“She didn’t just sing — she brought heaven down to earth.” When Carrie Underwood stepped onto the Ryman stage and delivered a soul-stirring rendition of “How Great Thou Art,”

Sometimes a voice hits you so hard it feels like a spiritual slap in the face in the best way possible.

Carrie Underwood didn’t just sing “How Great Thou Art” at the Ryman Auditorium. She owned it. She breathed fire and grace into a song that’s already soaked in reverence, and made one of the most powerful gospel hymns of all time feel like it was written just for her voice.

Back in 2021, Underwood lit up Nashville’s Mother Church with a virtual concert to support her gospel album My Savior. That show included a ton of spine-tingling performances, but her rendition of “How Great Thou Art” was the kind of moment that gives you goosebumps on your soul. Surrounded by stained glass and Southern ghosts, Carrie stood there in a simple gown, no fireworks or choreography, and let the music do the talking.

And it did.

She floated into that opening verse like a prayer, then belted the chorus with enough force to make you believe in something bigger. It was raw, flawless, and packed with emotion. There’s a reason the internet practically caught fire the first time she sang this song live with Vince Gill back in 2011. That version already felt untouchable, but this one at the Ryman? It was like watching someone channel something divine in real time.

The history behind “How Great Thou Art” gives it even more weight. Written in 1885 and brought into English churches thanks to a missionary named Stuart K. Hine, the hymn has been passed down through generations. Elvis Presley famously recorded it in 1967 and won a Grammy for it. Now it’s part of Carrie’s legacy, too.

She first included the hymn on her Greatest Hits: Decade #1 in 2014, but it was My Savior that gave it a proper home. That album hit No. 1 on the Top Christian Albums chart and snagged a Grammy for Best Roots Gospel Album. She teamed up with gospel powerhouse CeCe Winans on “Great Is Thy Faithfulness” and dug deep into songs like “Because He Lives” and “Amazing Grace,” all without losing the twang that made her a household name. It wasn’t just a gospel album. It was a soul cleanse with a southern accent.

Carrie has always had one foot in the pew and the other on the radio dial. Her breakthrough single “Jesus Take the Wheel” proved she could mix faith with firepower. But My Savior hit different. It wasn’t a crossover move or a radio play. It was her heart on a record. You could hear it in every lyric, every tear-tinged high note.

At the Ryman, that passion filled the room. Watching Carrie close her eyes, clutch the mic, and belt “How Great Thou Art” like it was the last song she’d ever sing, you could feel the air shift. No smoke, no mirrors, just a woman and a song that’s carried generations through heartbreak, joy, and everything in between.

And in a world full of noise, that kind of purity is rare.

Carrie Underwood doesn’t need gimmicks. She just opens her mouth and lets the spirit move, and suddenly everyone’s on their feet, crying, clapping, or both. “How Great Thou Art” has been covered a thousand times, but when Carrie sings it, it feels like the first time all over again.