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7 days to understand what anger's really about
Anger isn't always sin — Jesus flipped tables. But uncontrolled anger destroys everything it touches. These 7 chapters show you the difference between righteous fire and destructive rage.
Start Reading — Day 1: Anger in Your HeartReady when you are.
Jesus takes the commandment 'do not murder' and cranks it up: even being angry with your brother puts you in danger of judgment. The problem isn't just actions — it's what's burning inside.
Reflect
Jesus says anger itself is the issue, not just what anger leads to. Does that change how you view your own anger?
Is there someone you need to reconcile with before it festers any further?
Paul says 'be angry and do not sin.' That's permission to feel it. But then he adds: don't let the sun go down on your anger. There's an expiration date on holding onto it.
James drops a mic: be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to anger. Because human anger does NOT produce the righteousness of God. Your rage isn't fixing anything.
Paul tells the Colossians to strip off anger, rage, malice, and slander like dirty clothes. Put on compassion instead. It's not about suppressing anger — it's about replacing it with something better.
Jesus walks into the temple, sees people exploiting worshippers for profit, and flips their tables. This is anger done right — targeted, purposeful, aimed at injustice, not personal offense.
Paul says don't repay evil with evil. Don't take revenge — leave room for God. Feed your enemy. Give them water. Overcome evil with GOOD. This is the opposite of everything anger tells you to do.
Cain was the first person to let anger win. God even warned him: 'sin is crouching at the door.' Cain ignored it and committed the first murder. Anger unchecked always escalates.
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