| Daily Devotion Jesus Got AngryBy Kay  W. Camenisch 
  While on an  outing with two special little friends, we went to a gift shop that had a  basket of colorful hair clips displayed near the floor. It was like a magnet to  Megan, the 18-month-old. Her four-year-old sister, Mollie soon joined  her.      My correction, “No, no. Don’t touch” had no effect in getting little  hands out of the basket, even when repeated. Finally, I spoke a little stronger,  “Obey.” Immediately, both girls withdrew their hands and backed away. Mollie’s  eyes filled with hurt and confusion.   I’d been studying anger in the Bible for several months, and I realized  that Mollie reacted, as if to anger. I didn’t feel angry. Nor, did I think I was  angry. Yes, my voice became harsh for the final word, but I reasoned that I  needed to be firm to let them know I meant business. The more I thought about it, however, the more I realized that my  actions showed all the signs of using anger to get what I wanted. Their  reaction told me that I must have been angry, whether I I thought I was or not.  I had manipulated the girls with harshness.     Obedience is important. If they don’t learn to obey earthly authority,  they won’t obey God. It would be irresponsible not to address the issue.  However, what appeared to be sound logic and justification did not erase the  memory of both girls pulling away from me. They obeyed, but I had alienated  them to gain obedience.     But Jesus got angry when He drove the traders and the livestock out of  the temple. Therefore, it’s okay for me to get stern when I have just cause.  Right?      When I looked more closely at the passage, I discovered that is not  right.              Anger is  generally a reaction rather than a response of action. However, because Jesus  only did what He saw His Father doing, we know that His demonstration in the  temple was not a reaction to the moneychangers. It was action in response to  His Father.               Furthermore, if we are around  someone who has an angry outburst, we want to fight back or withdraw and run.  But that is not how people responded to Jesus. 
    The disciples were reminded of a verse from Psalms. (Mark. 11:17)The multitude was listening to Jesus, making the chief priests and  scribes afraid. (Mark 11:18) The blind and lame came to Him for healing. (Matthew 21:14) He taught in the temple the rest of the day and “the chief priests and  scribes saw the wonderful things He did.” (Matt. 21:15)The children were crying “Hosanna to the Son of David.” (Matt. 21:15)             People were drawn to Jesus after His  “angry” outburst. Nobody pulled back like Mollie and Megan. The chief priests  and scribes allowed Him to continue teaching and healing in the temple, and then  reacted because of the response of others to Him. Could it be that rather than reacting in anger, Jesus was acting under  authority?  Was He also taking authority–authority which was rightfully  His as the Son of God? After questioning  Him, the chief priests allowed Him to teach because He was acting as One under  authority.     I’m grateful my relationship with my young friends  was not permanently damaged, and that they have continued to learn and grow. I  am especially grateful because I believe in this incident God’s purpose was for me to learn something.  Thanks to them, my eyes were opened 
    to see that I was angry more  often than I thought. I also saw how easily anger affects relationships. 
    My harshness came from defending my own authority, not from a motivation  to train in righteousness. I was seeking conformity to my way, not following  the leadership of God. While trying to make them come under authority, I was  out from under mine.     I still believe it is important to teach obedience, and that there needs  to be consequences for disobedience. However, I’m learning to do it under  authority so it will draw people to me—and to Jesus—rather than driving them  away. Related Links: Can God change your life?God has made it possible for you to know Him and experience an amazing change in your own life. 
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  Kay W. Camenisch has written a Bible study, Uprooting Anger: Destroying the Monster Within, to help believers overcome the bondage of anger (www.uprootinganger.com). She has been published in The Upper Room and The Lookout. Contemporary Drama has published one of her plays, and she is a regular contributor to a newspaper column. Kay is also a pastor’s wife, mother, and grandmother. She has worked closely in ministry with her husband, including in local churches, as missionaries in Brazil, working with a church school, training young adults to mentor troubled youth, and establishing and directing a ranch for troubled young men. Visit Kay's website
 
	
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