JR. Forasteros - August 17, 2014

Haggai

Major/Minor

When we experience crushing tragedy, recovering seems impossible. Often, we build walls inside ourselves, keeping our hearts and souls safe - or so we think. Haggai shows us that in the wake of the Exile, God's people were doing the same. They were neglecting their relationship with God because it was too painful. But Haggai's challenge to them is the same as to us: if we stay behind our walls, we'll slowly die. We must embrace God once again, and when we do, we'll find not a God who is cold, uncaring and distant, but a God who suffers with us, who is working even now to redeem the world.

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We’re fewer than 100 hours from election day, so I want to ask you a weird question: which superhero do you most relate to these days? I think a lot of us would like to imagine we’re Captain America, doing our patriotic duty and defending the best of American ideals.

But I wonder how many of us over the last month have been able to relate way more to Bruce Banner. You know… the guy who gets angry and turns into the Incredible Hulk?

Yeah… that guy.

If you’re old enough to remember the TV show where Lou Ferrigno was the Hulk, you may remember Bruce Banner’s famous line: “Don’t make me angry. You wouldn’t like me when I’m angry!”

In the Avengers movie, that gets a tweak: “That’s my secret, Cap,” Bruce says just before he transforms. “I’m always angry.”

The Hulk is all about anger. And, as a superhero, he paints a pretty accurate picture of how we as a culture feel about anger: it’s bad. It’s dangerous. The Hulk is a stupid, impulsive beast. He’s as likely to punch you as he is the bad guy. He’s uncontrollable. Bruce works really hard to make sure the anger never gets out.

Anger is bad.

But… there’s a lot of anger in the air right now. And I’d like to submit that because we just write anger off as a bad emotion we’re not meant to feel, we don’t know how to deal with all the anger around us and within us.

Let’s talk about anger. Here’s our assumption: Anger is an emotion we were created to be able to feel. If that’s true, then it means anger can’t be bad. We feel anger for a reason.

What is anger? Why do we feel it? And what are we supposed to do with it?

We ground our answers in God’s character. We’re created in God’s image, and we know God gets angry. That’s right: God, who is perfect love, gets angry.

Let’s explore what makes Jesus angry, and how he shows us what to do with our anger.

Join us Sunday as we learn why God created us capable of anger.

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