BibleProject - God's Hot Nose – Character of God E6
Episode Date: September 21, 2020In Exodus 34, God describes himself as “slow to anger,” but many people are uncomfortable with the portrait of God as an angry or emotional being. How does the Bible talk about anger, and how does... this help us understand God as slow to anger?View full show notes from this episode →Timestamps Part one (0:00–13:50)Part two (13:50–20:50)Part three (20:50–31:50)Part four (31:50–40:50)Part five (40:50–52:30)Part six (52:30–end)Additional ResourcesTristen Collins, L.P.C. and Jon Collins, Why Emotions MatterAbraham Heschel, The ProphetsShow Music Movement Piano: Copyright Free“According to God” by Beautiful EulogySoft Dreamy Guitar: Copyright Free“After the Crash” by SavFK“A New Year” by Scott BuckleyShow produced by Dan Gummel and Camden McAfee. Powered and distributed by Simplecast.
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Here's the episode.
This is John at Bible Project, and today on the podcast, we're going to continue
a series walking through the character of God.
There are two verses in Exodus 34, verses 6 and 7,
where God proclaims about Himself, five attributes,
five characteristics that are fundamental to who the God of the Bible is.
First, too, we discussed in the last two episodes
that God is compassionate, that is, He cares for us like a mother cares for a child,
and secondly, that God is gracious.
That is that He sees in us and humanity
something that's valuable and worth showing favor to
even though we often prove the opposite.
These first two characteristics are kind of nice
and they give me warm fuzzies.
Many people in our culture have a default belief
that if they believe in God,
they either want to believe or just do believe that he's charitable and generous and good.
That he has pathos in that way.
Many people resonate with, there's a being, an energy permeating that's compassionate and gracious.
And what that's describing is a being with Pato's, who's moved.
The third attribute, the one right at the center of the five, is a bit different.
God proclaims about himself that he is slow to anger.
And actually, that isn't really an attribute.
I think it's in the center because it's the only one that isn't positive as such.
Or you could say it's stating a secondary, it's addressing something about God,
about how God responds.
The anger is not a basic attribute of God.
It's a responsive pattern of God's behavior, in response to evil.
But X is 34.6 can bring it around and say, but slow to anger, that's what's core to God's behavior in response to evil. But X is 34-6 can bring it around and say, but slow to anger?
That's what's core to God's character.
Slow to anger.
Which means that when he gets angry, it's measured, it's strategic, it's for a certain
reason.
But why an angry God at all?
I mean, angry people are scary. Angry people aren't fun to be around.
Angry people cause problems, right?
What anger means to us is different
and what anger meant to ancient Israelites.
The associations with anger, the way that we even talk about anger
now is different than how our grandparents would have talked about anger.
A person who's truly good will get angry sometimes. If you're familiar with anger, The way that we even talk about anger now is different than how our grandparents would have talked about anger.
A person who's truly good will get angry sometimes.
If you're familiar with the Bible, you'll know there are loads of stories and poems about God being angry.
And not just, you know, a little frustrated. We're talking lights out, hit the mat, you're done kind of angry.
And today we're gonna look at many of those passages.
I'm gonna just call this the problem of God's wrath
for modern readers of the Bible.
There are some narratives where God gets angry
and then he acts in some way that's terrifying.
And if you start to stack up these stories
and take them out of context
you can end up with the pretty distorted portrait of God.
Because what the God of the Bible wants us to see about him is that yes he gets
angry at evil and violence and human suffering but what's core about his
character is how he responds and that is with patience and with foresight
that God is slow to anger.
Thanks for joining us.
Here we go.
Well, hello.
Today, I have the pleasure, once again,
to talk with two Bible scholars,
like usual, Tim Mackey, how you doing today?
It's a good day.
Yeah, it's a good sunny day. And also, Chris Aquinn. Hi, Chris Mackey, how you doing today? It's a good day. Yeah, it's a good sunny day.
And also, Chris Aquin.
Hi, Chris.
Hey, guys.
We've been together talking through five attributes of God
that God describes Himself with.
And they come from a narrative in Exodus chapter 34
where God is talking with Moses on top of Mount Sinai.
And we've talked in depth about the context for these verses
and we jumped into two of the five attributes
and today the third attribute, Tim, which is...
Yes, in Hebrew, it's pronounced edicapiam
and it's translated into English traditionally
as slow to anger.
Those were gonna see the actual Hebrew figure of speech used
is really fascinating. And it, well, it means slow to anger, but it doesn't say slow to anger in
Hebrew. You know, these five character traits of God in Exodus 346 are arranged in a little
symmetrical mirror design. So the first two are a pair. We've talked about those
compassionate and gracious. And then the last two are a pair, full of loyal love and faithfulness.
And so those two pairs surround one character trait in the center that consists of two
words, then it's low to anger. How important is that? This is a chiasm and that slow to anger is in the middle. Oh, well, it's cool.
Yeah, the good.
Because it just means, you know,
it reflects intentional design of the communication.
It is interesting that the first two compassionate gracious
are conceptual pair as well,
addressing an emotional response
and being deeply moved and then graciously being generous.
Loyal love is an important pair with faithfulness
because they have to do with loyalty and reliability.
And then this center one here,
I think it's in the center because it's the only one
that isn't positive as such.
Or you could say it's stating a secondary, it's addressing something about God,
about how God responds. I'll say it this way. In the four character traits, God just is compassionate,
gracious, loyal, and faithful. But he does sometimes get angry. And that is a reaction of God.
It's not a part of his nature. It's something he reacts to. And so the fact that
he has to be slow to anger marks it as kind of different than the others. That's all,
I don't know, that's how I've thought about it in the past. I don't know if you guys have
any thoughts about that. That makes sense to me that anger isn't an attribute of God. It's
a reaction. A reaction has a negative connotation too, but it's a response at times, but compassionate, gracious, full
of loyal love and faithfulness. Those are maybe more how we think of attributes of a
person or of God. Although in the Hebrew, and I know you'll talk about this, it's not
stated as a negative necessarily.
So it leads, there's something unique about this one that is a bit different than the
others. I wonder too if it's at the center because of the surrounding narrative. Maybe it's a main point
in what's happening with Moses and the people more than the, I mean, the other words are really
significant too in the narrative, but maybe Slow to Anger really defines that God is deciding to
hold back his response of anger in this moment.
Because the context of this narrative is that while God is working with Moses to secure
this covenant, what would you call it?
It's just a covenant partnership, covenant agreement.
The remainder of this reliance are abandoning it, breaking the first of the 10 commandments,
creating an idol.
And if anything's going to make God a bit angry, that would be one thing.
And so that's what you're saying, Chris says that the context here is,
God is justified to be angry, but right in the center of all these attributes,
He points out that He's actually slow to anger.
Yeah. So why God gets angry? What it means to even say that God gets angry,
these are things that we will talk about.
But first, let's at least just note
that translation, slow to anger,
is a modern English translation.
400 years ago, when King James of England commissioned
the making of the King James translation,
those scholars of older English translated it long suffering,
one word, long suffering.
It's a long word.
It's all, you know, my kids are both, you know,
learning to read.
They're in the early years of learning to read.
And so, as I sit and read with them,
or have them read to me,
I'm beginning to remember what it looked,
what it felt like to look at really long words,
because I don't think about it anymore.
And when I see it through their eyes
and watch them try and to pronounce it,
there's so many letters and long suffering. Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha and 12, 13 letters. I kind of like that word as opposed to slow to anger.
I think maybe because if you really think about it,
it captures some of the grief of God
involved in whatever it is that's making him angry.
He suffers for a long time.
Yes.
Before responding.
I kind of like that.
Yeah.
Yeah, if you think about the reason why we get angry,
it's typically, I mean, I think,
it's typically because we have an expectation about what's right and wrong in the world,
and that someone breaks that expectation, and then we suffer because of it.
And we feel like things are worse because of it.
So this idea of long suffering is interesting
because while you're suffering,
you're not getting angry or you're not lashing out
you're being patient, even though you're being
your under-offense.
Yeah, you're suffering the loss of an ideal,
you're suffering disappointed hope.
Right.
You carry it a long time before anyone would know.
Ha, ha, ha. Which isn't necessarily a good thing for humans. Right. You carry it a long time before anyone would know. Which isn't
necessarily a good thing for humans. Yeah. Right. You bury your anger and it just turns into
a not in your stomach. Actually, so here, let me put a pin in this. We'll come back to this
in just a little bit about our vocabulary of anger in our world today. First though, let's take a dive into the Hebrew vocabulary
of anger because it's really interesting.
So first I'll just state an interesting thing.
I remember this when I first read this
and was learning Hebrew.
The Hebrew phrase, slow to anger, in Hebrew,
it's addric, a pym, it's two words,
just like long suffering, two words.
And as two words combined into a figure of speech, the first word adic means long.
That's why long suffering is pretty good, because the first word means long.
The simple word long, it can be used of an eagle's wing, you would say it's a long of wing
in Ezekiel 17, that eagle's long of wing. If somebody lives's a long of wing in Ezekiel 17. That Ego's long of wing.
If somebody lives for a long time,
you would say they live for long of days.
Eric of days?
Eric of days, yep.
So that's long.
So it could be physical, physical length, or a time.
Physical time. Many things can be long.
Literally long in the case of Ego's wings,
metaphorically long in the case of days. Days aren't actually long, but they can be long. Literally long in the case of Eagle's wings, metaphorically long in the case of days.
Days aren't actually long, but they can feel long. And so, you use the spatial image of long to talk about time.
So, first, the second word is, apyam, and it's the Hebrew word for nostrils.
Erika, apyam.
That makes perfect sense.
It's so surprising, isn't it?
It's holy. Yeah. Long of nostrils. isn't it? It's only, yeah.
Long of nostrils.
Long of nostrils.
Long of nostrils.
Yeah.
I don't think that's when we can bring back.
No.
Long nostrils just doesn't sound beautiful like long suffering.
That's...
What's interesting, a pie-m, it's actually the word nose.
Ah, Hebrew has a way to make a noun in the singular, car, like car.
It has a way to put nouns into plural, just like we do in English with word S, cars.
But then in Hebrew, uniquely, there's a way to indicate two of something.
Just two, not three or four, then you would use the plural, but just two of something.
And that's the word being used here, long of two noses.
Two nostrils?
Well, so the word, the singular word off is just nose.
It's the word nose.
And then a piem means two noses, meaning nostrils.
The Hebrew way you say nostrils is two noses.
Really?
So, wait, so what's the word for nose in Hebrew?
Off. Off. And I am. I am is the dual ending. Okay, a couple noses. All right, we've got two
noses. Long of two noses. Long of two noses. Long of nostrils. Yeah. How on earth? I mean, we have
lots of figures of speech that are like this. Yeah, totally. We got weird figures of speech.
Where you look at it and you're like,
how does that mean that?
I get it.
Here's a list I found knock on wood under the weather.
Rule of thumb out on a limb.
Break a leg.
Yep.
Yeah, that one's real weird.
Break a leg.
That's a theater one.
I think what it means is that there's a,
there's something called a leg behind the backstage, and that if the
audience kind of demands you to come back out, you've got to break that leg, and then the
curtains will open up again or something.
Okay, it's like we need the backstory to Erica Pine.
Totally, Erica Pine.
Erica Pine.
Long of double news.
Okay, so you guys ready to take a dive into Hebrew vocabulary about hot
anger. Yes. Where did hot anger come from? You're gonna learn in just a second. Okay. Okay, so we've got long of two not long of nostrils.
This is related to another figure of speech in Hebrew.
The most standard common way in biblical Hebrew, you say that somebody gets angry is to say
that his nose burned hot.
That's the standard biblical Hebrew phrase.
His nose burned hot.
His nose burned with heat.
So a couple examples.
First Samuel 17.
This is David and Goliath's story.
Come on, David and Goliath.
Classic.
Classic.
David is coming with a bunch of food from his dad
to bring to his brothers who were at the front line of the battle.
You know, his brothers here at Goliath making fun of them every day and this kind of thing.
And so David comes and he's trying to like peek through the line to see Goliath
and like hear what Goliath is saying.
And his older brother, Eliov, heard when David was there trying to talk to people in the battle line
and Eliov's nose burned hot against David and said, heard when David was there trying to talk to people in the battle line and
Elias knows burned hot against David and said why have you come down here? Why did you leave your sheep back in the wilderness? His nose burned.
His nose burned. Yep, there you go. That happens with brothers a lot.
Their nose is burned against each other or sisters. Yep. I think in English we associate anger with heat
against each other or sisters. Yep. I think in English we associate anger with heat,
too, or with like being red-faced or with seeing red.
Totally. I've never isolated it in my nose though.
Yeah, right.
Yeah. Isn't that interesting?
Yeah, you think of somebody's cheeks getting red?
Usually they're cheeks,
fire in your belly.
Yeah.
So this is a figure of speech that comes from
the physiological feeling of getting
revved up and emotionally angry. I'm just a picturing like a looney tunes character with like
steam coming out of their nose. Like venting all the heat inside. Yeah. So this is important
just because it's standard to use dozens of times throughout the Hebrew Bible. When the biblical
authors use language about God's anger, they use the same phrase.
When Moses objects five times to God sending him to go liberate the people of Egypt, not
of Egypt, the people enslaved into Egypt.
On the fifth objection, we read that Yahweh got angry, what most of our translations
is, but it's the nose of Yahweh burned hot against Moses.
So that's a phrase where you have the verb to burn hot,
and then the noun knows there.
And nose is always in the singular,
it's nose burned hot.
What's interesting then is those two words
can appear by themselves, it's such a common figure of speech,
those two words just to burn hot,
or the word knows can actually mean anger by itself sometimes.
Isn't that interesting?
Kind of like in English, I know if you describe someone
as nosy, it means they're what, inquisitive to a fault.
Yeah, and someone's business.
So in Hebrew if someone's nosy, they're angry.
Yeah, so check out Psalm 2 here.
Psalm 2 begins with the rebellious kingdoms of this world,
given God the finger, and they don't want to live under God's kingdom.
And God's response in thrown up in this guy is that he laughs,
and he makes fun of them.
And in verse 5, we read God rebukes the nations with his nose,
or in his nose.
And this is the parallel poetic line, and he terrifies them in his heat, in his hotness.
That's so great, because the parallel line is playing off of these two figures of speech that can be combined.
You can have someone's nose burning hot, but you can just rebuke someone in your nose and terrify them in your heat.
Yeah.
So the word nose actually is one of the standard Hebrew nouns for the noun anger.
It gets translated anger many, many times, but it's actually the word nose.
It's a standard figure of speech.
So does that make sense?
There's actually three figures of speech.
There's heat and to get hot and there's nose and then combine those together and you can become hot of nose or hot in your nose
And so there's no word that just is literally angry these figure speeches are all we have Hebrew
We'll look at some no there's a couple angry words that don't have anything to do with heat
They're not as common. Okay, so the idiom is the common way. Yeah, these two words
separately and together make up the vast majority of
Anger language. We're gonna look at a couple others in just a moment, but the reason I started with these is one that's x-thirty-four-six.
But then these are numerically the most. I should have put some statistics together.
But I didn't. So literally you've got two nouns, heat and nose.
Each one individually can become a metaphor for anger, and then you can combine them.
A burning hot nose is hot anger.
And to talk about the inverse, if to get angry is for your nose to burn hot, then this phrase
used of God in Exist 346 is the opposite of your nose burning hot,
Ericapaya, which I think means it takes a long time
for your nose to burn.
Oh, I think that's the meaning of the figure speech.
Yeah, I actually, I wonder if it also has to do
with the picture of smoke, like you were describing
John the Lini-Toon's character, the picture of smoke.
Like, I think are your events.
Yeah, coming out of God's nostrils and that it, Eric Epi, means it takes a long time
for the smoke to come out just because that's such a common image associated with
anger too.
Like, I think it's Psalm 18.
The smoke comes out of his nostrils and there's burning fire.
Yeah, it's actually one of the few places in the Hebrew Bible where God, yeah, where he's
smoking and flaming.
And then breathing out of his nose.
In fact, that might be singular.
I don't know if it occurred anywhere else in the Hebrew Bible.
Do you know off the top of your head?
I did look it up, but I can't remember where else.
I felt like it occurred a few times that the smoke at least coming out of the nose. Yeah, nostrils. Yeah, I did a little search on nostrils
in the smoke. Yeah, yeah. So to be long of nostrils means it takes a long time for you to
get angry and show it in your nose. I'm going to do a little bit of the same thing. So there's two other sets of words for anger, some of which are also hot words, words about
heat.
The second most common one is the root is chema and then there's a noun off of it chema,
but it means hot anger.
Sometimes in some passages the two words, nose and chema are used. And this is where actually the word wrath has entered our English translations.
Because anger would be the standard translation.
But when this other noun or verb, chema or chema comes in, if you watch it, when both
words occur in a context, they'll usually get translated, anger, and then the second one
will get translated wrath.
Just to distinguish it.
To distinguish them.
What they both mean is hot, hot anger.
Yeah.
They both mean hot anger.
Two different words for hot.
Yeah, this other word,
chamam can talk about metaphorically,
your heart getting hot, if you're agitated.
But then also you can talk about the sun, gets hot.
Like a zikil. When when Ezekiel is told to go
Be a prophet to the exiles. He's not happy. He's so ticked off and so he says he storms away from the vision
He just saw God and he storms away in the heat of his spirit
It's got a hot a hot spirit and so you can use it metaphorically too
So there you go. I think that's really important what you just said because I think a lot of people wonder what the word wrath really means.
And you're saying here, underneath the English word, wrath is the Hebrew word, heat or anger.
Heat. Yeah. Is the second word heat?
Jamam, how do you say that?
Well, jamam is the verb and then the noun is more common, chema.
Chema. Is that a more intense type of heat in Hebrew?
Why is that one translated wrath versus the other heat?
Yeah, that's a great question.
I mean, when Tindale was doing his thing.
Tell me what Tindale was thinking.
500 years ago.
Yeah, I don't know.
I don't know.
But Wrath entered the English, like language tradition associated with divine anger through
those earliest English translations.
And what they're trying to do with anger and wrath, those words, is reflect the variety
of biblical Hebrew words for anchor.
And English Wrath just seems way more intense than anchor.
Ah, I see.
And so I'm wondering if in Hebrew there was a similar thing happening.
Is maybe an old English as Wrath an anchor?
Are they maybe a little bit more synonymous?
Yeah, it seems like today the way we understand Wrath is more of like a rageful anchor.
Yeah, yeah. Wrath is extreme anger, according to Oxford.
Okay. English Dignare Online. So I think you're right. Okay, so thank you for putting your thumb on
that. That's not true in Hebrew. In Hebrew, lots of things grow hot, whether it's the verb
hara that's used with nose or the verb chamam. Neither word indicates
more heat than other. They're just, they're both words to get hot.
They're synonyms.
They're synonyms, truly synonyms. So you're right. Yeah. When we read wrath in our English
Bibles, that doesn't mean more angry than another word for anger. Yeah.
That's tricky. That is tricky.
That's a factor.
There's also a couple words in Hebrew
that mean anger and they refer to the emotion of anger,
not to the physical response that somebody feels.
So one is Ketsuf and actually here,
I found a passage where almost all of them
appear together.
This is then Deuteronomy 29 and Moses is predicting that the Israelites are going to break the
covenant and saying, in the future, descendants are going to look back at your guys' behavior
and be like, what were they doing?
They were clueless.
And so he says, the l's anger burned against his land.
That's his nose burned hot.
And he brought on it all the curses written in the scroll.
And so in anger, that is, nose and in wrath, that is, heat.
And in great anger, and this is the word ketsuf.
Ketsuf.
And it doesn't mean heat.
It just means to be ticked off, to be angry.
So that's the more literal or emotional.
It's not a metaphor.
It's not a metaphor.
Yep, it's not a figure of speech.
It's referring to the emotion of anger.
You would think that would be the most common word, the most common vocabulary.
Yeah, and it's not.
And it's not.
And it's not, yeah yeah a lot of words for anger
Isn't this a kind of a linguistic principle that for whatever is a more common experience? Yes, humans tend to develop more
classic Eskimos have 18 words for snow
Actually, you know what so I
Recently started trying to identify my feelings more so So I have this really cool feelings wheel that
like lists out, you know, different expressions of emotions. And I was just looking at the one
for anger and it has hurt, embarrassed, devastated, threatened, insecure, jealous, hateful, resentful,
violated, and it goes on and on. I was just thinking, man, this is a complex emotion
and it really matters how we picture it.
When we picture God, if we're picturing it
in one of these descriptions and not another
or as complex or, I mean, humans are pretty complex
according to the feelings wheel.
Yeah, and our feelings are complex
and they happen to us.
We experience them as happening to us
They make us often confused and we have a elaborate vocabulary for them most languages do
So here's a lesson to draw. There's a lot and there's actually a few words we didn't even cover yet
We covered the main ones what started as a funny figure of speech in Hebrew to be long of two noses
a funny figure of speech in Hebrew to be long of two noses becomes a metaphor that's humorous, but it's actually not quite as funny because we all know to burn in your nose. We all know the
experience of burning up a frustration or anger. And so this is a human physiological response,
but I'm going to just call this the problem of God's wrath for modern readers of the Bible.
This language has caused modern readers of the Bible enormous challenges in trying to
read the Bible.
And not so much about people's anger, but because this language is used very often about
God's reaction.
And there are some narratives where God gets angry, and then he acts in some way that's terrifying.
And if you start to stack up these stories
and take them out of context,
you can end up with the pretty distorted portrait of God.
Quick sample, just to make the point.
John, I'm just gonna let you read this.
Let me read the angry verses.
Go for it.
Numbers 11, verse 1.
Now, the people complained about their hardships
in the hearing of the Lord,
or like he was listening to them.
Is that what that means?
Yeah, that's right.
Okay.
So people are complaining God's listening.
And when he heard them
his anger burned hot,
then fire from the Lord burned among them
and consumed some of the outskirts of the camp.
Yeah, that's some Indiana Jones stuff.
Yeah, it's intense.
Deuteronomy 6 verse 14 and 15.
Do not follow other gods.
Gods of the people around you.
For the larger God who is among you is the jealous God
and his anger will burn against you.
And he will destroy you from the face of land.
Jealous, angry, I'll destroy you.
Yeah, intense. Isaiah 5, verse 25,
therefore the Lord's anger burns against His people.
His hand is raised and He strikes them down.
The mountain shake and the dead bodies
are like refuse in the streets.
Yet for all of this, his anger is not turned away,
his hand is still upraised.
Cool, yeah, there is this portrait.
You can really easily, you know,
collection of verses like this,
you've got a portrait of kind of a god off the handle.
It feels like.
Yeah.
And I do think you're right that this is one of the main obstacles
to people liking the
God of the Bible, or believing in him that, well, God just can't be like that.
That doesn't make sense.
Yeah, like that last one, he's angry.
He strikes people down.
There's dead people.
But he's still angry.
His anger isn't done.
The pile of dead people didn't make his nostril shorter.
It turned longer.
No, that's it.
This is the issue.
And what happens is because those stories circulate around
and they stick in your memory, when you come to Exodus 346
and the central character trait of God
and the list is slow to anger, many modern readers say,
no, he's not.
Right. That's the total bait and switch. Did you not
read Isaiah 5? Yeah. So this is a huge area of confusion and frustration for a lot of people.
Well, and then also in that immediate narrative, he slowed a anger. He still destroys some people.
Moses went and killed 3,000 people and said it was the word of the Lord.
destroy some people. Moses went and killed 3,000 people and said it was the word of the Lord.
Yeah. Not indiscriminately. I mean, in the context, it's a group of people who just violated their covenant terms with God. But there's multiple things happening here. So I just,
well, maybe I just want to head this off in our conversation kind of right now. I don't know if
I need to tackle this in the video, but I need to name it in some way.
I think there's two factors that make this extra difficult for us. One is part of our cultural
setting. What anger means to us is different than what anger meant to ancient Israelites.
The associations with anger, the way that we even talk about anger. Now, it's different than how our grandparents would have talked about anger.
Yeah.
So let's name and explore that a little bit.
And then secondly, there's an issue about using language about God that is rooted in our
physical bodies.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
For your your nose to burn hot makes sense for me.
But what does it mean to say that God's nose burned?
Like what, what are the biblical authors trying to do?
So I think let's tackle these, explore them a little bit.
I think they'll give us some helpful handles
when we go back and start to move into
the biblical passages about God's anchor. 1 tbc 1 tbc 1 tbc
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1 tbc 1 tbc Alright, I just have two kind of like caveats or two little points here that I think are
good starting points.
One is that the meaning of anger differs from culture to culture.
So as I sat down and thought about it, I could think of two main ways that I think about anger growing up on the West Coast of America in the early 21st century.
And actually, one, John, you could speak to and you could too, Chris, is that anger,
and I've just noticed this in my recent adult years,
the language of anger as a secondary emotion
that's trying to indicate to you
that there's something even more primary
that's being threatened or lost or compromised
and that there's almost, it's a self-protective mechanism
or sometimes in others' protective mechanism
that generates energy.
So both of you could probably speak to these better than I could,
but this is a very common way of talking about anger.
Now, I've noticed just in the last decade or so in my culture.
Yeah, that it protects you.
John, I think you wrote a book.
With your wife.
Yeah, about emotions and talked about anger.
Yeah, and how emotions are signals that your body has,
and we can pay attention to those signals,
and they tell us things.
And you know, you mentioned to him that emotions
are kind of happening to us.
The word emotion actually is, is,
you're really comes from your body in motion.
So your body's actively working, doing things.
And when you have your own conscious experience
of what your body is processing,
and your body does process, it's intelligent.
When you experience that, you're experiencing the emotion
or you're having a feeling.
I really think fear is a lot more about protection.
But I think anger also has a bit of that of self protection.
But like I mentioned before, I think it has a real moral slant to it. Like we get angry when
we're trying to protect what we think is right and what we think is fair and what we expect. So
if you wake up one day and you, you know, you're hoping that the day will be productive and you have meetings and this and that, and then everything goes south.
Your expectations are being thwarted and it's going to make you angry.
So you are protecting yourself, but you're protecting a sense of status quo or right and wrong that you want. But there's also a real, there's, it can get very moral in that, you know, there's this righteous
anger people talk about where it's if you, you're like, I want the world to be just. I want people
to be treated fairly no matter their skin color or where they grew up. And, and it makes me angry
when that doesn't happen. And then that anger energizes you to try to write that wrong. It's not that that point is not even self protection.
It's but it's protection over people who are marginalized.
Yeah, I'm thinking about that idea that anger is a secondary response.
I feel like that's a really common way to think about anger today and I don't know if it's
always been like that, but what's underneath the anger? Is it hurt or is it fear or is it protectiveness or what?
But when I'm thinking about that, it makes me wonder if that puts anger in a category of always being inappropriate
and always being just a signal that there's some actually primary emotion that we should be trying to figure out instead of, and maybe this is the question, is can we view anger as sometimes appropriate or is it always inappropriate?
Because if we think it's always inappropriate, then this picture of God is always going
to be inappropriate.
Totally.
That's a great point, and that's actually, for me, growing up really mistrusting emotions.
The one that I understand the least, probably to this day, and the one
that I've always had the most trouble with is anger. I feel like when someone gets angry
at me and expresses their anger, I always feel like they're being unkind, because the
kind thing to do is to keep that anger and hold it in. And so that's something I've really had to unlearn,
especially because my wife, like for her,
when you express your anger, you are being kind
because you're letting the other person know
what you value and what you care about
and to hide that from someone is actually unkind.
And so obviously there's healthy ways to be angry
and unhealthy ways to be angry, but.
Yeah, you could say that this is a way,
it's a psychological perspective that anger is a sign
of something and to express that anger is positive,
it's healthy, it's good for you, and it's being honest,
yeah, you know, with the people around you.
But it's secondary, and it's what you're trying to do is what does your anger trying to
tell you right now.
Yes.
So that would be a more positive psychological interpretation of anger.
That's very much a modern language, a modern concept about it.
We also have what you just said, John, I think a very suspect view of anger,
as almost synonymous with abuse. At least when certain actions are done out of anger,
it's essentially, we think of it as abuse, losing self-control, and then, you know, the moment you
combine this with somebody who's in a position of influence, losing their temper, not being long of nostril.
Yeah, that kind of thing.
So we have these two kind of conflicting interpretations
of anger.
It's kind of like how fire has two different
conflicting powers.
It can destroy things and it can keep you warm.
And I think anger is similar for sure.
Where would you put the Hulk in those two categories?
That's a good point.
He's kind of right in the middle, right?
He's a superhero.
He's there to protect.
Yeah, he's protective.
The good.
Yeah.
But he can't really control it.
Right.
And so he, like, kind of be careful.
You might get some collateral damage.
He has a short nose.
Big green nostrils and a short nose.
So here's the million dollar question.
Is the portrait of God's anger in the Bible like the incredible Hulk?
Like, is it sometimes, he's just protecting the innocent, you know, and you can quote those
verses of the Bible, he cares about the poor and the widow and the orphan, and he gets angry.
And we think, okay, I can get around that.
But then, you know, like those passages,
you just read John and you're like,
oh, now the Hulk is out of control.
Yeah, dead bodies, like piling up.
Like let's get Hulk back into his like happy place.
Yeah, the question that comes up for me then is,
okay, what is it that makes God angry?
And how long does it really take him?
And does he, yeah, I guess the question of what
makes him angry really matters?
Is it something he just gets upset about
and goes into a rage or is it something else?
Yes.
So we're gonna do one more caveat
and then we'll actually start jumping into stories.
What I found, just just systematically and in order,
went through the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament,
looking at all of this vocabulary of anger,
and what I continued to experience was surprises.
Like, and after a lot of years of reading the Bible,
I have some real surprises,
paying attention to when God actually gets angry.
There's a lot of stories where people think God is angry.
It doesn't ever say he's angry.
And then there's a lot of times when God does get angry, and it's surprising,
because there are not stories that we normally think about God's anger.
Connect to.
So it's one of these things where it's just like, we have all this baggage, but what we have to do is really check it at the door
and come with an open mind back to the biblical story.
And I think your point, Chris, is right.
It's allowing the actual biblical stories to tell us what it is that makes
God angry and what he's really patient with. I'm going to do a little bit of the work. I'm going to do a little bit of the work. I'm going to do a little bit of the work.
I'm going to do a little bit of the work.
I'm going to do a little bit of the work.
I'm going to do a little bit of the work.
I'm going to do a little bit of the work.
I'm going to do a little bit of the work.
I'm going to do a little bit of the work.
I'm going to do a little bit of the work.
I'm going to do a little bit of the work.
I'm going to do a little bit of the work.
I'm going to do a little bit of the work. I'm going to do a little bit of the work. One other thought, and this is just because I picked up this book, I have gone back to
many times over the years, and it's just by Abraham Heschel, who we've talked about
John back in the Sabbath.
Sabbath, yeah.
Yeah.
Oh man, listener to the podcast.
If you haven't read anything by Abraham Heschel,
your life is impoverished.
You must read.
If you ever reading the biblical prophets,
Old Testament prophets, you have to pick up Abraham Heschel's,
it's just called the prophets.
He has this whole section where he talks about the pathos of God in the Bible.
Essentially, God's emotions, language about emotions about God in the Bible, and it's majestic.
I started like trying to find my favorite quotes, and then after I'd typed for two whole pages,
I was like, oh, I've clearly overdone it. But he frames the whole discussion in the history of the Greek philosophical tradition, talking about the divine or God, the unmoved mover, the most perfect being, all of that language
has shaped a tradition where talking about God as unmoved, impassable, objective, not
subjective has produced a way of thinking about God that's devoid of any kind of reactive
relational or a spock kind of God. Totally, yeah, that's right. And so what
Heschl does is he traces like where that all comes from, and then in his
tradition, in the Jewish tradition, he's trying to show how the biblical
language about God's emotion is not just different figures of speech. It's a fundamentally different
conception of God and the universe to talk about God this way. Yeah, because Plato, kind of
famously, when he talked about not God, but the real, the ideal world and your ideal self,
it's this abstract thing and it's your mind,
it's your rationality.
Yeah, that's right.
And your emotions are this more base thing
that you really have to control,
but your mind is the real thing.
And then you fast forward and you get to Descartes
and he's doubling down on that and saying,
that's the only reason, you know, I think, therefore I am.
Plato has this metaphor of a chariot here and his horses.
And the horses are the emotions, there's two horses,
like the good emotions, noble emotions,
and then the dangerous emotions.
And then the chariot here, the one driving the chariot,
that's the real you, that's your mind.
And that, I mean, that's what I grew up in.
That's the framework that filled my imagination
growing up in the modern West.
You can get a feelings wheel.
Yeah.
You could.
Yep.
We call it the feelings chart.
It's up on our fridge.
Cool.
I agree.
And yeah, it's been really helpful, actually.
So yeah.
So Heschel's point is that what the Bible represents, right?
It's literature written that comes from one particular family in the ancient Near East.
And this family is experience of God and the way that, and he actually holds a view similar
to what maybe Orthodox Protestants would call biblical inspiration.
He views that the biblical text is both a human and divine product.
So he really believes there's something about the universe and God's own nature revealed
in how the scriptural language about it. He puts it this way. I'll read at least a couple
quotes. How can I not? So it's on the prophets, but remember the whole of the Bible comes from the
prophets. Moses was the greatest prophet of all. David was a prophet. So I'm on the prophets, but remember the whole of the Bible comes from the prophets. Moses was the greatest prophet of all.
David was a prophet, so I'm using the prophets as shorthand for the biblical authors. In the prophets, God does not reveal
himself in abstract absoluteness, but in a personal and intimate relation to the world. He has moved and affected by what
happens in the world and reacts accordingly. Events and human
actions arouse in him joy or sorrow, pleasure or wrath. He is not conceived as judging the
world in detachment. He reacts in an intimate manner being moved and affected and grieved
or gladdened by what people do. This notion basically defines the biblical consciousness of God. This is because
the prophets had no theory or idea of God. What they had was an understanding.
Not the result of theoretical inquiry about God, to them, God was overwhelmingly real and shatteringly present.
So good. So think Mount Sinai. Or Isaiah's experience waking up in his vision in the temple,
what Ezekiel saw. I mean, what Abraham saw that night when the burning torches passed between the animals.
So that's what marks the biblical exgeo's experience of the spirit in the Jordan.
The biblical tradition, its language about God's emotion, comes from actual experiences of this chain of people.
And their experiences of things happening in history and meeting
God in the middle of those events, shaped all of this language.
And so his point is it's not just figures of speech.
Thoughts about that quote before I get to the next quote, because the next quote is kind
of where the punch comes from this language.
Could you say his point is that God isn't an abstract idea,
but is a personal being that's simply kind of what he's saying?
Oh, in one sense, yes.
But he's also talking about how do we begin to account
for how the Bible talks about God with so much emotional
language of pathos is what he calls it?
Why is the pathos of God such a huge feature
of the Bible's language about God?
I see.
And one reason would be just that as humans,
we love to anthropomorphize things to understand them.
Correct.
And then if you're more influenced by the Greek philosophical
tradition, you'll see that as a weakness
in her thinking about God.
Right.
Something we need to transcend.
Yeah, it also seems like God relating with humans
inevitably makes him vulnerable in some ways to emotions.
Like any relationship, especially a covenant
when he enters into covenant with people
then makes him affected by what people do.
Yeah.
I mean, why else do I get angry or disappointed,
except when I'm in relationship with somebody?
Right.
Yeah, something you care about.
But there's a component of care or love, or yeah.
And his point is the Bible is born out of a people's
relationship to a God that wasn't just a trophy for them or an idol. I have a friend.
It's my friend, my Doyle, his pastor in New York. He says, wherever you think about where the Bible came from,
somebody in this family stuck their fork in the light socket. Something happened to this people group that shocked them and shaped them permanently.
And the story of that shock is a part of what we're reading in the Bible, because the Bible isn't
very optimistic or positive about ancient Israel. It's mostly a story about how these people
fail God. And so God is not a convenient figure for the people of Israel. He's not a God that's convenient for anybody.
And God's pathos, both his love and his anger,
is as a testament to their experience of someone
throughout their history.
Now that is very different than Greek thought,
and even modern thought, which bars a lot from Greek thought.
But is it different than what other ancient
Near Eastern people groups would have thought about gods? Oh, let's say in the Greek tradition,
the gods truly are like glorified humans. Because humans actually can become deified in the Greek
tradition. So yeah, they have emotions, but in the Greek philosophical tradition,
mainly we're trying to move beyond the lower level deities and think about the ultimate
unmoved mover, the one at the top. And what the biblical tradition is saying is, yes, the
most holy and transcendent being you could imagine is full of pathos towards this creation.
is full of pathos towards this creation. And it's a unique claim.
It's a unique claim.
So, when he goes on, then he has a couple chapters on Wrath
in the prophets that are just really amazing.
He introduces it this way.
He says, few divine passions have been so denounced,
so vehemently by teachers of morality
as the divine passion of anger.
It's pictured as sinister, malignant passion, an evil force, which must, under all circumstances,
be suppressed.
The truth, however, is that all of these features are not the essence of anger.
Like fire, nice John.
This earlier, like fire, anger may be a blessing as well as fatal,
reprehensible when associated with malice, but morally necessary as resistance to malice.
This is that moral, the moral meaning of anger.
He goes on in another section to say, really, the ultimate evil when it comes to pathos
is indifference and apathy.
To stand by and say and feel nothing when something terrible is going on.
And so he continues, he says, the prophets never portray God's anger as something that
can't be accounted for or unpredictable or irrational. It's never spontaneous outbursts always a reaction
occasioned by the conduct of humans motivated by a concern for right and wrong.
And so this conclusion then of this long chapter is the anger is not a basic attribute of God.
If you look at all of these passages, it's a responsive pattern of God's behavior
in response to evil. But X is 34, 6 can bring it around and say, but slow to anger, this is a core.
That's what's core to God's character, slow to anger, which means that when he gets angry it's measured, it's strategic, it's for a certain reason.
And so, you know, logically this all makes sense, but when you're actually reading the Bible,
you know, and read passages like what you read, John, it can be hard to remember things like this, you know.
But this has been a perspective that's very helpful for me. I'm going to go to the next room. So you're saying that you don't want an indifferent God that just would sit back and not
be moved by injustice or would not react to things that are evil, you want a God that has pathos.
This is what you're saying.
Yeah, that's his point and I resonate with it.
It's true in relationships.
If you're in a relationship with someone who's just always indifferent, you wouldn't really
have a relationship, I guess. And, but it's interesting is what we want.
And we also have this craving to understand
what are the unmovable axioms of the universe.
And there's actually this kind of joy in finding those,
you know, like the laws of nature.
But the laws of nature are cruel.
Like, just on their own device. If that's all God is then
There's no reason to really care about that kind of deity. Mm-hmm
So if if you take that then you have a category for I want a God who feels angry
And now you're saying to him if you have that category when you confront or when you come into confrontation with God being angry,
then at least at first it isn't just like, okay, here's this is a problem, you might be thinking
there's more here. One way to frame it is many people in our culture have a default belief that if
they believe in God, they either want to believe or just do believe that he's charitable and generous and good and that he's that he has pathos in that way
Many people resonate with there's a being or an energy permeating that's compassionate and gracious
And what they what that's describing is a being with pathos who's moved
moved in relationship to
creation moved in relationship to creation. However, to have a being who is only ever moved in that direction,
but never moved towards anger, I'm not sure I'd want to be in a relationship with somebody
who is only ever nice, but doesn't ever display anger.
Because if they don't display anger, it means they're not actually in a real relationship with me
Or paying attention to the world
You know, yeah, like anger can be a caring thing to want something better for you or for somebody else that you're hurting or for the
Relationship that you're in yeah, yeah a person who's truly good will get angry sometimes
The person who's truly good will get angry. Yes, that's good
That's good. I guess that's my basic point now a person who's good and gets angry isn't gonna litter the streets with bodies
True
From my point of view that's right. Yeah. But before I make that judgment beforehand,
maybe I should get into the biblical story
and try and understand what that's all about.
So we're talking on big theoretical level here.
Almost now detached from any biblical stories.
But I just find that it's helpful because personally
and with people I've talked to over the years, the way
that I can see of a vanger before I even pick up the Bible will often determine what I find
there and determine how much it bothers me.
And that's kind of what I was going for here.
Since anger is such a moral emotion, you can really learn what someone values by what they
get angry about.
Yeah, it's a good way of putting it. and what someone values by what they get angry about.
Yeah, it's good we're putting it.
So maybe that should shape the next part of our mission.
What is it that makes God angry?
And then we will find what God cares about,
which becomes a window into the character of God,
which is what we're after in this series.
Thanks for listening to this episode of the Bobo Project podcast.
We want to let you know we're collecting questions for upcoming question response episodes
in this series on the character of God.
If you want to have a question on the episode, please record yourself asking question,
try to keep it around 20 or 30 seconds, and then transcribe your question and send that to info at BibleProject.com.
Again, record yourself, transcribe it, send it to info at BibleProject.com.
Next week, we are going to continue this conversation about the wrath of God. The first time God is depicted as feeling any emotion in the Bible.
It's not anger.
It's grief and sorrow.
So here's the thing, is that the flood is really sobering.
The sobering portrait of God's judgment.
God has never said once to be angry in that story.
What the introduction says in chapter 6 is this,
the Lord was sorry that he made humans on the land and
He was pain. He felt pain in his heart
Today's show was produced by Dan Gummel show notes from Camden, McAfee and theme music from the band
Tense Bible project is a crowd-funded non-profit when Portland, Oregon
We want you and us all together to experience the Bible as a unified story that leads to
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