 21:1-5).

Lines 9-13: Repeats line 5-8.

Score: 10/10

3. How would an outsider interpret the song?

Unbelievers will likely know that it’s Christian given that it directly references events pertaining to Jesus’ crucifixion and explicitly names Him.  These events are familiar to most unbelievers, except possibly New Jerusalem.

Score: 9/10

4. What does this song glorify?

It glorifies Jesus as the ruling King whose death and resurrection made it possible for us to escape the wrath of God.

Score: 10/10

Closing Comments

CityAlight’s Jerusalem is great.  It recalls many of the events that led up to Jesus’ crucifixion and subsequent resurrection, including His triumphant entry into Jerusalem, the Jewish crowd’s call for His death, beatings, mocking, and after His death, the earthquake and torn veil.  CityAlight calls us to praise Him for His salvation, bringing Him glory.  Unbelievers will likely interpret similarly, though perhaps without comprehending “New Jerusalem”.

I recommend it for corporate worship.

Final Score: 9.5/10

Artist Info

Track: Jerusalem (listen to the song)

Artist: CityAlight

Album: Yours Alone

Genre: Hymn

Release Year: 2014

Duration: 4:49

Agree?  Disagree?  Don’t be shy or have a cow!  Calmly and politely state your case in a comment, below.

Updates:

11/09/2022 – After a brief exchange with Harold Geern, I updated the review to shift the timeline concerning Verse 2, lines 2-4, and removed my critique concerning Jesus’ silence.  This bumped this song’s score, from 9/10 to 9.5/10 and changed my corporate worship rating to “Yes”.

Comments

Kyle Gentner

Really enjoyed reading this. Thank you, Vince.

Nov 08.2022 | 02:25 pm

Harold Geern

I was thinking the same thing as Paul. I think it is referring to the time before being crucified. If you look at the next verse in the song, it says “Let the soldiers hold and nail him down” implying that at the time of the line, he wasn’t yet on the cross. The Gospels don’t mention Jesus speaking until he is on the cross, so I don’t think Matthew 27:46-47 applies to this line of the song. I think the song is referring to Matthew 27:38-44.

Nov 07.2022 | 10:40 pm

    Vince Wright

    Harold,

    Thank you for your comments!

    I think I understand your point, but it’s not the same one that Paul was making. You are claiming that Jesus was silently praying to the Father after Simon the Cerene was forced to carry the cross for Jesus, but before Jesus was crucified. After re-reading the lyrics, this interpretation makes more sense! Thank you for that. I’ll make sure to update my review to reflect this point. However, this begs another question: Where in Scripture does it say or imply that Jesus was silently praying to the Father during this time?

    You referenced Matthew 27:38-44 in your commentary; However, three Verses before, in Matthew 27:35, Jesus had already been crucified. This passage doesn’t fit the timeframe that you are presenting. In Verse 32, Simon the Cyrene carries the cross for Jesus. In Verse 33 and 34, they came to Calvary (or Golgotha), where Jesus was offered wine mixed with bile to drink. Jesus tasted it and refused to drink more of it. Then, in Verse 35, He is crucified.

    I also checked Mark 15:21-23, Luke 23:33-34, and John 19:16-18. Of these, Luke’s version is the closest to offering an answer. It says in Verse 34, “But Jesus was saying, “Father, forgive them; for they do not know what they are doing.” In Verse 33, Jesus was being crucified. Based on the order of events, it seems that Jesus said this during or after His crucifixion, not before. Though, I also wanted to mention that Verse 34 isn’t found in the earliest manuscript copies. There could be a case here for support, but it’s weak at best. I also don’t recall reading anything about this in the epistles or book of Revelation.

    Maybe He was praying silently to the Father and it’s not recorded in Scripture. That’s certainly possible. It could also be a case of poetic license, though I rarely let go without a penalty.

    I’d like to get this hammered out before committing to a review update.

    -Vince Wright

    Nov 08.2022 | 12:43 am

      Harold Geern

      After going back and rereading, I see your point. Perhaps CityAlight’s timeline is slightly askew, as none of the gospels really give time between Golgotha and being crucified like the song. I wouldn’t say the verse is biblically wrong, as I’m sure Jesus spent the whole time praying, and probably silently. Can a song be wrong to say that Jesus prayed? My thought is include that the Bible doesn’t technically say it, but it’s likely true.

      Nov 08.2022 | 09:09 pm

        Vince Wright

        Harold,

        Thank you for your comments!

        That’s true. Jesus praying silently to the Father is consistent with His nature and character, even if it’s not recorded in Scripture. Now that I’ve agreed to the timeline shift, you’ve given me good reason to increase the song’s score. Thank you for that!

        I updated my review. I probably won’t update the Song Review Index until later today or sometime tomorrow. I combined Verse 2, lines 2-4 together because everything you’ve said about Jesus’ silence also applies to the mockery.

        -Vince Wright

        Nov 09.2022 | 11:38 am

          J

          Psalm 109:4 describes Jesus as, literally, “I am prayer”, though it’s not necessarily about this point in time during Good Friday. Does this help?

          Aug 20.2023 | 08:39 pm

Paul

Hey Vince,

Thank you for such detailed reviews.

In the Verse 2, I believe the line “Silent as a Lamb” is reference to Isaiah 53:7 and is contrast to the scorn and Laughter, leaving the last line independent, making the meaning – “See Him on the hill, hear the mocking and laughter, yet as a lamb He did not open his mouth(He was silent) but was praying to the Father [1]”

[1] My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? – Mark 15:34 ,
Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit – Luke 23:46

Nov 07.2022 | 01:45 am

    Vince Wright

    Paul,

    Thank you for your comments!

    I see what you are saying. Even if it’s recorded in Scripture and that we see the words Jesus prayed to the Father, He still could have done so quietly. In response, there are two passages of Scripture I would like to bring to the table.

    Take a look at Matthew 27:46-47 (NASB). When Jesus prayed, “my God, my God, why have You forsaken me?” in Verse 46, the crowd responded to that in Verse 47 (emphasis mine): “And some of those who were standing there, when they heard it, said, ‘This man is calling for Elijah.'” If Jesus was quietly praying to the Father, how is it that they could both hear His prayer and respond to Jesus?

    Also, see Matthew 27:50 (NASB). It says (emphasis mine), “And Jesus cried out again with a loud voice, and gave up His spirit.” Cried out again? This tells me that He had done it once before. In a loud voice? This tells me that He wasn’t silent.

    -Vince Wright

    Nov 07.2022 | 07:51 am

      Paul

      I believe the silent part is with reference to the mocking and laughter(that He did not respond back) and the praying part stands independently.

      Nov 07.2022 | 07:58 am

        Vince Wright

        Paul,

        I think I’m understanding your point now. He wasn’t silent in the sense that He did not respond directly to His detractors. While I don’t agree with this interpretation, I can at least see it.

        -Vince Wright

        Nov 07.2022 | 08:05 am

Diane

I’m not sure I agree with the lyric calling Jesus frail. Scripture doesn’t say He was. A frail man couldn’t have endured what He went through and lasted as long as He did. Frail only in the sense that all mankind is frail in that we face death, perhaps.

Nov 06.2022 | 11:34 pm

    Vince Wright

    Diane,

    Thank you for your comments!

    I was thinking “physically weak” when I used the word frail. I consulted good old Merriam-Webster to check. Turns out, this is definition 3! I don’t think either of us would think that by saying that Jesus is “frail”, that He is easily lead into evil, that He is easily broken, or slighted. Yes, there’s a sense in which Christ is strong. He endured the sins of the whole world amid crucifixion. But, He was also physically weak. You might recall that He fell three times on his walk to Calvary.

    -Vince Wright

    Nov 07.2022 | 07:33 am

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