The Warning Against Anger
Ephesians 4:26
Be you angry, and sin not: let not the sun go down on your wrath:


We ought to mind this warning against anger, because if we give way to angry feelings, it will have a bad effect upon us in three ways.

I. IF WE GIVE WAY TO ANGER, IT WILL INTERFERE WITH OUR COMFORT. An angry man can never feel comfortable. Anger in our hearts or minds is just like a storm at sea. That storm, while it lasts, disturbs everything. As long as that storm continues it interferes, most seriously, with the comfort of all on board the vessel, which is exposed to it. Most of the passengers will be made seasick, and be obliged to go to bed, and their comfort will be wonderfully interfered with while that storm lasts. And just as a storm at sea acts on a vessel that is exposed to it, so anger acts on the soul where its influence is felt. It upsets and disturbs all our thoughts and feelings, and interferes entirely with our comfort.

II. THE SECOND REASON FOR MINDING THIS WARNING AGAINST ANGER IS BECAUSE IT WILL INTERFERE WITH OUR DUTY. Suppose I should wake up some morning, and on looking at my watch to see what time it was, should find that it had stopped, and was keeping time no longer. The mainspring is not broken. It was not run down, for I wound it up last night before I went to bed. But still the watch has stopped. It will not keep time. I cannot tell what is the matter with it. After breakfast I take it to the watchmaker, and ask him to examine it, and find out what the trouble is. He opens the watch, and putting on one of his magnifying glasses, he looks carefully into it. Presently he lays it down, and says, "I see what the trouble is. A little grain of sand has got in among the works, some how or other, and that interferes with the working of the watch and makes it stop." Then he goes to work and removes that grain of sand, and after this is done the watch goes on keeping time as usual. Now, our souls are like watches in some respects. Our thoughts, and feelings, and desires are very much like the wheels, or works of a watch. While our feelings and tempers are all right, the wheels will go on, and the watch will keep good time. But, if we give way to a wrong feeling or temper, like anger, it will be like the grain of sand in the works of the watch. It will stop them from going on, and the watch will not be able to keep time. When George IV was King of England he desired one day to receive the sacrament of the Lord's Supper, and he sent for the Bishop of Winchester to come and administer it to him. The messenger who was sent on this errand was very slow in his movements, and loitered along the way. This caused a long delay before the arrival of the bishop, and the king got very impatient about it. When the bishop came he stated that he started immediately on getting the message, but that the servant had been very slow in coming to him. This made the king angry. He rang the bell and called for the messenger. When he entered the room the king reproved him very sharply, dismissed him from his service, and told him to leave the palace at once. As soon as he was gone the king turned to the bishop, and said, "Now, my lord, we will go on with our service." But the bishop, with great mildness, and yet very firmly, said, "Please your majesty, I cannot do that. The temper just displayed is not a fit preparation for this solemn service." The king saw that he had done wrong, and made a suitable apology to the bishop. Then he sent for his servant, asked his pardon for speaking so angrily to him, and told him, in the pleasantest possible way, that he should keep his position in the king's employ.

III. AND THE THIRD REASON FOR MINDING THIS WARNING AGAINST ANGER IS, THAT IT WILL INTERFERE WITH OUR SAFETY. If we do what we know is wrong; if we let the sun go down upon our wrath, and give way to anger, then we are doing that which will interfere with our safety. Our shield and armour will be taken away, and we shall be exposed to all sorts of dangers.

(Dr. Newton.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: Be ye angry, and sin not: let not the sun go down upon your wrath:

WEB: "Be angry, and don't sin." Don't let the sun go down on your wrath,




The Folly of Meeting Anger with Anger
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