M E R I D I A N M A G A Z I N E
Abandoning
Anger
by
H. Wallace Goddard
Under the banner of honesty, anger has been made into a virtue. Under the banner of psychological well-being, the expression of anger has been made into a necessity. From the beginning, it was not so.
Years
ago when I was serving as a branch president, a young adult in our ward came
to see me. She explained that she had just been with her therapist. The therapist
was helping her work through many issues including a feeling that she had
been neglected and deserted by her father. The therapist invited her to take
part in an unusual exercise. She invited the young woman to mentally bring
her now-deceased father into the room. Sit him in a chair before her. And
give him hell. Tell him about her pain, disappointment, and years of loneliness.
"Tell him just how you feel. Let him have it."
After she described
the bitter confrontation to me, she paused. "What do you think of that idea?"
Perhaps she asked me because she knows that I relentlessly test every idea
by the teachings of Jesus. I did not have any pre-considered response to her
question, but I had an impression. "I think it depends on what your object
is. If you want self-justification, there is nothing as useful as blame. But
if you want peace, I recommend a different course." I told her that, like
her therapist, I recommended that she mentally invite her father to sit in
front of her. But rather than stand and berate him, I suggested that she kneel
at his feet and invite counsel from him. She might ask, "Dad, if you had not
been sick, if you had not been overwhelmed by mom's demands, if you had been
able to do what was in your heart, what might we have done together? What
daddy-daughter dates might we have had? Tell me about the times that we might
have stayed up late laughing, snacking and talking. Tell me about the shopping
and movies we might have shared. Tell me how you love me."
If our souls will be peaceful,
our minds can hear the words of comfort from those who love us from the other
side of the vail. If we let them tell us all that is in their hearts, our
pain will be swallowed up in assurance. Immortals gladly do what weak mortals
struggle to do.
Any time we presume
to judge another person, we are usurping the role of God. "Behold what the
scripture says--man shall not smite, neither shall he judge; for judgment
is mine, saith the Lord, and vengeance is mine also, and I will repay" (Mormon
8:20). The Lord's discussion of motes and beams (See Matthew 7:1-5) underscores
the mortal risks of such an undertaking. Criticism is always presumptuous
and ungracious.
And
that is the problem with anger. It presumes that my view is the standard of
truth. It exalts my needs while dismissing yours. It fills me with indignation
in my least righteous moments. It assumes that the best way for me to help
you is to paint your errors in vibrant colors.
When a battered,
weary swimmer tries valiantly to get back to shore, after having fought strong
winds and rough waves which he should never have challenged in the first place,
those of us who might have had better judgment, or perhaps just better luck,
ought not to row out to his side, beat him with our oars, and shove his head
back underwater. That's not what boats were made for. But some of us do that
to each other. (Jeffrey R. Holland, 1984)
Years ago Heavenly
Father taught me that I did not have the right to correct anyone I did not
love. That seemed reasonable enough. Little did I realize the trap at the
time. When I feel genuinely loving toward someone, I lose interest in correcting
them. I just want to love and bless them.
All the religious
world is boasting of righteousness; it is the doctrine of the devil to retard
the human mind, and hinder our progress, by filling us with self-righteousness.
The nearer we get to our heavenly Father, the more we are disposed to look
with compassion on perishing souls; we feel that we want to take them upon
our shoulders, and cast their sins behind our backs. My talk is intended for
all this society; if you would have God have mercy on you, have mercy on one
another. (Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, p.241, emphasis added)
The Prophet's observation
is elegantly harmonious with God's ultimate commandment as expressed in Luke: