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Hope Baptist Church
5688 McWhinney Blvd
Loveland, CO 80538
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Hope Baptist Church
PO Box 2481
Loveland, CO 80539
Email: info@hopebaptistcolorado.org
What does it take to really gripe you, to get you worked up to where you are no longer in complete control of your emotions? For some, nothing more than being honked at can set them off, while others seem to be able to take most everything life throws their way without getting too upset.
Anger can be a very effective deterrent against an intruder, or it can become a corrosive cancer, eating away at one’s insides. Though we all handle anger differently, we all are prone to its dangerous effects.
Which one of us has never regretted words spoken during an outburst of anger? Regardless of the level of remorse, once said, they can never be taken back. More damage has been done by heated words than by loaded weapons. More wars have been waged because of angry words, than those from invasions.
God spoke to the subject through the apostle Paul in…
Ephesians 4:26 Be ye angry, and sin not: let not the sun go down upon your wrath:
Interestingly, the Lord acknowledged that there is an anger that is not sinful. Jesus Himself welled up in anger at the condition He found the Temple. He single-handedly cast out the carnal money changers. When angrily confronting the Pharisees, Jesus found many colorful ways to characterize their sinful behaviors.
Jesus, of course, never sinned; so, when He got angry it was for righteous causes. In comparison, we can rarely justify our outbursts of anger. We can’t look back and truthfully say that we behaved like Jesus; we simply allowed our flesh to take over and let our emotions fly out of control.
Anger can be extremely destructive, both to the target of the anger, and the deliverer. Anger can destroy relationships and put one in dangerous situations, like angrily driving to burn off steam.
Our passage does not forbid anger, it just qualifies it. There may be times we need to get angry; perhaps to defend ourselves or someone else. There may be times where anger is the God-ordained emotion for the moment. However, it must be carefully handled and controlled by the Holy Spirit.
The Lord provides for us a very wise bit of counsel. He said, ‘let not the sun go down upon your wrath.’ Too many times relationships that could have been salvaged if they would have just worked things out right away, end in failure because they let the day fade without resolution. A day goes by, and then another, just being pushed aside and allowed to fester.
We must learn to handle anger with great care; our lives, and those around us may depend upon it.
The story of Jonah is one of the most familiar Bible stories of all time. Ask the average church goer what happened to Jonah, and they’ll tell you he’s the one that got swallowed by a whale. What they may or may not remember is that Jonah was a prophet that had been used of God. This account reveals a time that God came to Jonah with a new mission. God told him to go to the great city of Nineveh, the Assyrian capital, and cry out a message of impending judgment if they don’t repent. God’s word to Jonah is recorded in…
Jonah 1:2 Arise, go to Nineveh, that great city, and cry against it; for their wickedness is come up before me.
The task that God gave to Jonah was not unusual for a prophet. Throughout the Old Testament, God gave men of God assignments that usually included delivering a message of judgment. Jonah should not have been surprised at what God said. However, Jonah’s reaction was dramatic. Instead of yielding himself to do the will of His Heavenly Father, he fled. He ran to the local docks, found a boat going in the opposite direction, paid the fee, and sailed away.
Of course, we know that God was not finished with either Jonah, or Nineveh. God was intent in mercifully offering Nineveh a chance to repent, and He was not going to let Jonah off from completing His will. So, God made a great fish, called here a whale. After Jonah was thrown overboard, swallowed by the great fish, spent three days and nights sloshing around in its stomach, and was then vomited up on shore; Jonah decided to try it God’s way.
The Assyrians were a ruthless and heartless people. They had no morals and no reserves when attacking their enemies. Their cruelty was well known to all their neighboring nations. They were a conquering people, intent on expanding their empire. The city of Nineveh, its major city, grew to an enormous size. Nineveh was especially cruel to Israel. It is very likely that Jonah had been the victim of Nineveh’s brutality, either personally or through one of his family. Jonah had nothing but cold hatred for Nineveh, and he was not about to give them a chance to avoid judgment.
It took a three day and night ride through the ocean, coughing up rotten seaweed and salt water to get him to change his mind. After drying out, Jonah went into the city and delivered God’s message. Lo and behold, they repented in sack cloth and ashes! They grieved before the Lord for their wickedness and got right with God. God spared them from immediate judgment.
Jonah’s response? He sulked off and wished he could die. Obviously, though he surrendered on the outside, he had not had a change of heart towards them.
The story of Jonah illustrates the incredible mercy of God. God is not willing that any should perish, and gives them chance after chance to repent. Let’s remember God’s mercy, and show His love to this lost world.
Solomon, in his last years, looked back over his life and made some assessments. The wisest man, apart from Christ, to ever walk the planet had experienced all that life had to offer; had tasted the good and the bad; and in his book of Ecclesiastes decried the foolishness of this life, apart from God.
Hope Baptist Church
5688 McWhinney Blvd
Loveland, CO 80538
Hope Baptist Church
PO Box 2481
Loveland, CO 80539
Email: info@hopebaptistcolorado.org