“Then the LORD said, ‘Is it right for you to be angry?’” (Jonah 4:4 ESV).
Jonah, a Hebrew prophet sent by the LORD to warn the people of Nineveh, recorded that when God chose to relent and show mercy, he became deeply displeased and angry. Yet instead of rebuking Jonah harshly, the LORD met him with a gentle question: “Is it right for you to be angry?” The question itself was an act of grace—an invitation for Jonah to see what was happening within his heart. Jonah knew the covenant God of Israel to be gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love, yet he resented that mercy being shown to pagan Assyrians—Israel’s enemies. Ironically, throughout the narrative, it was not Jonah the believer who responded rightly to God’s word, but the pagan sailors who feared the LORD and worshiped Him and the Ninevites who believed God and repented at His warning. The LORD’s question echoed His words to Cain in the book of Genesis, warning that anger left unchecked can invite sin (Gen. 4:6–7). Jonah’s frustration exposed a heart more concerned with fairness than with grace, revealing how easily human anger can clash with divine compassion.
God’s question to Jonah confronts us as well. We are forced to examine whether our anger is righteous or rooted in pride, prejudice, or self-interest. Like Jonah, we may affirm God’s grace in theory yet resist it when He extends mercy to those we believe least deserve it. Scripture reminds us that the anger of man does not produce the righteousness of God and calls us to be slow to anger (James 1:19–20). When our anger goes unexamined and unchecked, it often gives opportunity for sin to take root (Eph. 4:26–27). The LORD’s gentle but firm question invites us to pause, reflect, and repent, asking God to search our hearts and lead us in His way. Only then can we truly answer the question before us: Are we right to be angry?
PRAYER: Dear Father, thank You for meeting us with gentleness when our hearts are restless or confused. Forgive us for the times we have resisted Your mercy or questioned Your compassion. Teach us to surrender our anger and let Your love do its healing work within us. Help us to rejoice in the mercy You show to others and to rest in the mercy You have shown to us. Shape our hearts until they reflect Yours. In Jesus’ name, amen.