Finding Peace: Understanding and Overcoming Anger Through Forgiveness

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### Quotes for Outreach

1. "Righteousness is actually, what it means is that it's a person that's learned how to live really well with God and with other people. And he says that that's what God desires for us. That's what God longs for for us. And if that's what you want, anger can't get it for you. Anger is an emotion. It wells up in us and it pushes us to respond. However, James says human anger is tainted by sin. So it often leads to where we're at. We don't want to go." (46 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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2. "Anger, they say, is a secondary emotion. It shows up often as anger. It shows up often as anger. It shows up often as anger. It shows up often as anger. It shows up often as anger. It shows up often as anger. But it's often rooted in something underneath. It can be helplessness. It can be inadequacy. It can be shame. And it exposes itself as anger because sometimes the most accessible emotion we have is anger." (25 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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3. "The Bible doesn't offer that as a way to wisely handle our anger. Paul says, don't let the sun go down with your anger and do not give the devil a foothold. Don't let it grab you. Spewers. But there's also stewards. Stewards, on the surface, it looks calm, but anger, anger, has a habit of not going away. If it doesn't come out, then it usually gets hidden. And if you try to hide your anger, it's like trying to hold a beach ball under the water. It could just pop out at any time." (41 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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4. "The first thing Paul says is own it. Own your anger. He says in NIV, it says it this way. In your anger, own it. It belongs to you. That was a hard one for me. My dad grew up in a really angry home, a spewing home, where there was a lot of screaming and complaints flying. He'd tell stories about hiding with his brothers in their room, just afraid. And I think he decided, you know what? When I have a family, we're not going to do that. And we didn't. My parents were great. It was a wonderful place to grow up. But the worst thing you could do in my family was get angry." (43 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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5. "In the end, letting go of anger is really giving up, choosing to give up control. Because anger helps to fuel the illusion that we're in control. And anger helps us to stay in control. Let go. Because ultimately, the cure to anger is to let go of anger. And anger helps us to stay in control. Let go. And anger helps us to stay in control. Let go. Because anger is the love of God. And it's as we launch into that, that we begin to heal, not just the outbursts of anger, but the roots that are planted in us." (37 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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### Quotes for Members

1. "Anger can push us to do really goofy things. Augustine says that in a sense, what you love the most is what has the capacity to make you the most angry. If that's true, he says, if what you love most is God, then you don't have much to be angry about anymore. Like if anybody in the New Testament should be angry, outside of Jesus, it's Paul. He got beaten. He got stoned. What I mean is he got, he had rocks thrown at him. He did. Yeah. Yeah. Stay with me. That pastor said that. If had a right to be angry, he found himself often in prison and he wasn't in prison because of evil that he did. He was often, he was in prison because of his own friends and countrymen. But you don't read in Paul's words anger. You read the opposite. How did he live that? He lived it because I think he understood that he was loved by his heavenly father. And regardless of what anybody did or whatever happened, nothing could change that." (25 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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2. "Ephesians chapter four says this. Since you've heard about Jesus and have learned the truth that comes from him, throw off your old sinful nature and the former way of life, which is corrupted by lust and deception. Instead, let the spirit renew your thoughts and your attitude. Put on your new nature created to be like God, righteous and holy. Stop lying. Let us tell our neighbors the truth, for if we are all part of the same body. And don't sin by letting anger control you. Don't let the sun go down while you're still mad, for anger gives a foothold to the devil." (43 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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3. "Tim Keller says, one of the good questions to ask yourself is, hey, what am I defending? What am I defending here? If you don't feel it, you can't heal it. Identify what it is, where it came from. The cure, actually, for anger is receiving and giving forgiveness. This is how it's said in Ephesians. Be gentle with one another, sensitive. Forgive one another as quickly and as thoroughly as God forgave you. Forgive. Forgiving is not a light thing. Sit down. Talk to God about it. Who are you angry at? Who are you angry with? Maybe it's God. And if you're mad at God, you know what? You would not be the first person that ever felt that. Identify your anger. And then the Bible invites us to forgive. Let go. Forgive. Cancel the debt. Dismiss the case. Make a daily decision to not reopen it." (96 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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4. "Let me just add one thing before we close. I have no doubt that in a group like this, there are people who are living with secret or private abuse. Receiving it or maybe even giving it. Maybe in the home that you're living in, anger is the dominant song. Can I just invite you, plead with you this morning, get help. God can heal anything, but you have to invite him to do it. And to all of us, may God help us. The image that Paul uses here is to take off the clothes. Take off the old, the rage and all that stuff and put on new clothes that look like him. May he help us to do that." (37 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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5. "Jesus, I thank you that it says in your word that that on the cross that you forgave us. That you opened the door for us. All of us have regrets. We have regrets about things that we've said. We have regrets about things that we've done. And none of that was a surprise to you. You opened a door for us to be forgiven. But it says also that you took on yourself our shame. You took our junk. You took our anger. Would you teach us, as the word that we just read says, to imitate you. To look like you. To copy you. To learn to live and breathe forgiveness. So that we can be free." (51 seconds)(Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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