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"I want to do what is good, but I cannot." “Wretched Man” by Torchier is a raw, atmospheric confession. Taking the profound spiritual crisis articulated by the Apostle Paul in Romans 7 and translating it into a heavy, contemporary soundscape, this track captures the bone-deep exasperation of the divided self. It is the sound of a spiritual whiplash—the claustrophobic, cyclical struggle of knowing what is right, desiring what is right, yet finding yourself pulled back into the dark. If you’ve ever felt like you were fighting a losing battle against your own flesh, this song is that desperate, midnight cry of: “What a wretched man I am! Who will rescue me?” (Romans 7:24). Sit with the tension. Wait for the light. 🔔 If this song resonates with your journey, please subscribe, like, and share your thoughts in the comments below. #Torchier #WretchedMan #Romans7 #ChristianAlternative #CinematicMusic #ChristianMusic #SpiritualJourney #FaithAndStruggle #ApostlePaul #Theology #DarkAlternative #christianindie The Black Velvet: An Artist’s Note on "Wretched Man" There is a tendency in art—and especially in songs about faith—to rush to the resolution. We want to wrap the struggle up in a pretty bow of triumphalism, dispelling the uncomfortable tension before it’s ever truly felt. Wretched Man is not that kind of song. This song is not light, not easy, and not pretty. It’s wrestling snakes in gloom. It is the sound of a desperate, cyclical struggle against your own nature, a contemporary retelling of the exact predicament the Apostle Paul found himself in when he wrote Romans 7. Listen closely, and you’ll notice that the song intentionally does not give equal time to the "answer." For the duration of this track, we are forced to sit in the tension. We feel the splinter without pulling it right away. Why? Because in every great story, the hero is largely measured by the power of his enemy. It is impossible to viscerally appreciate the power of Christ as victor unless we first appreciate the depths of the gloom He is rescuing us from. Scripture says we were dead in our sin, entirely incapable of saving ourselves. If we diminish the severity of that death, we cheapen the miracle of the rescue. If you go to a jewelry store and look at a diamond, how is it displayed? The jeweler doesn't place it on a white table. They place it against black velvet—the strongest, darkest contrast they can reasonably muster, because the darkness is what proves the brilliance of the light. Wretched Man is the black velvet. It is the dark, heavy, suffocating backdrop of our own brokenness, waiting for the light of grace to finally break through.