Pastor Paul Enenche - Lord I Long For Your Lovely Face -acoustic- -
“Lord I Long for Your Lovely Face (Acoustic)” is a masterclass in restraint. Pastor Paul Enenche successfully translates the heart of a prophetic minister into the language of a lovesick psalmist. It is haunting, beautiful, and utterly necessary for the personal devotional playlists of believers who crave substance over spectacle.
Personal devotion, prayer walks, post-service reflection, and anyone recovering from “hype” worship fatigue. “Lord I Long for Your Lovely Face (Acoustic)”
If you are looking for the high-octane praise of “Bow down and Worship,” this track might feel too quiet. But if you are a worshipper who is weary—tired of performance, tired of noise, and genuinely homesick for the presence of God—this song is a balm. It serves as a musical icon that leads you into the Holy of Holies without distraction. It serves as a musical icon that leads
Pastor Enenche is known for his prophetic, declarative preaching style, but here, his voice adopts a different posture. There is a distinct hoarseness and vulnerability in his delivery of the line, “Lord, I long for Your lovely face.” It is not a polished, studio-perfect vocal. It sounds like a man who has been praying for hours. He leans into the ache of the lyric, moving from a soft, almost whispered verse to a restrained, emotional lift in the chorus. Unlike the corporate shout of his congregational albums, this vocal is a solitary cry from the closet. The guitar doesn’t just accompany
The genius of this acoustic version lies in what it omits. The signature high-energy drive of the Dunamis International Gospel Centre is traded for the gentle strumming of a nylon-string guitar and what sounds like a soft pad of strings or a harmonium in the distant background. The tempo is deliberately unhurried. The guitar doesn’t just accompany; it breathes, leaving spaces between chords that feel like pauses for prayer. This sparse landscape forces the listener to stop performing and start longing .
While repetitive worship choruses often rely on a single hook, the lyrics here are scripture-soaked and directional. The focus on the “lovely face” of God (Psalm 27:8) shifts the desire away from His hands (provision) or His pockets (blessings) to His presence (intimacy). The bridge, which often builds into a frenzy in live settings, remains subdued—allowing the weight of phrases like “Nothing compares to knowing You” to land with theological gravity rather than emotional hype.