Offended=Skandalizo Stumbling block, snare (bent s4ck on which bait - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Offended=Skandalizo Stumbling block, snare (bent s4ck on which bait - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Offended=Skandalizo Stumbling block, snare (bent s4ck on which bait is fastened, animal strikes the s4ck and springs the trap) Anything that trips us up, causes us to spring the trap of anger. The anger of YOU not agreeing with


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“Offended”=Skandalizo

  • Stumbling block, snare (bent s4ck on

which bait is fastened, animal strikes the s4ck and springs the trap)

  • Anything that trips us up, causes us to

spring the trap of anger. The anger of YOU not agreeing with me.

  • Causes us to sin and poten4ally fall away.
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“Offended”=Skandalizo

  • In the NT, as in the OT, the issue in

skándalon (noun) is one’s rela4on to God. The skándalon is an obstacle to faith and hence a cause of falling and destruc4on. Theological Dic4onary of the N.T.

  • Jesus’ teaching was skandalon. Fall away

from faith. Or it can mean to “lead someone into sin so that they fall away.”

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Unoffendable: How just one change can make all of life beCer by Brant Hansen

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ForfeiHng our right to anger makes us deny

  • urselves, and makes us others-centered.

When we start living this way, it changes everything. Brant

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Actually, it’s not even ‘forfeiHng’ a right, because the right doesn’t exist. We’re told to forgive, and that means anger has to go, whether we’ve decided our own anger is ‘righteous’ or not. Brant

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Ma(hew 16:24 (ESV)

24 Then Jesus told his disciples, “If anyone

would come aUer me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me.”

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Following him will cost everything and give

  • everything. There are no half measures on this
  • journey. It’s going to be like learning to swim:

if you keep your foot on the boCom of the pool you’ll never work out how to do it. You have to lose your life to find it. What’s the use of keeping your feet on the boCom when the water gets too deep? You have the choice: swim or drown. Apparent safety, walking on the boCom, isn’t an opHon any longer. N.T. Wright

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Ma(hew 16:24 (ESV)

24 Then Jesus told his disciples, “If anyone

would come aUer me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me.”

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The thing that you think makes your anger ‘righteous’ is the very thing you are called to

  • forgive. Grace isn’t for the deserving.

Forgiving means surrendering your claim to resentment and leZng go of anger. Brant

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Colossians 3:12–13 (ESV)

12 Put on then, as God’s chosen ones, holy

and beloved, compassionate hearts, kindness, humility, meekness, and paHence,

13 bearing with one another and, if one has a

complaint against another, forgiving each

  • ther; as the Lord has forgiven you, so you

also must forgive.

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Forgiveness is the release, on the part of the creditor or offended party, of any expectaHon that a debt will be repaid or that an offender will receive punishment for an offense. When describing the removal of an inappropriate offense in this way, the removal does not condone the behavior or suggest approval for the offense. Lexham Theological Wordbook

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