Understanding Anger According to Ephesians 4:25-32
Exploring the concept of anger through biblical references and explanations from Ephesians 4:25-32. The discussion covers different aspects of anger, including righteous anger in response to injustice and sinful anger driven by self-concern. It emphasizes the importance of controlling and understanding anger to lead a more virtuous life, following the teachings of Jesus as a model for handling anger in a righteous manner.
Download Presentation
Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.
The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. Download presentation by click this link. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.
E N D
Presentation Transcript
6. Anger Ephesians 4:25-32 p. 1081
Rage Road Rage Air Rage Desk Rage Publicly expressing hostility, rudeness
1. Anger: Two Faces Anger itself is not sin (Eph 4:26) Jesus was angry (John 2:14 ff) Anger: a response to sin (Rom 1:18, Isa 13:9) Not to rage against sin is to lack godly passion Anger s two faces: In response to sin & injustice righteous Wrong target or out of control - sin
2. Righteous Anger: Response to Injustice Righteous anger: response to objective injustice Indifference to injustice is a problem E.g. Forced removals in South Africa Indifference is a lack of love Reasoned and controlled anger is almost required Aquinas: anger motivator for the good fight
3. Sinful Anger: Concern for Self Most common anger is personal 3 ways anger may be disordered: Comes too quickly (quick-tempered, irritable) Disproportionate (over-reacting, excessive) Lingers (grudge, resentment, passive-aggressive)
3. Sinful Anger: Concern for Self Seldom get it right: rarely justified (Jas 1:20) Only - anger against our own sin & spiritual forces Commonly, keep away from it (Eph 4:31) Jesus opposed injustice to the poor, needy When falsely accused, tried went meekly
3. Sinful Anger: Concern for Self Taught radical disregard for personal injustices (Matt 5:38 ff) He did not stand up for his rights laid them down He reacted to injustices done to others He called religious leaders blind guides (Mt 23:4f) He never did anything to advantage himself We should be the same
Living it Anger is a problem It is an area we can be radically different Turn the other cheek, lay aside our rights Another way to respond become angry This kind of anger is a danger to the soul
Living it Evagrius avenging yourself - stumbling block Anger distorts reason Becomes self-serving advancement of our rights A regular review of our anger is a helpful part of self awareness