果冻视频

Therapy and the Gospel: Declaring the Good-Enough News

a man seated alone on a couch

Last month, I sat in a room full of people and watched our group leader write on a white board the word each of us had identified as core to who we are. Words like

stupid,
uninteresting,
ugly,
rejected,
unlovable,
nobody,
alone,
worthless.

The list went on and on, but the truth is it could have been reduced to three words: Not good enough. Here鈥檚 the striking thing, though: it wasn鈥檛 a room full of therapy patients. It was a room full of therapists.

Out of the Shame and into the Beauty

We all hear the not-good-enough whisper murmuring at the edge of our hearts. Therapists are not simply experts sitting on a perfect perch casting down healing insights. Therapists are wounded healers who have heard the whisper and know what to call it.

That never-good-enough place inside of us is called shame.

Shame is the belief that our brokenness is the whole truth about who we are and that we are unworthy of love and belonging and connectedness. It鈥檚 a lie鈥攂ut we hear it so often, and in so many ways, it begins to ring true.

When we enter therapy, we begin a journey out of the shame-full lie and into the truth of our basic goodness and beauty, with a therapist-guide who knows the terrain鈥攕omeone who has entered into the depths of humanity and has returned to the surface to proclaim, 鈥淭here is something beautiful down there!鈥

The Music Inside

The morning after the white board and its never-good-enough words, I came down the stairs to find my wife and three children at the breakfast table, gathered around an iPad listening to a song. The song was 鈥淲hat Makes Us Beautiful鈥 by the boy band One Direction.

But this version wasn鈥檛 by One Direction. It was a gorgeous arrangement of piano and percussion. Wondering why my kids were so entranced by a piano, I peered over their shoulders and saw the answer.

 had ripped the cover off of a piano, and five of them were playing the song using the innards of the instrument鈥攖he strings and the wood and the metal. With the guts of the instrument, they had transformed a forgettable song into a rare beauty.

I think discovering our true selves鈥攐ur lovely souls buried beneath all the layers of shame鈥攊s like ripping the cover off the instruments we are, and discovering that what is inside of us can produce a rare kind of beauty. It鈥檚 like tearing away our false selves鈥攁ll the layers of protection and pretending鈥攁nd finding out the cover was unnecessary, because the music of our lives is made by what鈥檚 really at the core of us.

And in the midst of it, we discover there is something bigger than us playing music in us and through us, and the notes it鈥檚 producing are sublime.

Marinating in the Truth

I think a therapy room is often the place where the gospel of Jesus is declared in its purest form. Because it鈥檚 the place where the darkness of our shame finally yields, as the truth is allowed to shine: We are valuable. We are worthy of respect. We are beautifully made.

That鈥檚 the gospel of Jesus. The Good News is really the Good-Enough News; the gospel is grace-in-skin proclaiming we are, quite simply, good enough. All the work has been done. We have been created as instruments with guts of beauty鈥攏ow all we have to do is play our way into the symphony.

In his book, Tattoos on the Heart, Jesuit priest Gregory Boyle tells the story of a gangbanger named Willy who, when forced to sit in a car in stillness, discovers the breathtaking grace of the Good-Enough News:

I look at Willy and say, 鈥淵ou prayed, didn鈥檛 you?鈥

He doesn鈥檛 look at me. He鈥檚 still and quiet. 鈥淵eah, I did.鈥

I start the car.

鈥淲ell, what did God say to you?鈥 I ask him.

鈥淲ell, first He said, 鈥Shut up and listen.鈥欌

鈥淪o what d鈥檡a do?鈥

鈥淐ome on, G,鈥 he says, 鈥淲hat am I sposed ta do? I shut up and listened.鈥

I begin to drive him home to the barrio. I鈥檝e never seen Willy like this. He鈥檚 quiet and humble鈥攏o need to convince me of anything or talk me out of something else.

鈥淪o, son, tell me something,鈥 I ask. 鈥淗ow do you see God?鈥

鈥淕od?鈥 he says, 鈥淭hat鈥檚 my dog right there.鈥

鈥淎nd God?鈥 I ask, 鈥淗ow does God see you?鈥

Willy doesn鈥檛 answer at first. So I turn and watch as he rests his head on the recliner, staring at the ceiling of my car. A tear falls down his cheek. Heart full, eyes overflowing. 鈥淕od . . . thinks . . . I鈥檓 . . . firme.

To the homies, firme means, 鈥渃ould not be one bit better.鈥

Not only does God think we鈥檙e firme, it is God鈥檚 joy to have us marinate in that.

A therapy room is the place we bring all of our pretending and sadness and fear and frustration. And, ultimately, it鈥檚 the place we bring our not-good-enough selves. It鈥檚 the place we learn to be still again, so we can hear the voice calling us 鈥淏eloved.鈥 So we can touch our guts and the beauty there and know we are blessedly good enough.

So we can marinate in it.


鈥攁bout 61.5 million Americans鈥攚restle with mental illness each year, and 13.6 million live with a serious, ongoing illness such as bipolar disorder or major depression. October 6 to 12 is , so we鈥檙e posting stories and tools over the next few days to foster conversation and break down misconceptions about mental illness. As you read, may you be encouraged in your own life and better equipped to help others in the journey. 


Kelly is a licensed clinical psychologist, practicing at Alliance Clinical Associates in Wheaton, Illinois. He is also a writer and regularly about the redemption of our personal, relational, and communal lives. Kelly is married, has three children, and enjoys learning from his kids how to be a child again. You can find him on , , and .


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