“Unending Joy” by Moses Bliss featuring Greatman Takit

‘Unending Joy’ by Moses Bliss featuring Greatman Takit is a sound that feels both spontaneous and deeply intentional. The song was birthed during the last edition of the Hallelujah Challenge, organised by Nathaniel Bassey, while Moses Bliss was ministering on the 18th day of the online praise event. You can hear that it did not start as a studio idea. It grew out of a live moment, shaped by the atmosphere and the shared response of everyone present.

One moment from that session stayed with many people. Pastor Nathaniel Bassey unexpectedly began rapping during the praise. It caught people by surprise and brought a lot of excitement to the room. Moses Bliss later lifted that exact part and wove it into Unending Joy, keeping the freshness and sincerity of that moment intact.

The song speaks clearly about the joy believers have in Christ. It is not a quiet or reserved kind of joy, but one that shows up in expression. Greatman Takit’s contribution adds to this in a very natural way. His energy brings movement and flavor to the song, helping to push the message beyond words into something you feel and respond to.

This is not a song you sit down to listen to passively. It calls for action. From the opening declaration of “joy, joy, joy, joy of the Holy Ghost,” the tone is set for an atmosphere of praise and release. It mirrors the biblical understanding of joy as strength and assurance, captured in Scriptures like Nehemiah 8:10, where we are told that the joy of the Lord is our strength, and Romans 14:17, which speaks of joy in the Holy Spirit as part of God’s kingdom.

The chorus is simple and flexible. It can be sung slowly in a reflective moment or taken at a faster pace when the atmosphere shifts into celebration.

“Unending joy, unspeakable dey my heart oo, dey my life oo.” In plain terms, it is a declaration that this joy lives both in the heart and in everyday life.

That is where the strength of ‘Unending Joy’ lies. It works just as well in personal worship as it does in a full congregational setting. It feels honest, lived, and expressive, a reminder that joy in Christ is not just something we talk about, but something we carry and show

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