Baruch's God-fearing artist seeks to remind us that no mountain is too tall when God is involved. His new single, "Ant Hills," is for the broken, the stuck, the doubtful, the ones who find themselves at the foot of something that seems impassable. Baruch finds them here and says: what if that mountain isn't a mountain? What if, by faith, it's simply an ant hill?
The pulsing heart of "Ant Hills" is an acute discernment. Not a wisdom earned from stumbling your way through every hard lesson life has in store, but a higher, divine kind. Baruch occupies a rare space witnessing the decline of his "secular counterpart," a reflection of who he might have been had faith not altered his trajectory. That's where the song draws its power: in gratitude, redemption, and this clear-eyed calling to something greater.
There's something so beautifully confrontational about "Ant Hills." It doesn't preach from without; it preaches from itself. It sits close, speaks the truth, and dares the audience shamelessly. Baruch isn't afraid to go big but a sign of deliverance, not a whisper. He holds out the Word, stands firm on Romans 10:17, and wants us to believe that faith, even if it is only mustard-seed sized, is just enough to move what we thought of as unmovable.
There's grit in the production, polish in the spots it's as needed, and a real sense of urgency in the delivery. You can hear the urgency behind Baruch's words and the lift like this song is rising and carrying you. "Ant Hills" is a spiritual recalibration. It's one of those tracks that doesn't just play through your speakers; it barges into your life, taps you on the shoulder, and says, "Are you listening?"
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