Read Keeping Your Cool…When Your Anger Is Hot!: Practical Steps to Temper Fiery Emotions Online
Authors: June Hunt
Forgiveness Prayer“Heavenly Father, thank You for caring about how much my heart has been hurt. You know the pain I have felt because of
(
list every offense
)
. Right now I release all that pain into Your hands. Thank You, for Jesus’ dying on the cross for me and extending Your forgiveness to me. As an act of my will, I choose to forgive
(
name
)
. Right now, I move
(
name
)
off my emotional hook to Your hook. I refuse all thoughts of revenge. I trust that in Your time and in Your way You will deal with my offender as You see fit. And Lord, thank You for giving me Jesus’ power to forgive so that I can be set free. In Jesus’ holy name I pray. Amen.”
“My salvation and my honor depend on God;
He is my mighty rock, my refuge…
One thing God has spoken, two things have I heard;
that you, O God, are strong,
and that you, O Lord, are loving.
Surely you will reward each person
according to what he has done”(PSALM 62:7,11-12).
The ultimate purpose of our fiery trials is to clear away everything holding us back from a more mature, more empowered walk with Christ.
“In all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord”(ROMANS 8:37-38).
Fire works: A Short Fuse Is Bad NewsIt’s hard to say which is scarier: watching a bomb explode and witnessing fiery debris fly in every direction, or being near a bomb that should have exploded, but didn’t.It happens every Fourth of July in the United States. Someone lights the fuse on a firecracker and runs a safe distance away. Covering their ears, a watching crowd excitedly waits for the blast. The sparks sizzle and crackle all the way down to the end of the fuse—then
boom
—the black powder ignites!
Unfortunately, not all firecrackers detonate as they should. Yes, the fuse burns—same as before. And everyone waits:
three, two, one…
but nothing happens—no flash, no boom. No longer is the air filled with excitement, but it is thick with anxiety…caution…hesitation. Is it really a dud, or just slow to blow? Who will go near to investigate? Do you dare pick it up? Maybe the fuse didn’t stay lit. Or maybe the embers are still smoldering on the inside, unseen—call it destruction in slow motion.
Without a doubt, anger and fireworks have a lot in common. If not handled properly, both can explode on you and on those around you. Like a cantankerous Roman candle, red-hot anger can appear to fizzle and disappear inside. Although out of sight and mind, this inner anger is just as damaging as a powerful explosion—simply because the pent-up force will eventually explode on the inside harms your emotional stability. This can happen anytime we attempt to ignore smoldering embers of anger rather than permanently extinguishing them in a healthy way.