“And I have an admiration for the people that I work with, because I know it was hard for them to get therapy, to overcome their sense of embarrassment, as if there’s something wrong with having a mental illness. And yet they come in and they gift me with their presence and they gift me with their stories and they gift me with the chance to try to help them.”
Read MoreStephen Saunders, professor of Psychology at Marquette University, explains how Martin Luther dealt with mental health and how that practice was directly derived from Luther's theology.
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