Jennie Allen - Slow To Anger

Jennie Allen - Slow To Anger

Up next

What Happens When God Shows Up?

Have you ever felt such overwhelming joy that it surprised you? This week, Candace and Francis Chan talk about what it really looks and feels like to give from overflow, not obligation, and why the difference between those two starting places changes everything. Francis brings pe ...  Show more

What Francis Learned About Mountain Biking!

There is a difference between knowing the gospel and being moved by it. In this conversation with Pastor Francis Chan, that difference becomes hard to miss. What starts as a moment of raw honesty as Francis watches Candace respond to the gospel with tears opens into something muc ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

How to Engage with Anger with Aubrey Coleman
The Daily Grace Podcast

Anger is an emotion that is deemed bad. We label people with frequent outbursts as “angry people”. Yet, there is so much more to this emotion! If we’re honest, most of us regularly struggle with anger; it just may manifest in different ways. The thing is, not all anger is bad. ...

  Show more

Best Anger Management Advice
The Catholic Gentleman

Today John, Sam, and Devin explore various dimensions of anger as it arises in the hearts, minds, and actions of men. Have you noticed that anger is everywhere today? We discuss why we experience anger, when it becomes a sin, or when it is just. Anger, rightly understood, can be ...  Show more

Special Episode: How to Work with Anger
The One You Feed | Personal Growth, Emotional Resilience & Purpose

So many of us are feeling angry for a myriad of reasons amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. To help us better understand and work with our anger, Eric reached out to several previous guests of the show to ask them if they would be willing to talk with him for a special edition of The O ...  Show more

How to be Angry Better
The Happiness Lab with Dr. Laurie Santos

Anger is a powerful signal that you or someone you value is in danger. But in our normal lives the sensations of rage we experience are false alarms - we aren't in real peril and we don't need to resort to extreme survival behaviors, such as violence.Therapist Faith Harper (autho ...  Show more