Please, Preach to Me the Gospel

Please Preach to Me the Gospel
by Christopher Witmer

Please, preach to me the Gospel
Please tell me of my sin.
Because when I look inside me,
I feel the brokenness within.

Please, preach to me the Gospel
Please tell of the bloody Cross
Because when I look around me everywhere
I see how quickly I get lost.

It’s not a comfort to know I’m perfect
That lie, I can detect.
It’s a comfort to know that Jesus,
Carried my sin upon his back.

Bloodied, bruised, and broken
He suffered to make me whole.
So great has been my sin within.
So great the happiness I stole.

So please preach to me the Gospel
Speak not lightly of my wrongs.
For when I’ve faced it in the eyes
His love shows up so strong.

Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash

Why I Go to Therapy and More Thoughts On What It Means to Process

I’m sitting in the waiting area of the counseling center where I meet with my therapist at four o’clock every Monday afternoon.

I have my regular Flat White that I get from Starbucks on my way (if I didn’t have time to stop by the legendary Civil Coffee for their delicious black coffee).

To my left, there’s an old guy tapping on an iPad with his forefinger. To my right there’s a handsome fellow with a salt-and-pepper beard filling out the paperwork. Next to him is a boy with that 10-11 year old chubbiness. His Mom is sitting catty corner with a concerned pride in her eyes. You know the kind of look only moms give.

The thing that always strikes me when I sit here is the normal-ness of everyone. No one looks sickly or agitated or depressed.

It makes me wonder why they’re here. Did they experience a death close to them? Are they having a midlife crisis?

Are the kids being bullied at school? Were their parents divorced? Do they struggle with intense self-worth or anxiety like so many kids their age these days?

I want to both cry, imagining what they must have experienced, and tell them I’m so proud of them for being healthy enough to get help.

I think through all the reasons these normal people are getting therapy and then I catch a glimpse of myself in the mirror and think, “Well, you look kind of normal. Why are you getting therapy?”

I’m sometimes kind of sheepish about using the word “therapy.” It sounds so clinical and dramatic. You don’t, typically “go to therapy” unless something crazy happened to you (even though you probably should anyways).

Despite this, I’m trying to be as open and honest about it as I would about anything else I do. It’s making me process life at a level and with a greater bird’s-eye perspective than when I’m slogging through life moment by moment.

Which is why I go.

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