Choosing Love Over Anger in an Offended World

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Sermon Summary

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"Let's say that you had a magic thermometer that we all had that we could just measure the temperature of how offended all of us are walking around in our world today. Would you say the temperature is rising or is it going lower? It's kind of like the temperature in Phoenix, right? It should be going down and it just keeps ticking up and up and up again, right? And it's almost like we're living in an age of offense. And it's everywhere, right? You get on social media, you see people just blowing everybody up on social media, turn on the news, same things happen in there. You go to a sports game on the field, everyone's offended. The parents on the sidelines, they're offended. Everybody's offended in the stands. You show up to your workplace, your home, everybody's offended." [00:01:06]

"And I'll tell you something right up front. Reading this book, it bugged me on occasion in like the best possible ways. I mean, it just got crawled up under my skin. It was kind of getting up in my business like crazy. Because the author has the audacity to suggest right up front that, as Christians, we should be maybe the most unoffendable people in the world. That we can learn to be unoffendable. And reading that, I took offense to that. I was like, who is this guy? Does he live under a rock? He obviously doesn't have to deal with the people I deal with, right? I mean, I'll just be personal. He obviously doesn't pastor a church." [00:02:43]

"The book of James chapter 1 verse 19 puts it this way. My dear brothers and sisters, take note of this. Everyone, everyone, everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to become what? Angry. Angry. How are you doing with that command? I think we live in a world today where most people operate the exact opposite of this verse. We are so, so slow to ever listen and we are ultra quick to blow up on everyone around us. I mean, our anger levels are at zero." [00:06:14]

"In fact, if you read through all the New Testament, let me tell you what you will never find. You'll never find, you know, with the fruits of the Spirit, for example, the fruits of the Spirit are simply things that should come out of us as followers of Jesus, and what are they? Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, gentleness, faithfulness, self-control. You'll never read of the fruits of the Spirit as the fruits of the Spirit. Love, joy, peace, righteous anger. It is not there. In fact, in the wisdom literature in the Old Testament, like, for example, Proverbs and Ecclesiastes, how we're to be wise, anger is never once referred to as something good. It is always, always referred to as making you foolish." [00:11:00]

"Getting angry initially is not the sin. It's when you hold on to it and justify it that it will destroy your life. Now, hang with me because I'm going to give you a deep biblical view of anger. Okay? Anger is listed 49 times in 45 verses in the New Testament. There's two Greek words primarily that are used that are synonyms. And here they are. The Greek word themos and the Greek word. Use the synonyms. The Greek words, the sense to be angry. In other words, to carry anger or to be angry." [00:12:44]

"Let me ask you something. To move the ball down the field on a football field, do you need to do that? Do you need to do that? Do you need to do that? Do you need to do that? to be an angry coach to do that? What about to move the ball down the field in your life? Do you need to have anger to have some movement and momentum? How many of you have ever watched Andy Reid, the head coach of the Kansas City Chiefs coach on the field? Anybody out there watch Andy Reid coach?" [00:16:44]

"Here's what you know, and every law enforcement person that's in leadership will tell you this. The best, best officers in the law enforcement community are not the ones that are angry. They are trained, the best of the best, to de-escalate, not to escalate. In fact, the officers that make the most mistakes, the things we see on the news, the mess-ups, are ones that are operating out of anger. And it's like this in almost every area of life. If you study MMA fighters, MMA fighters, the best of the best, do not operate out of anger. They operate out of self-control because God knew what he was saying and he knew what he was saying. In scripture, when he said this in Proverbs 14, short-tempered people do foolish things. Did you know anger, the idea of anger leading us to action, did you know anger can actually keep you from taking the action you need to take?" [00:19:31]

"Anger can be a mirage, almost like that's the end result. But anger is always a secondary emotion. There's always something above it, and we have to really look at our anger and say, what am I angry about? And am I actually doing something to make things right? Someone's thinking, well, I mean, the Bible, like some of the heroes of faith got angry, right? Yeah, Moses got angry and killed an Egyptian. Is that our model? Actually, after that, God sent Moses into the desert for 40 years." [00:21:40]

"Why is it that in Scripture, anger is the only thing we're told to get rid of that we want to lose? We're labeled as righteous, and I'll tell you the reason. Because in Scripture, we see that God can have a righteous anger, but it's God, not us. Because God is holy and righteous and can handle it, but we are told we are not righteous, and when we try to hold anger, it doesn't make things right. It destroys our life." [00:23:34]

"So if anger isn't to be our motive for making things right in this world, in our families, with our kids, in our workplaces, with all the injustices we see in this world, if anger is not to be our motive, then what on earth should be our motive as a follower of Jesus? What is our motive to make things right? is right in this world. Not anger, but what? What is it? Say it out loud. It's love. It's always been love. In fact, Jesus, right before he dies in John chapter 13, he says, I have a brand new command for you. And here's my brand new command. Hey, a brand new command. Be angry with one another as I've been angry with you. So you must be angry with one another. And oh, by the way, by this, everyone will know that you're my disciples. If you'll just be angry, if you'll just get pissed about everything, the world will be like, I love Jesus. Look at these Christians. They're so pissed all the time." [00:24:19]

"And we got to look at our hearts, and I'm talking to myself here. We got to look at ourselves and say, we have to learn to be unoffendable. And if you think we can't change the world with our motive being love, of, let me give you exhibit A, maybe the man in recent history that has changed the world, maybe arguably more than anybody, Martin Luther King Jr. Martin Luther King Jr. dealt with one of the greatest injustices in recent history, that we would treat people differently and look down on them because of the color of their skin." [00:26:11]

"We wanna make things right in this world. I'm not saying, listen, being unoffendable does not mean we don't take action. What it means is we release anger. We do what's right to the best of our ability in love. And then we trust God with the results so that we don't destroy our lives in the process." [00:31:13]

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