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A Sickness in His Soul

Two men. One washed beggars’ feet. The other gold-plates toilets.

(Listen while reading)

Jesus walked into leper colonies. Trump won’t shake hands without sanitizer. Christ broke bread with prostitutes and tax collectors. Trump dines with billionaires at Mar-a-Lago. Bills the Secret Service for protecting him.

The Nazarene owned one robe. Trump owns suits cut to hide what they can’t. Jesus spoke in parables. Trump speaks in circles back to himself.

Christ faced his accusers in silence. Trump fires lawsuits at 3 a.m. The Son of Man turned the other cheek. The son of Fred Trump turns on anyone who doesn’t clap.

One man carried his cross up a hill. The other carries grudges.

Millions call them both Lord. Evangelicals who memorized the Beatitudes shout his name at rallies. They read “Blessed are the meek.” They cheer a man who mocks the disabled on camera.

Jesus cleared the temple of money changers. Trump fills his with them. Names them cabinet secretaries.

Pardons them when they get caught.


A modern psalm of indictment, A Sickness in His Soul draws a stark, unflinching line between the gospel of Christ and the gospel of Trump.

I walked among the poor and low

Two thousand years and more ago

Built no throne, but truth was told

Betrayed with thirty pieces of gold

Now I watch from skies above

They preach My name, forget My love

They use the cross to justify lies

Sickness in his soul, diseased and cold

Carrying weight no mind can hold

He kills what’s kind, just, and right

And keeps the truth out of the light

Wear My name like armor bright

Preach the law but shun the light

Turn the stranger from the gate

Call it faith, but it’s just hate

There’s a sickness in his soul

Steals the pulpit, takes control

Wraps himself in flags and fire

Builds his gospel on dark desires

Twists the truth and wears My name

Then turns the cross into a flame

Crowned a king with crooked grin

Claimed he spoke the truth within

But I don’t roar, or strike, or boast

I walk with those broken, low, and lost

There’s a sickness in his soul

It took root so long ago

He cannot choose what’s just and right

His skin splits at the smallest slight

Still hear children singing low

Down where broken halos glow

Choirs bow to wealth and fame

Sell My words and sign My name

I turned the tables once before

And I will turn them once again

When the temple fattens off the poor

Believe Me — that’s sin

Gene Scott grew up on a tenant farm in Sheffield, Illinois, where strip mines swallowed the prairie and Euclid trucks hauled coal past the kitchen window. His father welded for International Harvester winters and pulled hogs from collapsed mine shafts. His mother drove a hundred miles round-trip to Bradley University three days a week, graduated with honors, and never let them miss a meal. Scott earned degrees from Illinois and Missouri, married Lana Ferguson on her family’s front porch in Hancock County—the oldest residence in the county, where her Confederate ancestor is buried at the edge of the woods—and raised a son in the Appalachian foothills. His writing draws on Midwestern magical realism, generational memory, and the stories told around oak kitchen tables where stoker men and snake women once drank coffee.

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