Hear Me (Remix): From Mocks of Old to Blocks Today | Christian Rap & CHH Song
About Hear Me (Short Remix)
Hear Me (Short Remix) is a Christian rap and CHH song by Malachi Ben-David - a scripture-rooted warning wrapped in a lofi gospel beat, drawing a straight line from the prophets nobody listened to all the way to the screens stealing your soul right now. In two minutes of tight bars, this Christian hip hop track stacks the great ignored warnings of Scripture - Noah, Jeremiah, Isaiah, Ezekiel - against the modern distractions that choke the seed, and calls for one thing: hear the Word clear and unlock the way. If you're searching Christian rap, gospel rap, or CHH about real conviction and biblical warnings, this is a bars-driven cipher built to cut through the scroll.
Rooted in scripture songs and the warning passages from Genesis to Revelation, Hear Me (Short Remix) moves from ancient echoes to modern shadows to a renewal path - "silence the noise, pray in still repose" - and lands on the oldest open invitation in the Book: "Hear Me now, open wide the door." It's Christian hip hop for anyone distracted, busy, and one bar away from finally listening.
Lyrics for Hear Me (Short Remix)
HEAR ME (SHORT REMIX) Malachi Ben-David
[Verse 1 - Ancient Echoes] Noah warned the flood, ark rising high, World laughed it off, chasing empty sky. Jeremiah's cries fell on deafened ears, Mocked and chained, drowning in their fears. Isaiah spoke bold, truth they couldn't bear, Blind hearts wandering, lost without care. Ezekiel watched, thunder in his call, But crowds ignored, chasing shadows tall.
[Chorus - Divine Call] Distractions whirl, world's grip so tight, Screens steal your soul, dimming the light. God's voice echoes, break from the spin, Thorns choke the seed - let renewal begin. Prioritize Him, seek what endures, From mocks of old to blocks today, Hear the Word clear - unlock the way!
[Verse 2 - Modern Shadows] Screens buzz endless, grace pushed aside, Careers consume, leaving faith to hide. Like Sodom's kin, signs dismissed as jest, Trends over truth, failing the test. Haggai rebuked homes built in vain, Temples neglected, chasing fleeting gain. Martha's rush missed the sacred part, Mary chose wisdom, capturing the heart.
[Bridge - Renewal Path] Don't scoff like crowds at the crucified Son, Victory rose strong, the battle won. Silence the noise, pray in still repose, Rebuild your spirit - let devotion grow. Repent the haste, embrace His rest, Eternal life calls - answer the quest.
[Outro - Lasting Plea] Heed the patterns, from scrolls to streets, Drop the chains, find peace complete. Hear Me now, open wide the door, Spirit set free, forevermore.
Behind the Song
Hear Me (Short Remix) is a warning song, and it makes its case the way a good rap makes any case - by stacking evidence until it's undeniable. The first verse is a rapid roll call of prophets the world refused to hear. "Noah warned the flood, ark rising high, / World laughed it off, chasing empty sky." Then Jeremiah, "mocked and chained." Then Isaiah, "truth they couldn't bear." Then Ezekiel, "thunder in his call, / But crowds ignored." Four warnings, four generations that laughed - and the verse never editorializes, it just lets the pattern speak. That's Christian rap doing what CHH does best: teaching through density.
The chorus is where the ancient becomes uncomfortably present. "Distractions whirl, world's grip so tight, / Screens steal your soul, dimming the light." This is the parable of the sower dropped into 2026 - "Thorns choke the seed" is Matthew 13:22, the cares of the world choking the Word - and the song's sharpest line collapses the whole timeline into one bar: "From mocks of old to blocks today." The people who mocked the prophets and the people scrolling past conviction today are, the song argues, the same people. The call is Matthew 6:33: "Prioritize Him, seek what endures."
The second verse is the modern mirror of the first. Where verse one had prophets, verse two has us: "Screens buzz endless, grace pushed aside, / Careers consume, leaving faith to hide." It reaches back for two more warnings - Sodom's family treating the angels' warning "as jest" (Genesis 19:14) and Haggai's rebuke of people building paneled homes while God's house lay in ruins - and then lands on the quietest indictment in the song: Martha and Mary. "Martha's rush missed the sacred part, / Mary chose wisdom." Not every distraction is sin; sometimes it's just busyness that crowds out the one thing needed.
The bridge is the turn from warning to invitation. "Don't scoff like crowds at the crucified Son, / Victory rose strong, the battle won" - the mockers at the cross of Matthew 27 answered by the resurrection of 1 Corinthians 15. Then the practical protocol: "Silence the noise, pray in still repose." That's 1 Kings 19 - God wasn't in the wind, the earthquake, or the fire, but in the still small voice. The whole song has been about noise; the bridge is where it finally gets quiet enough to hear.
The outro is the plea the title has been building toward. "Hear Me now, open wide the door" is Revelation 3:20 - Christ standing at the door, knocking, waiting to be let in. After two minutes of naming everything that drowns out God's voice, the song ends by handing you the doorknob. Christian rap and CHH are the right home for a message like this because the form rewards conviction and repetition - and Hear Me uses both to preach one thing from Genesis to Revelation: the warning is the same, the door is still open, so hear Me now.
Biblical Background
Hear Me (Short Remix) is built on Hebrews 3:15 - "Today if ye will hear his voice, harden not your hearts" - and it proves that warning through a chain of biblical figures who called out and were ignored. The first verse gathers Noah preaching before the flood (Genesis 6, Matthew 24:38-39), Jeremiah mocked and thrown in the cistern (Jeremiah 25 and 38), Isaiah speaking to people who wouldn't hear (Isaiah 30:9-10, Isaiah 6:9-10), and Ezekiel the watchman whose warnings were treated as entertainment (Ezekiel 3 and 33).
The chorus rests on the parable of the sower, where thorns - the cares of the world - choke the seed (Matthew 13:22), and on the call to seek first the Kingdom (Matthew 6:33) and the mockery of messengers in 2 Chronicles 36:16. The second verse draws on Ephesians 5:15-16, Luke 10:41-42 (Martha and Mary), Lot's warning treated as a jest (Genesis 19:14), the scoffers of 2 Peter 3:3-4, and Haggai's rebuke (Haggai 1). The bridge moves through the mockers at the cross (Matthew 27:39-44), the resurrection victory (1 Corinthians 15:54-57), the still small voice (1 Kings 19:11-13), and the body as God's temple (1 Corinthians 6:19-20). The outro closes on the unchanging Christ (Hebrews 13:8), the call to draw near (James 4:8), and the door He knocks at (Revelation 3:20). Every reference is listed below in the order the song travels through it.
Scripture References
Genesis 6:13-22 - Noah warned and built the ark (Verse 1) Matthew 24:38-39 - they knew not until the flood came (Verse 1) Jeremiah 25:4-7 - the prophets sent, but not heard (Verse 1) Jeremiah 38:6 - Jeremiah cast into the mire (Verse 1) Isaiah 30:9-10 - a rebellious people who will not hear (Verse 1) Isaiah 6:9-10 - hearing they hear not, blind hearts (Verse 1) Ezekiel 3:17-21 - Ezekiel appointed a watchman (Verse 1) Ezekiel 33:30-33 - they hear thy words but do them not (Verse 1) Hebrews 3:15 - today, if ye will hear his voice (Chorus) Matthew 13:22 - the cares of the world choke the Word (Chorus) Matthew 6:33 - seek ye first the Kingdom of God (Chorus) 2 Chronicles 36:16 - they mocked the messengers of God (Chorus) Ephesians 5:15-16 - walk circumspectly, redeeming the time (Verse 2) Luke 10:41-42 - Martha troubled, Mary chose the good part (Verse 2) Genesis 19:12-14 - Lot's warning seemed as a jest (Verse 2) 2 Peter 3:3-4 - scoffers in the last days (Verse 2) Haggai 1:4 - paneled homes while God's house lies waste (Verse 2) Haggai 1:9 - ye looked for much, and it came to little (Verse 2) Matthew 27:39-44 - they mocked the crucified Son (Bridge) 1 Corinthians 15:54-57 - death is swallowed up in victory (Bridge) 1 Kings 19:11-13 - the still small voice (Bridge) 1 Corinthians 6:19-20 - your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost (Bridge) Psalm 23:1-3 - the Lord is my shepherd, He restores my soul (Bridge) John 10:10 - I am come that they might have life abundantly (Bridge) Hebrews 13:8 - Jesus Christ the same yesterday, today, forever (Outro) James 4:8 - draw near to God, and He will draw near to you (Outro) Revelation 3:20 - behold, I stand at the door and knock (Outro)
FAQ
Q: What is the song Hear Me (Short Remix) about? A: Hear Me (Short Remix) is a Christian rap and CHH song about the warnings people ignore - both the ancient prophets nobody listened to and the modern distractions that drown out God's voice today. It draws a straight line "from mocks of old to blocks today," then calls the listener to silence the noise, repent the haste, and open the door to Christ.
Q: Is Hear Me (Short Remix) Christian rap or CHH? A: Both - it's a Christian rap and Christian hip hop (CHH) track with a lofi gospel beat and a bars-driven cipher structure. It stacks scripture-rooted warnings the way conscious rap builds an argument, making it Christian rap for listeners who want real conviction and biblical depth.
Q: What scriptures inspired Hear Me (Short Remix)? A: The anchor is Hebrews 3:15 - "today, if ye will hear his voice, harden not your hearts." It also draws on Noah (Genesis 6, Matthew 24), Jeremiah, Isaiah, and Ezekiel for the ignored prophets, Matthew 13 for the thorns choking the seed, Luke 10 for Martha and Mary, 1 Kings 19 for the still small voice, and Revelation 3:20 for the door. All references are KJV and listed in song order above.
Q: Why does the song compare ancient prophets to modern screens? A: That comparison is the heart of the song. The prophets were ignored because people were "chasing empty sky"; today the Word is choked by screens, careers, and endless scrolling. Hear Me argues it's the same hardened heart across every era - "from mocks of old to blocks today" - and that the invitation to listen is still open.
Q: What genre is Hear Me (Short Remix)? A: Hear Me (Short Remix) is Christian rap and CHH (Christian hip hop) with a lofi gospel sound - a scripture-rooted, bars-driven song about biblical warnings and answering God's call.
Q: Where can I listen to Hear Me (Short Remix)? A: You can listen to this Christian rap song on YouTube, Spotify, Apple Music, and Audiomack. It's also available in the Facebook, Instagram & Threads Music Library and as a TikTok Sound.