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Sermon 4/13/08
Ephesians 4:31 - Anger

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Sermon 4/13/08 – Ephesians 4:31 – Anger

Anger

Let all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamor and slander be put away from you, along with all malice” (Ephesians 4:31)

There is so much ANGER in the world today! That’s undoubtedly the way it always has been, but it seems so much more NOTICEABLE than it was a few decades ago. My second career was in the mortgage banking industry and I remember in those years going into what we now call “trashed” houses. They were mostly repossessions – the homes were taken by the mortgage insuring company, usually in the U.S. in those days, by the FHA (the Federal Housing Administration) or by the VA (the Veterans Administration).

Many of the repossessions (or “repos” as we called them) were in fine condition and most were ready to be on the market once more, but some were destroyed inside. They were terribly damaged by someone; probably the previous owners. I never actually thought about anger in relation to such damages – my only thought at the time was that the marketability of such a property was disappointingly limited because of its condition.

But a recent article on the editorial page of local newspaper called, “Messy Divorces, Evicted Homeowners Don’t Always Leave Gracefully,” started me thinking about such homes. The article cited “some cities, such as Las Vegas (Nevada), where nearly two out of every 100 homes are in foreclosure.” Isn’t that incredible? If you drive or walk past a neighborhood of 50 homes, at least one of those homes is being foreclosed and the “owners” must go!

And how do those who are being foreclosed feel about it? According to the newspaper article – they’re very angry! When they bought the home or refinanced it, many took some kind of “adjustable” mortgage and subsequently the payments went up, or one of the owners lost their job, or they got a divorce. They are losing the home and are ANGRY about it! What they do, according to the article, includes: “abandoning their pets inside homes, punching holes in walls and removing appliances and fixtures that legally belong to the banks.” The article stated that “Some who are forced to leave their dream homes pour paint or oil on carpets in every room, smash light fixtures and windows…” etc.

Incredibly the article continued that “banks are actually paying people to leave – but only if they don’t trash the house… (giving) offers of up to $1,000 ‘cash for keys,'” if they leave the house without damaging it. “In one case in Nevada, a man facing foreclosure spurned a $500 offer to leave without trashing the house… (and) the bank wound up raising its offer to $2,800” for the house to be left “clean and whole.” As a society, we’ve lost our moral compass. Much like many parents pay their children to mind or get good grades, places like banks pay former customers to not destroy their homes.

Billy Sunday, a famous evangelist of the early 20th Century, who lived from 1862 to 1935, was an exceptionally fast runner and became a gifted professional baseball player before he trusted in the Lord. The same God who gave him legs that let him run fast, also gave him answers. A lady once came to him after one of his crusades, trying to rationalize her angry outbursts. "There's nothing wrong with losing my temper," she said. "I blow up, and then it's all over." "So does a shotgun," Sunday replied, "and look at the damage it leaves behind!"

Our anger can not only destroy our careers and our homes, it can also ruin our children. If we display outbursts of rage or other more subtle expressions of anger, our children will become just like us, and we wonder, why are they like that? What has become of this world? Not realizing that we are part of the problem.

An author for the U.S. magazine “Reader's Digest,” wrote about preparing for an article through a study of the Amish people. At the local school yard, he noted that Amish children never screamed or yelled like so many other children, which amazed him. He spoke to the schoolmaster about them. He said he had not once heard an Amish child yell, and asked why the schoolmaster thought that was so. The schoolmaster replied, "Well, have you ever heard an Amish ADULT yell?" If we are calm and gentle, our children likely will be, too.

The Amish religion teaches adult baptism a commitment to the church, belief in the Trinity, the virgin birth, incarnation, crucifixion, resurrection ascension, and atonement of Jesus Christ, heaven and hell. They believe that salvation is a gift from God through unmerited grace, and that the inerrant Bible is inspired by God. Those who are “Evangelical” or “Fundamentalist” Christians sometimes criticize groups like the Amish, but you might ask, have you ever heard an Evangelical or Fundamentalist yell?

The answer all too often is – Yes! “Evangelical” people often harshly criticize other groups and yell at not only their families, but also complain about other Christians. That reminds me of Charles De Gaulle, the famous French general who later became President of France. He worked closely with British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, during World War II. De Gaulle once said about himself, about Churchill, and about their relationship with one another: "When I am right, I get angry. Churchill gets angry when he is wrong. So we were very often angry at each other." Do you ever see that assumption in church? – “I’m right; therefore that other person is wrong!”

Our Scripture verse for today is -“Let all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamor and slander be put away from you, along with all malice” (Ephesians 4:31). In Churches, unlike apparently the Amish Church, attitudes like “bitternesswrath and anger” all too often lurk beneath the surface of those smiling faces. We need to get rid of our anger, and the context of today’s Scripture verse tells us how to do it.

We are to become people of truth and love as it says in Ephesians 4:15 – “speaking the truth in love;” and at last “grow upinto Him who is the Head, even Christ.” Contrary to what some teach, our old nature does not somehow vanish when we trust in the Lord. Our old attitudes and ways are still with us. Paul the Apostle called it the “old self” or the “old man.” When we accept the Lord we acquire the “new self,” the “new man” in Christ, and both natures exist within us. We are to simply and prayerfully make a choice – to “lay aside” our old ways and “put on” the new (Ephesians 4:22-24). We must decide to be honest, no longer denying our shortcomings; instead taking them to the Lord for healing, at last “grow(ing) upintoChrist.” We go to Him in prayer and HE enables us to become “kind to one another, tender-hearted, forgiving one another, just as God in Christ also forgave - you” (Ephesians 3:32).

Father, we bring You our pride, our anger and our unforgiveness. What we cannot do, You can, and we come as sinners in need of repentance. Forgive us, heal us, and please heal our church, our land, for we are sorely in need of You. In Jesus Name. Amen.

Ron Beckham, Pastor
Friday Study Ministries

www.FirstChurchOnTheNet.org
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Write to:
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"While we were yet sinners, Christ died for us" (Romans 5:8)
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