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Anger is easy to excuse and even easier to spiritualize. We can call it stress, frustration, passion, or “righteous indignation,” and still avoid the harder question: what is it doing inside of us? From Matthew 5:21–26, we walk through Jesus’ sobering move from the command against murder to the heart-level reality beneath it. His words are not meant to shame us into silence, but to uncover what needs healing.

Jesus’ “But I say to you” doesn’t soften God’s law, it deepens it. We talk about why unresolved anger is not a minor flaw, how it can settle into resentment, and how it often shows up first around the people closest to us. We also make an important distinction between righteous anger and sinful anger: one moves toward truth, justice, and restoration, while the other drifts toward pride, bitterness, and condemnation. Along the way we address the progression Jesus highlights from anger to contempt and then to speech that demeans, dismisses, and dehumanizes.

The passage also reframes worship and obedience. If I’m aware a relationship is broken, faithfulness to God calls me to move toward reconciliation, not just keep up appearances. We explore what it means for kingdom righteousness to start near, reshape the church, and then become a witness to the world.

If you’re wrestling with Christian anger, church conflict, or relational healing, this message offers clear biblical direction and gospel hope. Subscribe for more teaching, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review to help others find Foundations of Truth.

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