People with good
sense restrain their anger; they earn esteem by overlooking wrongs. Prov. 19:11
NLT
Do you let your
anger explode or do you turn it inward?
I’ve learned that
neither method is wise.
Let anger explode,
and you wound others. Turn it inward, and you wound yourself.
As a mom, you play a powerful role in
teaching your children how to handle their anger. Even if you didn’t learn it well growing
up, you can learn how to handle anger with God’s help.
My husband’s
family was explosive—mine was more the simmering kind. When we were first
married, we thought our own ways were right. He saw nothing wrong with yelling;
I saw nothing wrong with stonewalling. Did we ever have lessons to learn,
especially when our children were born!
As a young mom, I
entered counseling for my past hurts. I started learning how turning my anger
inward led to seasons of depression.
I never learned how to safely and appropriately release my anger as a child,
and neither had my husband. Due to our dysfunctional backgrounds, we weren’t
set up to teach our children how to handle their anger.
I wanted our
children to learn how to handle their anger in appropriate ways. So, I turned
to the Bible and asked God to teach me about handling anger. These are the three
key lessons I learned, which I started passing on to our children.
1. Anger is not a sin.
God gave us anger
as a warning signal. Popular Christian radio host June
Hunt says that there are four roots to anger: hurt, fear, frustration, and injustice.
Anger is a signal to deal with those root problems. Ephesians
4:26 says “In your anger do not sin…”—note it doesn’t say “Don’t ever get
angry.”
When Jesus drove
the money changers out of the temple, Jesus displayed righteous anger over
injustice. He wasn’t sinning because he was holy, so his anger was appropriate.
There are times when our anger has a valid reason. It can motivate us to confront
the negative source. We need to ask ourselves if our anger is righteous and we
need to deal with the root issue right away without exploding or stuffing.
When my child
yells, screams insults, stomps, or slams doors in anger, I confront. I say,
“It’s OK to be angry, but it’s not OK to handle your anger like that. What’s
the best way to handle your anger?” They have learned to say, “Talk it out.” As
a family, we are learning to calmly and respectfully handle our anger and sort
out when it’s appropriate and when it’s not.
2. God is slow to get angry.
Since I began
reading my One Year Bible in 2002, I’ve read through the whole Bible many
times. I am always surprised at how many times God’s people disobeyed him in
the Old Testament, yet he waited a long, long time to get angry enough to
punish them.
He let them test
his patience many times when they wandered in the wilderness before they
entered the Promised Land. He let king after king disobey him and lead people
into idol worship before finally exiling the Israelites to Babylon.
If God, who is
without sin, can wait so long to get angry with his own people, what right do I
have to get angry at the smallest infraction? I no longer snap at my children
for every little thing, because I want to be slow to anger like God is.
When my children
are bickering, I constantly ask them, “Is this really worth getting upset
about?” They are learning that very few infractions are worth their anger. They
are gradually learning to overlook a myriad of wrongs (and so am I).
3. We can handle our anger with the power
of the Holy Spirit.
God wants us to
learn to control our anger. As the verse states, we must learn to restrain it.
We can’t do this on our own, but the Holy Spirit will help us exercise the
fruit of self-control when we are angry.
In our home, I’ve
taught our children to take these steps when they feel angry:
·
Take
deep breaths to calm down.
·
Literally
“bite” your tongue by holding it gently between your teeth so you can’t speak.
·
Count
to ten before speaking.
·
If you
feel like you’re going to explode, leave the room.
·
Take a
walk to burn off negative energy.
·
Say,
“I’m at my limit.”
·
Punch
your pillow or scream into it. (My counselor recommended this one!)
·
Don’t
use “You are” statements when discussing your anger. State how you feel
instead.
These are
practical ways to gain control over anger. We can also ask daily that the Holy
Spirit will help us practice self-control when angry and send up arrow prayers
for help in heated moments.
I want to be a mom who earns esteem with
God by appropriately handling my anger, and I’m sure you are too. Put these tips into play this week and
watch how God helps you handle your anger in new ways. Teach them to your
children to start a peace-filled revolution in the next generation.
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3 Truths to Teach Your Children About Anger
Have a wonderful weekend!
Blessings and God's peace to you,
Photo from Canva.com
Reflection questions:
1. What was the anger style in the home where you were raised?
2. What tip will you use to teach your children how to handle their anger?
I love the reminder that we are modeling the righteous management of anger for our kids, and I think I really failed in this when the kids were small, but also had the opportunity to model the right time to make apologies and to turn things around, so there's much to be grateful for even in this.
ReplyDeleteBlessings to you, Sarah!
You and your husband sound like my husband and me. Him: explosive. Me: bottled.
ReplyDeleteI love the point you made about anger itself not being sin. I think maybe the misconception around anger may contribute to some of our issues with it.
Love the tips too. Especially the tip to say how you feel instead of accusing.
Great post as always, Sarah.