“Through writing this book, it became so clear to me that God is with us in every moment, and that when we turn our hearts toward Him, even the ordinary parts of life can become acts of worship. My hope is that this message helps people see their lives as a song of praise, an anthem of worship, an everyday hallelujah.” – Phil Wickham
That message sits at the center of Everyday Hallelujah: Unlocking Deep Joy Through Everyday Acts of Worship, the new book from the Grammy-nominated worship leader, arriving August 11, 2026 through Nelson Books.
Fans attending Wickham’s 40-city Song of the Saints arena tour have already been introduced to the project’s companion song, also titled “Everyday Hallelujah,” in an acoustic moment throughout the night.
In Everyday Hallelujah, he moves beyond the platform of worship leading and into a more personal exploration of what worship actually looks like in everyday life. Rather than limiting worship to Sunday mornings or songs sung inside church walls, the book reframes it as something woven into the ordinary rhythms of family, work, gratitude, struggle, and surrender.
Drawing from Scripture, stories from two decades of ministry, and his own personal experiences, Wickham traces the idea of worship from Genesis to Revelation while encouraging readers to discover God’s presence in moments that might otherwise feel routine. The central theme is simple but deeply resonant: worship is less about location or performance and more about the posture of the heart.
The project also represents an increasingly common crossover for artists in the worship space, where music, teaching, and devotional writing are beginning to blur together into a larger creative and spiritual conversation. In Wickham’s case, the book directly inspired the song, creating what feels less like a promotional tie-in and more like two expressions of the same message.


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