All of us become angry at one time or another, but some of us are much better at anger management than others are. Anger in and of..
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Be Angry but Don’t Sin
Published on 2012-06-11 21:20:00
All of us become angry at one time or another, but some of us are much better at anger management than others are. Anger in and of itself is not a bad thing. God gave us anger as an emotion because some things should anger us. Some of the senseless killings that make the national news, for instance, really get me wound up. But the Bible says, “Be you angry, and sin not” (Ephesians 4:26). That means we should never allow our anger to drive our actions. Husbands and wives, boyfriends and girlfriends, fellow colleagues, etc. tend to say some of the most hurtful things to each other when they are angry. Who says such words don’t hurt? Sometimes, they wound beyond repair. And what can we say about actions driven by our anger? Recently, a local resident, thinking his wife had been cheating on her, waited for her to come home, and stabbed her to death right before her little children. Obviously, there is no way to right this wrong. God gave us an emotion called anger but He calls us to respond in ways that please Him.Whenever we allow anger to get the best of us, we become less effective at doing whatever we should be doing for the Lord, our employer, ourselves, or whoever. Professional athletes know this all too well. They know that if they allow the opponent to get under their skin and cause them to become angry they will lose concentration, and they are headed for defeat. Also, when we allow anger to take the driver’s seat, rational thinking takes a back seat. I am sure there are tens of thousands of prisoners—maybe more—this very day who regret the fact that they
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