INTRO
Recently
I read a little book called The Wisdom of the Desert Fathers.
It's full of stories about monks who lived in the desert during
the 3rd and 4th centuries. Most of them
are true stories and some are apocryphal. I'll let you decide
about this one:
There
was a monk who in his training was only allowed to say two
words per year. The first year he said: "Food bad." The second
year he said "Work hard." The third year he said, "I quit."
His superior replied, "All you do is complain, complain, complain."
At
New Hope we can be like that monk. We don't say much. You know,
we're trained to LISTEN and that's what we do. But when we talk
about our counseling experiences we're prone to complain about
the sour, stuck frequent callers and others who are take advantage
of us or are critical.
- "You
blankety-blank! (Click!)"
- "You're
not very caring! How long have you been a counselor?"
- "I
need you to tell me what to do. If I knew what to do
I wouldn't have called."
- "Don't
just mirror back what I say. I hate that!"
- "What
do you mean you need to go? I just started talking!"
How
do we respond to callers or chatters who react in anger toward
us?
We
pray!
TRIED
BY FIRE AT NEW HOPE
This
class is about learning to deal with difficult, angry callers/chatters
as Jesus would if he were us in our situation. If Jesus were
you with your personality and your life and he were answering
the incoming call at 714-NEW-HOPE or responding to a chat at
NewHopeNow.org and the person got angry how would he deal with
it?
Some
callers and chatters get angry with us just because they've
had a bad day. Others don't like our way of responding to them.
Stuck Frequent Callers/Chatters get angry with us when we set
time limits on the conversation. Abusive people get angry because
we said "Hello"! How would Jesus respond to these callers and
chatters?
He
wouldn't complain. He wouldn't let himself get burned out on
difficult people because he'd know he was needed. He'd treat
the difficulties as an opportunity to learn obedience through
suffering, as the writer to Hebrews pointed out in Hebrews 5:8.
JESUS' TEACHINGS ON ANGER
Let's go over Jesus' teachings on anger from
the Sermon on the Mount. There are three main issues he gets
into, each drilling down deeper into the problem of anger.
Don't let anger control you: "I tell
you that anyone who is angry with his brother will be subject
to judgment" (Matthew 5:22, NIV).
"You're familiar with the command to the ancients,
'Do not murder.' I'm telling you that anyone who is so much
as angry with a brother or sister is guilty of murder. Carelessly
call a brother 'idiot!' and you just might find yourself hauled
into court. Thoughtlessly yell 'stupid!' at a sister and you
are on the brink of hellfire. The simple moral fact is that
words kill.
"This is how I want you to conduct yourself
in these matters. If you enter your place of worship and, about
to make an offering, you suddenly remember a grudge a friend
has against you, abandon your offering, leave immediately, go
to this friend and make things right. Then and only then, come
back and work things out with God.
"Or say you're out on the street and an old
enemy accosts you. Don't lose a minute. Make the first move;
make things right with him. After all, if you leave the first
move to him, knowing his track record, you're likely to end
up in court, maybe even jail. If that happens, you won't get
out without a stiff fine" (Matthew 5:21-26, MSG).
Jesus is not saying that the emotion of anger
is sinful. He's saying that anger is dangerous - be careful!
Judge yourself: What am I angry about? Why am I angry? What
is an honest and loving way to deal with this? Seeking to resolve
the conflicts that anger you ASAP is so important that you may
need to interrupt a sacred ritual. Be the first to say "I'm
sorry" or to offer empathy and compassion. Of course, it's not
fair, but do it anyway because God does it for you.
Don't seek revenge when mistreated: "Love
your enemies, bless those who curse you, do good to those who
hate you, and pray for those who persecute you" (Matthew 5:44,
NIV).
"Here's another old saying that deserves a second
look: 'Eye for eye, tooth for tooth.' Is that going to get us
anywhere? Here's what I propose: 'Don't hit back at all.' If
someone strikes you, stand there and take it. If someone drags
you into court and sues for the shirt off your back, giftwrap
your best coat and make a present of it. And if someone takes
unfair advantage of you, use the occasion to practice the servant
life. No more tit-for-tat stuff. Live generously.
"You're familiar with the old written law, 'Love
your friend,' and its unwritten companion, 'Hate your enemy.'
I'm challenging that. I'm telling you to love your enemies.
Let them bring out the best in you, not the worst. When someone
gives you a hard time, respond with the energies of prayer,
for then you are working out of your true selves, your God-created
selves. This is what God does. He gives his best--the sun to
warm and the rain to nourish--to everyone, regardless: the good
and bad, the nice and nasty. If all you do is love the lovable,
do you expect a bonus? Anybody can do that. If you simply say
hello to those who greet you, do you expect a medal? Any run-of-the-mill
sinner does that.
"In a word, what I'm saying is, Grow up. You're
kingdom subjects. Now live like it. Live out your God-created
identity. Live generously and graciously toward others, the
way God lives toward you" (Matthew 5:38-48, MSG).
If we give in to angry feelings and justify
them the next thing we want to do is to act on them and get
even. Jesus' point here is don't seek revenge; God is gracious
with you so you be gracious to others. Treat conflict and injustice
as an opportunity to reveal the kindness of Christ.
Try to change yourself first, not others:
"Do not judge, or you too will be judged" (Matthew 7:1,
NIV).
"Don't pick on people, jump on their failures,
criticize their faults--unless, of course, you want the same
treatment. That critical spirit has a way of boomeranging. It's
easy to see a smudge on your neighbor's face and be oblivious
to the ugly sneer on your own. Do you have the nerve to say,
'Let me wash your face for you,' when your own face is distorted
by contempt? It's this whole traveling road-show mentality all
over again, playing a holier-than-thou part instead of just
living your part. Wipe that ugly sneer off your own face, and
you might be fit to offer a washcloth to your neighbor" (Matthew
7:1-5, MSG).
EXAMPLES OF JESUS RESPONDING TO THE PHARISEES'
ANGER
Let's look at how Jesus applied his own teachings
to the way he dealt with religious leader's criticisms, manipulations,
attacks, and abuse.
- They
judged him for letting a prostitute sit at his feet crying,
washing his feet with her tears and anointing them with perfume.
Jesus told them a story that honored the woman for
showing much love because she'd received much forgivenss and
confronted the Pharisees for showing little love because they'd
received little forgiveness (Luke 7:36-50).
- They
criticized Jesus and his disciples for picking heads of grain
on the Sabbath. Jesus asked them if they'd read the
Scriptures that demonstrate that the Sabbath is about God's
mercy, not sacrifice (Matthew 12:1-8).
- They
plotted to kill him after he healed a man with shriveled hand
on the Sabbath so he withdrew (Matthew 12:9-15).
- They
accused him of being in league with the devil after he delivered
a possessed man. Jesus calmly explained that their
was a war between the Kingdom of God verses the kingdom of
Satan, good verses evil, he and his followers versus them
(Matthew 12:22-37).
- They
judged his disciples for breaking the traditions of the elders.
Jesus asked them why they break the command of God
for the sake of their traditions and gave them examples (Matthew
15:1-9).
- They
pressured him to show them a sign from heaven to prove himself.
He told them they were missing the signs right in front of
them. He said their request was evil and the only sign they'd
get was that of Jonah. Then he walked away (Matthew
16:1-4).
- They
tried to trap him into contradicting the law or his message
of love by bringing him a woman caught in adultery and asking
permission to stone her according to the law of Moses. Amazingly,
Jesus affirmed law and grace by inviting whoever was
without sin to throw the first stone. They all walked away
confronted by their sins and Jesus released the woman (John
8:1-11).
- They
picked up stones to stone Jesus when he proclaimed, "I and
the Father are one." He confronted them for wanting to stone
him when he'd done so many wonderful miracles. When they came
after him he escaped (John 10:22-42).
- They
slandered him for accepting and eating with sinners and so
he told them parables that highlighted God's grace
for the lost (Luke 15).
- They
badgered him on the issue of divorce: "Is it lawful for a
man to divorce his wife for any and every reason?" Jesus reminded
them of the sacredness of God's original plan for oneness
in marriage and then confronted them for mistreating women
(Matthew 19:1-9).
- They
raged at him after he drove the conniving merchants out of
the temple and healed the blind and lame and blessed the children.
Jesus replied simply, "Have you never read, 'From the
lips of children and infants [God has] ordained praise'?"
Then he walked away (Matthew 21:12-17).
- They
challenged him by asking, "By what authority are you doing
these things?" Jesus said he'd answer their question after
they answered his question about whether John's baptism
came from heaven or men. They refused to answer because Jesus
caught them in their own trap. If they said John who pointed
to Jesus was from men then the people would be mad at them,
but if they admitted that John was sent by God then they were
admitting that Jesus was too. So Jesus didn't answer them
(Matthew 21:23-27).
- They
tried to get him in trouble with the Romans by asking them
if it's right to pay taxes to Caesar. The people hated the
taxation without representation and the Romans enforced their
tax. Jesus confronted them for trying to trap him and then
wiggled out of the trap: "Give to Caesar what is Caesar's
(the tax) and give to God what is God's (the heart)" (Matthew
22:15-22).
- They
asked him difficult questions about the resurrection, greatest
commandment, and the Messiah and his answers left them
silent and pondering (Matthew 22:23-46).
- They
sent a crowd armed with swords and clubs to arrest him. Jesus
walked up to them and said, "I am he" and they all
fell back to the ground. Peter struck a soldier with his sword,
cutting off his ear. Jesus healed the soldier's ear,
commanded his disciples to put away their swords, let them
arrest him, and confronted their unfounded and improper
attack (Matthew 26:47-56, John 18:1-11).
- They
questioned Jesus in an illegal trial, spit in his face, punched
him, slapped him, and mocked him as a helpless prophet. Jesus
silently accepted their mistreatment. Then he calmly
confronted them for ganging up on him secretly and for
abusing him when he did nothing wrong (Matthew 26:57-67, John
18:19-24).
- They
watched him being crucified and he said, "Father, forgive
them, for they do not know what they are doing." They sneered
at him, "He saved others; let him save himself if he is the
Christ." He prayed, "Father, into your hands I commit
my spirit." (Luke 23:33-46).
CAN
WE RESPOND TO ANGRY PEOPLE AS JESUS DID?
What
do you notice in the way Jesus responded to anger, judgment,
and abuse from the Pharisees?
Jesus'
response to aggression is revolutionary. It's so wise,
so beautiful, so strong, and so different from what it normally
done. In tense and angry situations, when he's being judged,
baited, or hit look at how he responds. He tells a story, asks
a question, calmly explains, heals people, wiggles out of traps,
walks away, prays, or silently accepts the mistreatment. In
all cases he holds his ground, de-escalates the conflict, and
speaks the truth in love.
What's
he doing? He's practicing what he preached! "Make the first
move to resolve a conflict. Turn the other cheek. Bless those
who curse you. Pray for your enemies. Take the log out of your
own eye before you remove the speck in another's eye."
Do
you want to live that way? You might be afraid to face
life and people and conflicts without aggression. Most people
don't want to handle anger in the way that Jesus is teaching
here. It doesn't feel safe. It doesn't seem right. Sometimes
we just need to fight back, don't we?
Some
of us do want to be like Jesus and so we try. But when we're
mistreated we lose our temper, get emotionally beat up, or become
tongue-tied. Is it even possible for us to live these teachings
of Jesus? Afterall, Jesus was the Son of God and we're just
human beings.
If
we understand teachings like "Bless those who curse you" as
a legalism - a standard we have to measure up to by trying hard
- then the answer is no, it's not possible. This was the approach
the Pharisees took. They mustered up all their moral muscle
to keep the law. They were religious perfectionists, devoted
legalists. But they failed to live the law because their hearts
were wrong. God's law wasn't in their hearts. They didn't rely
on his strength; they didn't depend on him to make them righteous
people on the inside.
An
Example
Let
me share with you a simple, concrete example from my life. Some
of you have heard me share part of this before. A number of
months I go I started trying to implement the teachings of Jesus
in how I drive. This might seem like a trivial thing, but it's
something I do everyday and it gives me a specific situation
to practice trusting Jesus to transform me. Besides when I'm
driving I'm praying anyway. For me, driving to and from work
is an opportunity either for silence and solitude or for listening
to Christian teaching tape.
My
temptation in the car has been to use the power of my engine
to race ahead and to assert my rights that people not cut in
front of me. And when people do cut me off or ride my bumper
or do something else rude my typical response was to get irritated
and perhaps angry. You know how it goes: "You're not going to
get ahead of me!... No, you can't squeeze in there - I'll make
sure of it!... That was rude and dangerous! What a jerk. Oh,
you cut me off. That's not right. I'll show you and I'll get
ahead and cut you off."
Do
Jesus' teachings apply here? "Turn the other cheek. If someone
asks for your shirt give him your coat. Bless those who curse
you and pray for those who persecute you." Yes, they do. Through
prayer and trusting Jesus I can respond differently: "Don't
get mad, Bill. Look to Jesus. Let the person cut in. Smile.
Pray for him, he might be having a hard day. 'Yes, Lord I pray
that you would keep him safe for his family and help him to
rest in your love and to honor the name of Jesus."
Could
we do the same thing with an angry, stuck frequent caller/chatter?
Would you? Would you dare to take this situation that
you have to deal with on every New Hope as a training opportunity
to become more like Jesus?
JESUS
IS TEACHING US SPIRITUAL MARTIAL ARTS
It's
critical that we understand that "Bless those who curse you"
and all the other teachings of Jesus are not pieces of legalism.
They're teachings. All of Jesus' teachings about conflict have
to do with the fact that if you go Jesus' route you upset the
dynamics of the situation. If someone curses you and you curse
him back then he knows exactly what to do. But if you bless
him then he doesn't know what to do. Jesus is teaching us a
kind of spiritual martial arts for those who put their faith
in him and live within the dynamics of the invisible Kingdom
of the Heavens.
Martial
arts is about more than physical techniques for self-defense.
True, martial artists develop physical strength and learn skills
for disarming and restraining others. They learn to fight and
even become able to inflict serious harm on another person.
But true Martial Artists do not want to injure others. They
want to perfect their own character and their way of reacting
to life situations. Through disciplined training from a master
then learn things like focus, timing, balance, composure, self-control,
responsibility, and respect. Experts in martial arts develop
mastery over their bodies and minds and are prepared when conflicts
or dangers arise.
I
want to show you a clip from the move, "Karate Kid." I
saw this movie when it came out in 1984 and I watched it again
recently. How many of you have seen it?
In
the movie a fatherless teenager named Daniel has moved to Los
Angeles from the East Coat and faces the challenge of making
new friends in a different culture. He strikes up a relationship
with a pretty blonde girl. Unfortunately for him, she recently
broke up with mean kid who is part of the Cobras, a menacing
gang of karate students who use karate, not for self-defense
but to hurt others. The Cobras bully and beat up on Daniel mercilessly.
Daniel
learns that the handyman at his apartment complex is a master
of the martial arts and so to get even and to impress his girlfriend
Daniel asks Mr. Miyagi to teach him karate.
Miyagi
agrees under one condition: Daniel must submit totally to his
instruction and never question his methods. Daniel shows up
the next day eager to learn. To his chagrin, Mister Miyagi has
him paint a fence. Miyagi demonstrates the precise motion for
the job: up and down, up and down. Daniel takes days of strenuous,
monotonous work to finish the job. Daniel wonders, "What does
this have to do with karate?" But he says nothing. Then Miyagi
has Daniel scrub a huge deck, wax three old weather-beaten cars,
and paint the entire house. Each job has precise motions and
requires concentration and endurance. Each job takes days and
leaves Daniel exhausted in sore. Finally, Daniel reaches his
limit of working so hard to do Mr. Miyagi's chores that have
nothing to do with karate!
Daniel
blows up at Mr. Miyagi: "I thought you were going to teach me
karate, but all you have done is have me do your unwanted chores!"
Daniel broke Miyagi's one condition of unquestioned obedience.
The old man's face pulses red with anger, "I have been teaching
you karate! Defend yourself!" Miyagi thrusts his arm at Daniel,
who instinctively defends himself with an arm motion exactly
like that used in one of his chores. Miyagi unleashes a vicious
kick, and again Daniel averts the blow with a motion used in
his chores. After Daniel successfully defends himself from several
more blows, Miyagi simply walks away, leaving Daniel to discover
what the master had known all along: skill comes from repeating
the correct but seemingly mundane actions.
Through
participating in Miyagi's rigorous training program Daniel become
a Karate champion. The mastery over his mind and body that he
gains, along with the respect for others (fighting is always
the last answer to a problem) enables him to deal with life
better. Daniel develops the physical and mental skills to stand
up to the bullies and to do so in an honorable way.
This
is like what we learn from Jesus and it's also the way that
we learn from Jesus. You can learn to deal with criticism, conflict,
and mistreatment if you go into training with Jesus. Become
his disciple or apprentice by learning to obey what he teaches.
This doesn't mean imitating Jesus' behavior - it means
internalizing Jesus' Spirit. You become like Jesus in
your heart by relying on his power.
Daniel
couldn't become a karate master by watching Miyagi and then
doing the amazing feats of strength and skill. Neither can we
obey Jesus' teachings on anger (or anything else for that matter)
simply by watching him respond to the Pharisees' attacks and
then trying to imitate him. We need to train with Jesus in ways
that change us from the inside out. "Don't try. Train." Is the
succinct way Dallas Willard describes it. More than learning
new behaviors we need to become a different kind of person:
- aware
of danger, not idealizing
- peaceable,
not angry
- assertive,
not aggressive
- self-controlled,
not impulsive
- confident
in God's power in us, not afraid
- secure
in God's acceptance, not ashamed
- relying
emotionally on God and Christ's Ambassadors, not on unsafe
people
- willing
to look foolish for Jesus' sake, not wanting to impress
As
with Daniel, our training for responding to angry people must
be done prior to the conflict or crisis. We need to be
disciplined and persistent in our preparations.
What
does the training program for dealing with conflict look like?
You're in it! It's studying in New Hope continuing education
classes. If you want it I'm here to be your karate mentor! Let
me elaborate:
A
SPIRITUAL MARTIAL ARTS TRAINING PROGRAM
- Ask
for what you need: "Ask and you will receive, and your
joy will be complete" (John 16:24, NIV). To be of help to
others we need to be getting our needs met by God and the
Body of Christ. This way we can give out of fullness and not
out of compulsion or emptiness.
- "Forgive
as the Lord forgave you" (Colossians 3:13b, NIV): Work
through repressed anger. If you have unresolved anger over
past hurts or disappointments and someone gets angry at you
look out! This is an example of someone "pushing your button."
- Strengthen
your Boundaries: You can't really say yes if you can't
say no. To strengthen your boundaries means to increase self-awareness,
establish self-identity, admit limitations, and exercise your
"no" muscle.
"Simply let your 'Yes' be 'Yes,' and your 'No,' 'No'"
(Matthew 5:37a, NIV).
- Practice
the "Think-Feel-Do Triangle": Think and feel through what
happens before you speak or act. (Triangle: Think <->
Feel -> Say/Do)
"O LORD, you have searched me and you know me. Search me,
O God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious
thoughts. See if there is any offensive way
in me, and lead me in the way everlasting" (Psalm 139:1, 23-24,
NIV).
-
Practice
self-denial: Self-denial is not self-negation
nor is it self-shaming. To practice self-denial you
need to have a sense of self or soulfulness that you're
aware of and see the value of. When you have "self" then
you can deny what you want in order to love God and others.
"Then he said to them all: 'If anyone would come after me,
he must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow
me. For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but
whoever loses his life for me will save it. What good is
it for a man to gain the whole world, and yet lose or forfeit
his very self?'" (Luke 9:23-25).
There
are many spiritual disciplines that are ways to practice
self-denial:
Fasting:
going without food or some pleasure for a period of time
-
Silence: listening to others, not defending or promoting
your self or otherwise managing what others think about
you
- Secrecy:
not telling others of your achievements
- Service:
put the welfare of others ahead of your own. Take the position
of the last, lowest, and least. Let others be first, highest,
and best.
- Abandon
outcomes to God: Don't try to control how situations
go for you or what people think. Trust that the Lord is
sovereign and that he is working all things for your good
(Romans 8:28).
- "Do
not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer
and petition present your requests to God and the peace of
God which passes all understanding will guard your hearts
and minds in Christ Jesus" (Philippians 4:6-7, NIV). Anxiety
is a control problem of trying to manage the outcomes of dreams,
projects, people, situations. It's usurping the Lord's Sovereignty;
it's lack of trust.
At New Hope it means accepting that the calls/chats you get
are meant for you. This means you have the care that is needed
for the caller/chatter and it means that this call/chat
is the learning opportunity that God wanted for you, to help
you to grow to be more like Jesus.
- Anticipate
and welcome trials as growth opportunities
"Consider it pure joy, my brothers, whenever you face trials
of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith
develops perseverance. Perseverance must finish its work so
that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.
If any of you lacks wisdom, he should ask God, who gives generously
to all without finding fault, and it will be given to him.
But when he asks, he must believe" (James 1:2-6a, NIV).
-
Practice being Assertive (Instead of Being Passive or Aggressive)
"Speak the truth in love. In your anger do not sin" is Paul's
wise counsel in Ephesians 4:15, 26, NIV). This is being assertive.
Jesus was very, very assertive. Even in becoming our sacrificial
lamb and embracing the cross he was strong and confronted
people with love.
Passive: Going into the "depressive position," internalizing
anger and feeling bad about yourself. Victim role: "I'm bad."
Implosion.
Aggressive: Reacting in anger, fighting back, or seeking revenge.
Abuser role: "You're bad." Explosion.
Assertive: Not imploding or exploding, but responding (think
and feel before say or do). "I matter and you matter.
I care about you and me." (Avoid the extremes of the teeter
totter: Passive - Assertive - Aggressive).
- Appeal
to "the light of Christ" in others
As I read earlier, Jesus said that we're to love our enemies
and pray for those who persecute us because our Heavenly Father
causes the sun to rise not just for good people, but also
for the evil (Matthew 5:44-45).
Years ago George Fox practiced this. He was the founder of
the Quaker movement. His teachings to his followers were very
profound. They were persecuted and often killed in England.
He taught his people to address that of Christ in every man.
So when someone is attacking you then you address that of
Christ in him. That doesn't mean that all people have trusted
in Christ for salvation. He is simply referring to the fact
Jesus Christ is the one that lights every human being. There
is in every human being a sense of God.
Dr. Schuller says he never wants to offend the image of God
in others. This is a different way of saying what George Fox
taught. In our New Hope situation and in your life when you
are caught in a conflict remember that the other person is
not totally unconnected with God. God is bearing a witness
in that person. Appeal to that - not to the power of
your fist to strike back!
- Learn
to accept persecution but not abuse
This is a very important clarification! I don't want you to
think that I'm throwing you out at sea in shark infested waters!
Peter teaches us that some suffering is according to God's
will and some is not (1 Peter 4:19), some is persecution that
brings honor to the name of Jesus and some is evil that promotes
sin (1 Peter 4:14-16). If a caller is abusive you need to
stand up to it in the love of Jesus. Love is a power.
For instance:
-
If a caller/chatter is raging or swearing at you then you
can calmly and firmly say, "It's not okay for to talk to
me that way."
- If
a caller/chatter keeps talking even after you've said you
need to wind down the conversation then offer empathic words
and reinforce your limit. You might say, "I understand you
have more you want to say but I do need to say good bye.
Would you like me to pray for you first?"
- If
you're able to "speak the truth in love" (Ephesians 4:15)
and not go into a posture of shame or being frozen by fear
then you are enduring persecution for Christ's sake. You're
representing his gospel as a Christian volunteer with New
Hope and you're embracing an opportunity to grow to be more
like Jesus (1 Peter 4:12-13).
- If
you're not strong enough internally to deal with a certain
instance of abuse or if doing so would harm you or the other
person then do what Jesus did so often - walk away.
- Do
all these things prayerfully and with the support of a spiritual
friend. Jesus said that when two or three of us gather
to pray in his name that he is there with us (Matthew 18:20).
There is power in praying together, in supporting one another
as apprentices of Jesus.