“RETURNING to In The Presence volume 3 was never a strategic decision; it was a response, said Everton Mlalazi, reflecting on his latest worship project, In The Presence 3: Great God.
The Zimbabwean gospel artist described the album as a confession rather than a concept, born out of moments when worship became the only language that he had left.
“Great God flowed from a deep awareness of who God is, especially in a season where I personally needed to be reminded of His greatness,” he said.
For Mlalazi, this third instalment is not about extending a successful series but about returning to the place where his spirit feels most honest before God.
“Each time I tried to move away from this sound, I found myself drawn back to that place of reverence,” he explained. “This is where I am most truthful in my worship.”
The project invites listeners into reverence, reflection and intimate encounters with God. Mlalazi hopes the songs will create space for healing and surrender, whether heard in church or in private devotion.
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“My prayer is that worshippers leave with a renewed awareness of God’s nearness and greatness at the same time,” he said. “He is majestic, but He is also deeply personal. I want people to carry the assurance that God meets us right where we are.” His personal walk with God has shaped the tone of this chapter. Earlier in his journey, he said that worship was driven by passion and longing. Now, it is grounded in obedience and trust.
“Intimacy with God is not always loud,” he reflected.
“Sometimes it is quiet, weighty and humbling. This project carries the sound of maturity shaped by waiting, learning and yielding.”
Balancing artistic excellence with spiritual responsibility remains central to his approach. “Excellence is stewardship,” Mlalazi said.
“God deserves my best musically. But the goal is never to impress. The goal is to point.” He added that the technique must always serve the message.
“When hearts are aligned, and intentions are pure, excellence becomes a doorway into genuine worship, not a distraction.” Mlalazi, a multi-award-winning Christian vocalist and songwriter from Tsholotsho in Matabeleland North, Zimbabwe, first rose to prominence through The Vine Music Ministry, which he founded in 2014.
The group released Musandipfuure in 2018 and The Great Physician in 2022, the latter followed by a sold-out performance at the Sandton Convention Centre.
During the Covid-19 pandemic, he launched his solo career and created more than 100 episodes of Virtual Hymns, offering digital worship to audiences across the region. His debut solo album, In The Presence, produced hits such as Uyingcwele and Ekhaya, while later collaborations included Ladysmith Black Mambazo and Janet Manyowa.
With In The Presence 3: Great God set for release in the first quarter of 2026, Mlalazi said that the mission remains simple: “I just want to lead people back to the altar, back to a place of honest worship.” — IOL.