
With 45 Dove Awards, three Grammys and more than 18 million albums sold, Michael W. Smith has long been recognized as one of the most influential artists in contemporary Christian music.Â
But after four decades in the industry, the 67-year-old husband, father and grandfather is clear-eyed about what, exactly, anchors his personal life and music career.
âMy identity is not being Michael W. Smith the artist,â he told The Christian Post. âThe things that are near and dear and more important to me are, first and foremost, my relationship with Lord. Then my family, my wife, my kids, my grandkids, my friends that I walk through life with.â
âYour craft can't be your identity. If it is, it will consume you, and not in a good way.â
From stadiums in the Netherlands to studios in Tennessee, Smith is still writing, recording and performing with the same sense of calling that first led him into music ministry in the early 1980s â and heâs far from finished.Â
His latest single, âYour Love Is a Flood,â is an upbeat track that feels simultaneously classic and fresh, blending synth textures with worship. Lyrics include the lines âYour love is a flood/ And Iâm dancing in the rain/ Heaven and Earth colliding/ Open the clouds, I feel it rising up.â
âThis song is about the overwhelming grace of God,â Smith said. âAnd how, even in hard times, I wake up every day knowing Iâm loved.â
âI donât need to make another record,â he added. âBut I feel called to make this one.â
Smith began composing the melody for âYour Love Is a Floodâ nearly five years ago; he tracked a rough version in his home studio and posted a video to social media, then shelved it.
âIâve got a handful of those melodies that I just couldnât shake,â he recalled. âThis one kept calling me back.â
When he sent the demo to his longtime friend and collaborator Jason Walker, the response was immediate. Within days, Walker had shaped the beginnings of a lyric that Smith said captured his belief that Godâs grace is real, overwhelming and radically available.
âThere are so many people who canât wrap their minds around the idea that God really loves them,â Smith says. âTheyâre carrying trauma, legalism, guilt. And I just told Jason, âThis is what drives me. I know who I am. Iâm loved. Thatâs why I can wake up every day with joy, no matter whatâs going on.ââ
âItâs a worship song, but with a pop edge,â he added. âI donât really care about labels. Itâs just honest.â
Reflecting on his early years in the Christian music industry, Smith, who shot to fame in 1991 when "Place in This World" hit No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100, shared how much his understanding of Godâs love has grown over the decades.
âIn the â80s, I dealt with a lot of guilt,â he says. âIf I messed up, Iâd beat myself up. I got legalistic. Thatâs immaturity. But as you walk with the Lord longer, you grow. You start to really understand grace. You read Scripture and realize Heâs for you. Heâs not looking to crush you. That changes everything.â

This deeper understanding flows through another new single, âArms Around the Sun,â which explores the mystery and magnitude of divine love. Co-written with worship leader Michael Olson, the track was originally conceived as a shuffle but was eventually restructured into a pop groove.
âThe lyrics just clicked,â Smith says. âAnd it felt fresh. It had this little Euro-pop vibe I loved.â
Adding to the songâs surprise factor was actor Jonathan Roumie, best known for portraying Jesus in âThe Chosen,â who was visiting the studio and ended up playing drums on the track.
âHe hadnât played in a while, but he still had it,â Smith says. âWe recorded him without even telling him. He just brought this energy.â
Roumie also appears in the music video, and Smith hinted that the actor might explore music further in the future. âHeâs got real musical chops,â he says. âI told him, letâs do a jam night in Nashville sometime.â
Smith is preparing for the fall leg of his âBeyond the Far Horizon tour,â a reimagined live show that the artist said blends cinematic storytelling, worship and new material. Audience response, he says, has been encouraging, particularly for the new songs.
âWe debuted âFloodâ during the spring leg of the tour, and people were shocked â in a good way,â he says. âWe played it in the Netherlands with a 400-voice choir and 15,000 people. It was electric.â
Even classics like âBreatheâ and âWaymakerâ are getting fresh arrangements. âI like shaking things up,â Smith says. âI want every show to be unforgettable.â
âI donât like being away from home as much anymore,â he added. âBut I still feel called. When I see peopleâs lives being changed, especially in places like Europe, where thereâs so much hunger for God, thatâs what keeps me going.â
Smith reflected on his early years in the spotlight, how the accolades, the record sales and the fame affected him more than he realized at the time.
âBack in the day, it was about how many records we sold, what awards we won,â he said. âI was young, kind of immature. I got caught up in it. I wish I could go back and talk to that younger version of myself.â
Subconsciously, the âPlace in This Worldâ singer said, he allowed his career to shape his identity. He credited mentors, family and years of spiritual formation with helping him reframe success.Â
âYou start to believe the press, you start to think itâs about you,â he said. âBut itâs not.â
âGod doesnât share His glory with anybody,â he continued, echoing a line a friend once shared with him on a Florida porch. âThat stuck with me. And now, every night before I go on stage, I pray: Let my posture be pure. Let me walk out in humility.â
Deflecting applause, he said, has become a spiritual discipline. âThe spotlight can be dangerous,â he says. âSo I do everything I can to deflect the glory, to keep it on Him.â
Weighing on the current state of CCM, Smith expressed both hope and concern. âThereâs a lot of great stuff happening,â he says. âBut I also see this surge of fame, and I worry about that.â
He cautioned young artists not to build their identity on celebrity, adding: âIf youâre not grounded, it can consume you.â
He points to rising artists like Forest Frank, whose blend of worship and mainstream appeal is attracting massive crowds. âI pray for Forest,â Smith said. âHeâs filling arenas and boldly pointing people to Jesus. Thatâs amazing. But I hope he stays grounded. I hope heâs got good people around him.â
Smith has seen the toll that public ministry can take, especially when leaders live secret lives or fall into sin.
âI think there is a purging going on, and God's looking for people who are passionate and hungry for the things of God. That's what He's looking for.â
The artist, who is also gearing up for his Christmas tour with Amy Grant and CeCe Winans, said he still meets regularly with his 95-year-old pastor, Don Finto, who has been a guiding voice in his life for decades.
âI wouldnât have made it without him,â Smith said. âYou need those people. You need that tribe.â
Looking ahead, he hopes his new music offers both excellence and authenticity. âI want to discover something musically that hasnât been discovered yet,â he says. âBecause I believe the Church should be making the best art.â
At the end of the day, the âAgnus Deiâ singer says he just wants to stay in his âsweet spotâ: serving God through music, operating in his gifts and deflecting the spotlight.
âWhen people applaud, I try to deflect that glory right back to Him,â he says. âBecause I know this was never about me.â
News Source : https://www.christianpost.com/news/michael-w-smith-talks-new-music-jonathan-roumie-collab.html
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