
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Jesus Himself shows righteous anger when confronting hypocrisy or oppression, yet Christian teaching stresses that such anger must always be rooted in love and aimed at restoration, never harm. Believers are called to be “slow to anger,” allowing the Holy Spirit to shape their responses so that anger does not control their actions or break relationships. Ultimately, theology sees anger as something to be acknowledged, examined, and transformed, inviting God to redirect it toward justice, healing, and forgiveness.
By CornerstoneBV5
55 ratings
Jesus Himself shows righteous anger when confronting hypocrisy or oppression, yet Christian teaching stresses that such anger must always be rooted in love and aimed at restoration, never harm. Believers are called to be “slow to anger,” allowing the Holy Spirit to shape their responses so that anger does not control their actions or break relationships. Ultimately, theology sees anger as something to be acknowledged, examined, and transformed, inviting God to redirect it toward justice, healing, and forgiveness.