Author Archive
How to Be Angry Without Sinning – Part One
Ephesians 4: 26, 27
Do you ever get angry? Do you even have an anger management problem? A biblical understanding of anger will be addressed in these six columns.
In answer to the first question I must answer guilty. Yes, like Jesus, I get angry. Like Jesus? Yes, more than once He is depicted as getting angry like His Father God. Consider:
The Scripture does not teach that God doesn’t get angry. It teaches He is slow to anger. Note:
Psalm 30:5 “His anger is but for a moment, His favor is for life.”
Isaiah 12: 1 “In that day you will say: ‘O Lord, I will praise You; Though you were angry with me, Your anger is turned away and You comfort me.”
Micah 7: 18 “He does not retain His anger forever…”
Hosea 11: 9 “I will execute the fierceness of My anger…”
Nehemiah 9:17 “But You are God … slow to anger…”
Joel 2: 13 “Return to the Lord your God … For He is gracious and merciful, Slow to anger….”
Again I say, God does get angry and so should you. Don’t take that statement out of context nor apply it apart from the way it is now to be developed.
Jesus went into the temple and found they were not praying and worshiping, but buying and selling. He turned over the tables of the money changers and drove them out. Can you imagine Him doing this passively?
Don’t tune out after this statement. The Bible not only teaches us that God gets angry, it also encourages us to get angry. That demands some biblical interpretation. Without an understanding of this statement, improper license to get angry might be taken.
Our text says, “Be angry, and do not sin.” Literally, ” [A] Be sure to be angry, but [B] do not sin.
There is a clean anger. It is righteous indignation such as expressed by Jesus over evil. Failure to become angry over evil is a sign of unlikeness to Jesus. If the spirit of Jesus is in us we can’t stand by passively watching wrong being heaped upon wrong.
To gain a biblical understanding of this subject, consider two groups of anger. One is ventilation and the other indignation. One is good, the other isn’t. One is characteristic of Jesus and should be of us, the other isn’t a trait of our Lord and should not be of us.
One ventilation is a term used for improper anger, the losing of the temper, blow-up kind.
The other indignation is a term for the feelings of Jesus in the temple. It is a strong displeasure over unrighteousness. Indignation means you become incensed. When it is vented toward sin it is righteous indignation and that is good.
These two will be developed further in the next post.
Victory in Jesus – Part Six
“But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore, my beloved brethren, be steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, knowing that your labor is not in vain in the Lord.” I Corinthians 15: 57, 58
You, the real you, will never cease existing. Just because you exit your natural body at the moment of death does not mean you cease to exist. In truth that isn’t the termination of life. It is the end of life in the terrestrial body. It is the beginning of life in the celestial body.
The Greek term “steadfast” here means to be seated, settled, fixed. The idea here is that of steadiness. Paul uses this term in Colossians 1:23 to refer to the fixedness of a foundation: There he prays that the Colossians will “continue in the faith, stable and steadfast, not shifting from the hope of the gospel that you heard.” The term “stable” refers to the laying of a foundation. You get that sense from the King James Version which translates the term “grounded.”
At that point it will be obvious your labor wasn’t in vain.
Victory in Jesus – Part Five
“But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore, my beloved brethren, be steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, knowing that your labor is not in vain in the Lord.” I Corinthians 15: 57, 58
This passage opens with “Therefore.” It translates the Greek conjunction “hooste,” meaning consequently. As a consequence of the victory that is ours there is an appropriate response. “Be steadfast, unmovable….” is a present participle, meaning we are to be constantly stable. We are to “continue to stand” and “always abound.” Keep on being steadfast and immovable. This gives no furloughs for fits of unfaithfulness.
This is a charge not to vacillate between obedience and disobedience. Consistency is the challenge.
We are to abound in “the work of the Lord.”
What is the work of the Lord? Is it lighting candles on an altar, or polishing brass in a cloistered chamber.
Our Lord allows us contact with other persons in order that we might serve them in His name. That is the work of the Lord. As Jesus came not to be ministered unto but to minister, so we must all perpetually be ministers to one another in His holy name. What God considers is how we behave toward others. How much of a loving spirit do we show?
Be assured, such labor is not in vain. The ultimate confirmation of this will come in our inevitable victory celebration called “the day of the manifestation of the sons of God.”
Our supreme victory is spoken of in I Corinthians 15 in the verses preceding our text. It is summed up in verse 40: “There are also celestial bodies and terrestrial bodies; but the glory of the celestial is one, and the glory of the terrestrial is another.”
While waiting for the celestial body, win the spiritual victories of which your terrestrial is capable.
We now have what is called a “terrestrial” body. That is, a body perfectly suited for life on planet earth. Outside the sphere of earth’s atmosphere it isn’t perfectly suited. Capsules or space suits have to be used to sustain life outside our natural realm.
In death the believer is given a new body, a “celestial” body. As our natural body is perfectly suited for life on this planet, so this new celestial body will be perfectly suited for life in Heaven.
Victory in Jesus – Part Four
“But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore, my beloved brethren, be steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, knowing that your labor is not in vain in the Lord.” I Corinthians 15: 57, 58
Bob Montag in 1954 hit the longest home run on record. It was 518 miles. In the old Atlanta ballpark he hit it and it landed in a coal car on a train that took it to Nashville and back.
Most, if not all of these formerly salty old pros, now know Jesus as savior. It was interesting to hear them speak of the change in their lives and the lives of other companions there. One said of a colleague “I can hardly believe the change in his life. I have been with him when no civilized person would want to be with him in the dugout. Now look at him! What a change!”
The change was a result of the old pro becoming a victor through Christ.
The lifestyle our Lord designs for us has not been proven NOT to work. It has been tried and proven to be difficult and no longer tried. It is difficult to live as a victor until you make comparisons. It isn’t difficult when compared with facing life alone without a personal relationship with Jesus.
It isn’t difficult when compared to facing life’s inevitable end, called death, without Him.
In the darkest hours of World War II the destiny of civilization seemed to tremble in the balance. The Congress of Allied Women met in Paris and adopted this slogan:
“BELIEVE VICTORY! THINK VICTORY! PREACH VICTORY! LIVE VICTORY!”
We who are more than conquerors through Jesus Christ our Lord need to live like that.
It is time for us to evidence we truly believe victory. Think victory, let your mind sponge it up. Preach it, make bold the proclamation of victory. Live victory. You do this by living victoriously by the enabling power of Jesus.
Do we evidence a gracious forgiving attitude,
a willingness to return good for evil,
to speak a helpful word of release to those
who are captives of their own bad habits,
to help set free those oppressed by wrong,
hateful attitudes,
to bind up the broken hearted,
and open the eyes of the blind.
That is the work of the Lord.
Enjoy the assurance of the ultimate victory in Jesus by serving Him daily.
Victory in Jesus – Part Three
“But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore, my beloved brethren, be steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, knowing that your labor is not in vain in the Lord.” I Corinthians 15: 57, 58
It is Jesus who ”keeps on” us the victory. In the Greek that is present participle, meaning ours is a continual victory.
He is alive to meet us everyday. In this is found new power to stand firm amid the pressures of life — and they are many.
You need an awareness of His presence and power if you attempt to claim your victory daily in a world crowded with frustrating mean-spirited people who say cruel twisted things about people in an attempt to mask their own unhappiness. This even happens among Christians who hate Christians in the name of Jesus.
Christ did not give us the victory over the world in order that we might fight among ourselves.
He doesn’t give us blessings and advantages to use against each other, but for His cause.
Doing the work of the Lord does not give us permission to act like everybody else. In saving us He never gave us permission to breathe fire in a world of dragons.
As co-victors He would have us go into a world where most folks live with “their dukes up” with our arms outstretched in love.
The world might well call such a venturous spirit a failure, but the Bible calls such a one a victor. In the physical world potential winners have often been classified as losers.
In 1902, The Atlantic Monthly’s poetry editor returned a collection of poems to a 28-year-old would-be poet with a caustic note reading: “Our magazine has no room for your vigorous verses.” The name of the poet was Robert Frost.
In 1905, the University of Bern failed a PhD dissertation because it was considered fanciful and irrelevant. The young candidate for his PhD was Albert Einstein.
In 1894, the rhetorical teacher at Harrow in England wrote on a 16-year-old’s grade card: “A conspicuous lack of success.” That student was the young Winston Churchill.
As these persons overcame physical losses, so you can daily overcome would-be spiritual defeats through Jesus.
Amid adversity remember “… in all these things we overwhelmingly conquer through Him who loved us” Romans 8:37.