How Great Is Our God Sheet Music [hot] Access

Since its release on Chris Tomlin’s 2004 album Arriving , “How Great Is Our God” has become a staple of modern congregational singing. While the song’s theological lyrics are well-studied, the sheet music itself serves as a critical artifact. This paper examines the published sheet music for “How Great Is Our God”—its musical structure, notational challenges, available arrangements (lead sheets, piano/vocal, choral), and its role in disseminating the song across global worship contexts.

| Format | Publisher | Purpose | |--------|-----------|---------| | Lead Sheet | Hal Leonard | Melody, lyrics, chord symbols; for small bands | | Piano/Vocal/Guitar | Word Music | Full grand staff with right-hand melody; for pianists | | SATB Choir | PraiseCharts | Four-part harmony with optional orchestration | | Instrumental (C, Bb, Eb) | Christian Copyright Licensing International (CCLI) | Transposed parts for wind/brass players | how great is our god sheet music

Unlike classical or folk music, “How Great Is Our God” is under active copyright (Tomlin, Jesse Reeves, Ed Cash). The sheet music sold commercially (e.g., on Musicnotes or Sheet Music Plus) requires royalties to CCLI. Many churches legally reproduce only the lyrics via CCLI license, but full sheet music purchases are necessary for orchestrations or transposed parts. This has created a dual economy: simple chord charts are free or low-cost, while professional choral octavos cost $2–$5 per copy. Since its release on Chris Tomlin’s 2004 album