Have you truly learned how to love? Priscilla Alcantara and Emicida pose this challenging question by shining a spotlight on everyday contradictions. The lyrics call out people who claim to follow a God of love yet walk past those craving kindness, and they name real victims — Floyd in the USA, João Pedro in Brazil — to expose racism, injustice, and the contagious “virus of selfishness.” Instead of letting faith or good intentions stay stuck in words, the song insists that love must become a verb, something expressed through concrete action that heals pain and fights inequality.
In Emicida’s agile rap, vanity, consumerism, and fear are unmasked as obstacles that keep hearts locked up. He urges listeners to bridge the distance between “brothers under the same sky” and rebuild a world where pure, liberated love reigns. The track mixes soulful vocals with sharp social commentary, inviting you not just to sing along but to rethink how you treat others. By the final chorus, you are left with the ultimate self-check: if love is more than talk, what will you do next?