<p>Rick Thomas's <em>MAD: Seeing Your Anger with the Clarity of God's Word</em> is a direct unflinching and deeply biblical examination of one of the most common-and most minimized-sins in the Christian life: anger. From the opening pages Thomas refuses to let the reader hide behind softened language or cultural euphemisms. What we often call frustration irritation or being bothered he consistently reclassifies as what Scripture calls it-anger. And not merely as a behavioral issue but as a heart-level problem rooted in desires self-righteousness and functional unbelief.</p><p></p><p>The strength of this book is its clarity. Thomas dismantles the illusion that anger is only explosive or obvious. Through his anger spectrum he exposes both loud and subtle expressions-from rage to silent treatment-showing they are all manifestations of the same sin. This reframing is not merely diagnostic-it is corrective. It removes the reader's ability to excuse respectable anger.</p><p></p><p>A central contribution of the book is how it ties anger to worship. Anger is not primarily about circumstances or people; it is about what the heart wants and is not getting (James 4:1-2). Thomas repeatedly presses this point: anger is a response to unmet desires revealing what rules the heart in that moment. This moves the conversation beyond behavior management into true biblical transformation.</p><p></p><p>Another standout theme is the relationship between anger and self-righteousness. The author argues persuasively that anger often flows from a greater-than better-than posture-a subtle elevation of self above others. This insight is both theological and intensely practical. It forces the reader to reckon with the gap between their view of themselves and the gospel reality of who they were apart from Christ. The book also excels in its practical theology. Each chapter includes reflection questions and calls to action reinforcing that this is not a passive reading experience but a workbook for repentance. Thomas repeatedly urges readers to slow down examine their hearts invite others into their self-assessment and actively pursue change.</p><p></p><p>His treatment of righteous anger is particularly helpful. Rather than dismissing it he carefully distinguishes it from sinful anger through three markers: humility redemptive intent and relational accessibility. If your anger pushes people away rather than drawing them toward restoration it is not righteous-no matter how justified it feels. The case studies-especially the recurring example of Biff and Mable-bring the theology into real life. These scenarios expose how anger functions in marriage parenting and everyday relationships showing how deeply ingrained and destructive it can become when left unchecked.</p><p></p><p>Perhaps the most sobering and helpful contribution is Thomas's insistence that anger is not merely reactive-it is revealing. The heat of life does not create anger; it exposes what is already in the heart. This is a needed correction in a culture that blames circumstances rather than confronting sin. The book's tone is direct but pastoral. It does not coddle the reader but neither does it condemn without hope. The gospel is consistently held out as the only solution-not as a concept but as a lived daily reality involving repentance humility Scripture saturation and community.</p><p></p><p>If there is a defining takeaway it is this: you cannot deal with anger until you see it clearly and you cannot see it clearly until you are willing to be honest about your heart. This is not a book for casual readers. It is for those who are ready to stop managing anger and start mortifying it. Used personally in counseling or in discipleship contexts it has the potential to produce real observable change.</p><p></p><p>Life Over Coffee Publishers</p>
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