التخطي إلى المحتوى الرئيسي

"So Loved (feat. Pearl Harry)" by Le Monde Bear: John 3:16 With a Disco Pulse


“So Loved (feat. Pearl Harry)” by Le Monde Bear is a song about John 3:16. The beginnings go back to when Le Monde Bear heard Pearl Harry sing for chapel at her high school worship time, and the song came alive — the vibe and music quickly followed soon after. They recorded Pearl's vocal during a lunch break, and you can still hear kids screaming in the background of her vocal track. The song further developed during the week of the first strikes on Israel, October 7, 2023.

Le Monde Bear - So Loved (feat. Pearl Harry)Disco, yes. Gospel, absolutely! The lyrics start with humanity “walking in darkness,” blind and off-balance, so relevant for our world today. The song points us to new light breaks and shows us a path through the wilderness, as it retells salvation as rescue, not as a form of self-improvement. God gave His Son, and we may respond with belief. The result is everlasting life.

His grace is not limited to one place or specific people. The bridge insists that there is no border, distance, or ransom is too great. His Love will cross every divide.

Christ breaks chains, and He calls you royalty! Let that sink in for a moment! After this song has been in drafts for a few years, it arrives like loving ink from heaven: Joy belongs here.

Have you ever felt captive to fear or shame? Take a breath, and run to Him! May this bright and danceable reminder move your heart and faith closer to our God.

(Related scripture: John 3:16)

Background:

"So Loved (feat. Pearl Harry)" by Le Monde Bear is a song about John 3:16. The beginnings go back to when Le Monde Bear heard Pearl Harry sing for chapel at her high school worship time, and the song came alive - the vibe and music quickly followed soon after. They recorded Pearl's vocal during a lunch break, and you can still hear kids screaming in the background of her vocal track. The song further developed during the week of the first strikes on Israel, October 7, 2023. 

Disco, yes. Gospel, absolutely! The lyrics start with humanity "walking in darkness," blind and off-balance, so relevant for our world today. The song points us to new light breaks and shows us a path through the wilderness, as it retells salvation as rescue, not as a form of self-improvement. God gave His Son, and we may respond with belief. The result is everlasting life. 

His grace is not limited to one place or specific people. The bridge insists that there is no border, distance, or ransom is too great. His Love will cross every divide. Christ breaks chains, and He calls you royalty! Let that sink in for a moment! After this song has been in drafts for a few years, it arrives like loving ink from heaven: Joy belongs here. 

Have you ever felt captive to fear or shame? Take a breath, and run to Him! May this bright and danceable reminder move your heart and faith closer to our God.

Release date: March 13, 2026

Connect with Le Monde Bear

Would you like to hear more CCM music? Then check out our Christian playlists on: https://www.christiandance.eu/playlists

Popular posts

"Lay Your Weapon Down" by Curtis Ray: The Strength It Takes to Let Go

Pride feels powerful until it costs you everything that matters. Curtis Ray wrote “Lay Your Weapon Down” out of an honest wrestle with something most of us know too well — the pull between proving a point and preserving a relationship. In a world where the loudest voice and the sharpest argument seem to be rewarded, we tend to forget it’s not about surrendering conviction. It’s about asking an important question: “If love is not the motive behind what we say and do, then what are we really fighting for?” That question doesn’t let you off the hook easily. In 1 Corinthians 13:2 (ESV) we read: “And if I have prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing.” The Apostle Paul wasn’t being dramatic here. You can be completely right and still be completely empty. Knowledge, conviction, even faith — none of it carries weight without love underneath it. The song captures the essence of this sc...

"Is Anybody There? (Psalm 27)" by Stephen M. Miller: Holding On to Grace at Heaven’s Door

Stephen M. Miller's "Is Anybody There? (Psalm 27)" comes in the quiet aftermath of the Christmas celebrations, when reflection can feel like isolation. Stephen's song isn't about polishing away his mistakes, nor does it encourage you to do so with your mistakes. Stephen shares his painful experience, "I never saw it coming Lord // It felt right but it was wrong // Family and friends have left me // But I still have you and a song."   Stephen owns the fallout of his actions, taking accountability without despair. "I said it and I did it, Lord // Broke more hearts than I'll ever know // I can't fix this, though I've tried // Don't be angry, and please don't go." His song is a prayer for God's presence and guidance. "Hear me when I call you, Lord // Don't turn your face away // Don't give up on me like others have // Come help me through this day." Stephen describes a fear that we too experience when we ...

"Welcome Home" by Mary Oz: Love Is Already at the Door

What if the door you’ve been afraid to walk through has been open for you all along? “Welcome Home” by Mary Oz recalls one of the most tender stories in the Christian faith — the return of the prodigal son. His return wasn’t a march of shame, nor was it a hero’s parade. It was a quiet, tired walk back to the only place that ever truly knew and loved him. Mary wrote this song with a soft invitation, a conversational opening that builds into something victorious, with harmonies and drums leading the charge. Then settling again into that same warm, assuring, and secure invitation. A progression that mirrors the journey home.  The lyrics remind us that Jesus isn’t asking you to clean up first. “Come in, lost and wild prodigal / ‘Cos Love is waiting by the kitchen door.” There’s no courtroom here. No checklist. Just Love — patient, unhurried, already standing at the door. The broken don’t arrive here as burdens; they arrive as loved ones.  That’s the heartbeat of Luke 15:20: “But ...