Midtown Presbyterian Church
This week's teaching takes us deep into one of the more misunderstood aspects of Christian living: how we handle anger in a world full of conflict. Drawing from Ephesians 4:25-29, we're confronted with Paul's paradoxical command to 'be angry, but do not sin.' The message challenges our cultural assumptions about anger, revealing that emotions themselves are often God-given responses to injustice and harm. Like nuclear power, anger can either heal or destroy depending on how we handle it. The teaching walks us through Jesus' own expressions of anger, showing us that He became angry when the vulnerable were dismissed, when children were turned away, when religious systems failed to bring healing. His anger always moved toward compassion and restoration, never toward vengeance or destruction. We're given practical diagnostics to distinguish between righteous anger and destructive wrath, examining whether we're angry about genuine harm or simply disrupted preferences, whether our words heal or wound, and whether we move toward repair or replay offenses. The call is clear: conflict delayed becomes conflict deepened. We're invited to become field hospitals for those wounded by the culture wars, not contributors to the casualty count. This means learning to pause and reflect, take responsibility first, build appreciation even in disagreement, and pursue curiosity over criticism. The foundation for all of this is the cross, where Jesus absorbed the full force of humanity's wrath and rose again, proving that the power of destructive anger can be left in the grave.
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