
‘Amen’ is a special release, and what gives it uncommon weight is the feature of Pastor Enoch Adeboye, a general of faith whose voice carries authority, covering, and generational blessing. His presence on this record is not symbolic or ceremonial. It is weighty, priestly, and deeply intentional. This is one of those moments where collaboration goes beyond sound and enters spiritual significance.
While introducing the song on Instagram, Dunsin Oyekan shared the heart behind the release. He explained that at the start of 2025, God placed it in their spirit to release Judah, a sound that became defining. As they step into 2026, ‘Amen’ becomes the sound for the new season. According to him, the Lord is starting the year on a note of victory. He described Amen as the zenith of God and the peak of prayer, and emphasised that it is a privilege to feature a general of faith on the song. That context matters, because it frames ‘Amen’ not as a random release, but as a spiritual marker.
The song itself does not rush in. It opens with a string from the keyboard, gentle but intentional, setting the tone before any voice is heard. That opening creates space, almost like a breath before a declaration. When Dunsin Oyekan’s voice finally comes in, it lands with clarity and authority. There is no warm up. This is priestly from the onset. “‘Amen’ is the end of all arguments.” That single statement frames the entire sound. In Scripture and in practice, ‘Amen’ signifies agreement, certainty, and finality. Here, it is positioned as heaven’s verdict over every declaration.
Dunsin then says, “Now this is the way a priest should release a blessing,” and it is after this statement that the priestly declarations begin. The Lord bless you and keep you. The Lord make His face shine upon you and be gracious unto you. The Lord lift up His countenance upon you and give you peace, taken from Numbers chapter 6 verses 24 to 26. These words are not sung casually. They are spoken as pronouncement. This is blessing released, not lyrics performed, and ‘Amen’ becomes the seal that follows.
Musically, the repeated chant of Amen builds an atmosphere of agreement. It pulls the listener into participation rather than observation. This is followed by hallelujah to the One who opens His hands and satisfies every living thing, echoing Psalm 145 verse 16, before returning again to ‘Amen’. The structure keeps drawing the listener back into alignment with every word being spoken.
The progression continues into “Now unto Him who is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think,” drawn from Ephesians chapter 3 verse 20. The Scripture is woven seamlessly into the flow, increasing intensity rather than breaking it. The ‘Amen’ response rises to a crescendo, then deliberately drops, creating space.
That space is filled by the calm, steady, fatherly voice of Pastor Enoch Adeboye. “I want you to receive a father’s blessing from the God that I serve.” At that moment, the song fully crosses from worship into prayer. When he continues with the familiar phrase, “In the name that is above every other name,” the weight of decades of faith, prayer, and spiritual leadership becomes tangible. This is not performance.This is impartation.
‘Amen’ is not just a song you listen to. It is Scripture declared, prayer released, and blessing sealed. It is agreement captured in sound, and a powerful way to step into a new year anchored on victory.
Go and listen, and more importantly, receive the prayer.