In the English language, "mad" can be either angry or insane.
On July 8, 1741, 38-year-old Jonathon Edwards stood in the pulpit of the Congregational Church in Northampton, Massachusetts and preached what is now the best-known sermon in American History. Edwards was already well known as a preacher of aesthetic theology; he saw God’s love and purpose everywhere in the wonders of nature.
In the ancient, early days of Israel’s political formation, Young Jonathon got angry with his father Saul for treating his beloved friend David unfairly.
In his later years as king of Israel, David’s downfall seems to be that he can’t bring himself to get angry with his errant adult children as they begin to play havoc with each other’s lives and with the kingdom itself.
Jesus was angry with his community’s leaders when they stood by silently and let a man with a useless hand suffer instead of reaching out and helping him; when they were more worried about obeying the established “rules”. The man with the withered hand was more valuable to them as a chance to catch Jesus breaking a rule than he was as a potential productive member of society,
Jesus got mad enough at Peter to call him “satan” when Peter got after him for getting down to the heart of what was to come, the consequences f all this disturbing feeding, and healing, and teaching.
The wisdom book of Proverbs is full of advice about the virtues of patience and soft words, but the fact remains, people get mad.
“Inglorious Bastards,” one of the most critically acclaimed films playing, and a box office pleaser explores a devastating intersection of abusive institutional power and imagined angry response. It’s a “could-a, should-a, would-a” film.
WE don’t want to be angry, we know that anger, especially sustained anger, is unhealthy, one of the major stressors. WE don’t want others to be angry with us. But we now that the best way to “manage” anger induced stress is to resolve, not avoid, the anger. We carry unresolved anger, aware or unaware, forward in our lives. We know that the rate of sudden cardiac death increases when the population is collectively stressed, (CNN 2-24-09 citing Rachel Lampert). And we know that over 60% of the US poplulation reports being angry and irritable on a daily basis.
And a study published last spring by Rachel Lampert demonstrates a link between electrical signal disruptions induced by anger and arrhythmia in patients with existing heart conditions.
“Other studies have also shown that if you ask patients about what happened before a heart attack, they'll most frequently say they were angry, said Dr. Charles Raison, psychiatrist and director of the Mind/Body Institute at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia.” (CNN ibid)
And, as Jonathon Edwards embedded in our imaginations, the God who made us in God’s own image gets angry too. The worship book of the psalms lists the seven things that make God mad too. If anger really is wrong, what do we do with God’s wrath?
God’s anger is a response to our sin. Its not God’s character. It’s not who God IS. God is love. In the beginning it is love. In the end it is love. That love is resolved that each and all experience God’s care and is angered when we prevent it.
Injustice causes God’s heart to skip a beat.
Was it wrong to be angry in the aftermath of 9-11?
Is it wrong for a parent to be angry when they can’t access the same basic health care that their neighbor or boss or teacher or pastor’s family has?
Is it wrong for one of my colleagues to grow irritated when in one public dinner after another he is asked for more coffee, peas, pasta because he is a big black man?
Is it wrong for another to become angry when each time he moves to a new parsonage, police cars follow him home until well-placed parishioners call and ask them to stop? He is from the Caribbean.
Shouldn’t my Korean friend be angry when the bouncer at a bar tells him to go find when that likes “Chinamen?”
The seven deadly sins were listed, with the best of intentions, by the church in its early decades as an institutional power, the only remaining effective institutional power, during the chaos of the disintegrating Roman empire. “calm down, keep your head, work together,” were life saving words in that time.
And glimpse the results of our actions- in backlashes from imbalance of power, Uprisings, downfalls. The furious power of nature disturbed by careless stewardship of our physical resources..
Instead of fearfully trying to tip the cosmic scales in our favor, shouldn’t we be trying to both please God and become our best selves by eliminating the causes of righteous anger so that real love can flourish? Anger can be a wake-up call, and instrument.
Anger can sever us from God and others or anger can move us back into God's embrace, toward God's purpose.