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"King of the World" is a song by Point of Grace written by Cindy Morgan. [1] On August 23, 2009, the group appeared on Fox News Channel's Huckabee, performing "King of the World", the last single from How You Live: Deluxe Edition accompanied by Mike Huckabee on bass guitar.
How You Live is the twelfth album and seventh studio album from contemporary Christian music group Point of Grace.It was released on August 28, 2007 and has achieved critical and commercial success, peaking at #56 on the Billboard 200 and at #4 on the Billboard Christian & Gospel Album Charts.
Point of Grace is an all-female contemporary Christian music vocal group. The current trio consists of Shelley Breen, Denise Jones, and Leigh Cappillino. The group started out as a quartet in 1991, with original members Breen and Jones, as well as Terry Jones and Heather Payne.
No Changin' Us is the fourteenth album and eighth studio album by Christian group Point of Grace. It was released on March 2, 2010. It was released on March 2, 2010. Background
"How You Live (Turn Up The Music)" is a song written by Cindy Morgan for Point of Grace's seventh studio album How You Live. It is the third single from the album and the group's first release in the country music market. It was produced by Brown Bannister. The song was later included on the compilation album WOW Hits 2009.
"King of the World" 39 — 2010 "Come to Jesus" 5 — No Changin' Us "There Is Nothing Greater Than Grace" 5 — "Love and Laundry" — — 2011 "Hole in the World" — — Turn Up the Music: The Hits of Point of Grace: 2012 "A Thousand Little Things" 24 — A Thousand Little Things "—" denotes releases that did not chart
The Whole Truth is the second album by Contemporary Christian group Point of Grace. It was released in 1995 by Word Records with selected market distribution by Epic Records . Background and release
[2] Kevin Davis, giving the album four stars at New Release Today, wrote, "really engaged by the emotional vocals and the prayerful lyrics found in these sacred songs." [5] Felicia Abraham, reviewing the album for Charisma, noted that Point of Grace made the album "without conforming to the restraints of any given genre." [6]