Lyrics Thank You God - Tim Minchin
I
have
an
apology
to
make.
I′m
afraid
I've
made
a
big
mistake.
I
turned
my
face
away
from
you,
Lord.
I
was
too
blind
to
see
the
light.
I
was
too
weak
to
feel
Your
might.
I
closed
my
eyes;
I
couldn′t
see
the
truth,
Lord.
But
then
like
Saul
on
the
Damascus
road,
you
sent
a
messenger
to
me,
and
so...
I
have
had
the
truth
revealed
to
me.
Please
forgive
me
all
those
things
I
said.
I'll
no
longer
betray
you,
Lord.
I
will
pray
to
you
instead.
And
I
will
say
"Thank
you,
thank
you,
thank
you
God.
Thank
you,
thank
you,
thank
you
God."
Thank
you
God
for
fixing
the
cataracts
of
Sam's
mum.
I
had
no
idea
but
it′s
suddenly
so
clear
now.
I
feel
such
a
cynic.
How
could
I
have
been
so
dumb?
Thank
you
for
displaying
how
praying
works:
a
particular
prayer
in
a
particular
church.
Thank
you
Sam
for
the
chance
to
acknowledge
this
omnipotent
opthamologist.
Thank
you
God
for
fixing
the
cataracts
of
Sam′s
mum.
I
didn't
realize
that
it
was
so
simple,
but
you′ve
shown
a
great
example
of
just
how
it
can
be
done.
You
only
need
to
pray
in
a
particular
spot
to
a
particular
version
of
a
particular
god,
and
if
you
pull
that
off
without
a
hitch,
he
will
fix
one
eye
of
one
middle-class
white
bitch.
I
know
in
the
past
my
outlook
has
been
limited.
I
couldn't
see
examples
of
where
life
had
been
definitive.
But
I
can
admit
it
when
the
evidence
is
clear,
as
clear
as
Sam′s
mum's
new
cornea.
That′s
extremely
clear!
Extremely
clear!
Thank
you
God
for
fixing
the
cataracts
of
Sam's
mum.
I
have
to
admit
that
in
the
past
I
have
been
skeptical
but
Sam
described
this
miracle
and
I
am
overcome!
How
fitting
that
the
sighting
of
a
sight-based
intervention
should
open
my
eyes
to
this
exciting
new
dimension.
It's
like
someone
put
an
eye
chart
on
the
wall
in
front
of
me
and
the
top
five
letters
say:
I
C
G
O
D.
Thank
you,
Sam,
for
showing
how
my
point
of
view
has
been
so
flawed.
I
assumed
there
was
no
God
at
all
but
now
I
see
that′s
cynical.
It′s
simply
that
his
interests
aren't
particularly
broad.
He′s
largely
undiverted
by
the
starving
masses,
or
the
inequality
between
the
various
classes.
He
gives
out
strictly
limited
passes,
redeemable
for
surgery
or
two-for-one
glasses.
I
feel
so
shocking
for
historically
mocking.
Your
interests
are
clearly
confined
to
the
ocular.
I
bet
given
the
chance,
you'd
eschew
the
divine
and
start
a
little
business
selling
contacts
online.
Fuck
me
Sam,
what
are
the
odds
that
of
history′s
endless
parade
of
gods
that
the
God
you
just
happened
to
be
taught
to
believe
in
is
the
actual
one
and
he
digs
on
healing,
but
not
the
AIDS-ridden
African
nations,
the
victims
of
the
plague
or
the
flood-addled
Asians,
but
healthy,
privately-insured
Australians
with
common
and
curable
corneal
degeneration?
This
story
of
Sam's
has
but
a
single
explanation:
a
surgical
God
who
digs
on
magic
operations.
It
couldn′t
be
mistaken
attribution
of
causation,
born
of
a
coincidental
temporal
correlation,
exacerbated
by
a
general
lack
of
education
vis-a-vis
physics
in
Sam's
parish
congregation.
And
it
couldn't
be
that
all
these
pious
people
are
liars.
It
couldn′t
be
an
artifact
of
confirmation
bias,
a
product
of
groupthink,
a
mass
delusion,
an
Emperor′s
New
Clothes-style
fear
of
exclusion.
No,
it's
more
likely
to
be
an
all-powerful
magician
than
the
misdiagnosis
of
the
initial
condition,
or
one
of
many
cases
of
spontaneous
remission,
or
a
record-keeping
glitch
by
the
local
physician.
No,
the
only
explanation
for
Sam′s
mum's
seeing:
they
prayed
to
an
all-knowing
superbeing,
to
the
omnipresent
master
of
the
universe,
and
he
liked
the
sound
of
their
muttered
verse.
So
for
a
bit
of
a
change
from
his
usual
stunt
of
being
a
sexist,
racist,
murderous
cunt,
he
popped
down
to
Dandenong
and
just
like
that,
used
his
powers
to
heal
the
cataracts
of
Sam′s
mum
– of
Sam's
mum!
Thank
you
God
for
fixing
the
cataracts
of
Sam′s
mum!
I
didn't
realize
that
it
was
such
a
simple
thing.
I
feel
such
a
dingaling,
what
ignorant
scum!
Now
I
understand
how
prayer
can
work:
a
particular
prayer
in
a
particular
church
in
a
particular
style
with
a
particular
stuff
andfor
particular
problems
that
aren't
particularly
tough,
and
for
particular
people,
preferably
white,
for
particular
senses,
preferably
sight
– a
particular
prayer
in
a
particular
spot,
to
a
particular
version
of
a
particular
god.
And
if
you
get
that
right,
He
just
might
take
a
break
from
giving
babies
malaria
and
pop
down
to
your
local
area
to
fix
the
cataracts
of
your
mum!
Hallelujah!
1 Grew On Me
2 Cage-Nerd
3 Cont
4 Thank You God
5 Didn't Have You
6 The Fence
7 Prejudice
8 Lullaby
9 Cheese
10 Pope Song
11 Beauty
12 Dark Side
13 Not Perfect
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