Topic: Three Things to Avoid When You’re Angry [RICK WARREN Devotional 14 June 2024]
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Three Things to Avoid When You’re Angry
BY RICK WARREN — JUNE 14, 2024
FROM BUILDING MY LIFE ON VALUES THAT LAST
“If you become angry, do not let your anger lead you into sin.”
Ephesians 4:26 (GNT)
We all get angry from time to time. We may handle it differently, but none of us can escape the emotion entirely. But just because we get angry doesn’t mean we’re sinning.
The Bible says, “If you become angry, do not let your anger lead you into sin” (Ephesians 4:26 GNT). Paul tells us in this passage not to let our anger lead us into sin. That means that anger isn’t necessarily sin. The truth is, we can deal with our anger in both appropriate and inappropriate ways.
Unfortunately, many of us express our anger in ways that get us further from our goals instead of moving us closer to them.
For example, here are three things to avoid when you’re angry:
Don’t suppress your anger. Don’t store it up inside. When you suppress anger without expressing it in proper ways, it’s like taking a soft drink bottle and shaking it up. One day it’s going to pop! It’ll impact your body eventually. Doctors tell us a number of physical ailments are often brought on by suppressed anger.
Don’t repress anger. When you repress your anger, you simply deny it’s there. Deny your anger often enough, and you’ll be depressed. When I used to do more counseling, I’d hear many people tell me they were depressed, but they were really just angry. They thought that Christians should never get angry, so they bottled it up inside. Denying anger is a sin. It’s called lying.
Don’t express your anger in inappropriate ways. We can express anger in a variety of inappropriate ways. We pout, spit sarcasm, manipulate, or do something stupid. None of those approaches get us anywhere near the result we’re looking for.
So what should we do with our anger?
Confess it.You don’t just admit the anger, but you also admit the cause. You tell God—and whoever you’re angry with—that you’re frustrated or you feel threatened. The more honest you can be in your relationships, the easier it will be to get to the root causes of your anger.
Here’s the good news about your anger: You may have grown up in a home where anger was consistently expressed in inappropriate ways. Inappropriate anger is learned, but it can be unlearned too.
You don’t have to stay the same. You can start changing how you deal with anger today!
Talk It Over
- How did your family deal with anger as you were growing up?
- Which of the three inappropriate ways to deal with anger do you tend to use? What would your family say you tend to use?
- What anger are you dealing with now? How does God want you to handle it?
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