Kicking Tail and Taking Names

Have you ever prayed a “kicking tail and taking names” prayer, calling down the fury of heaven upon the heads of your enemies? Is that ever okay? It is, provided those people are hindering, hurting, or plotting the destruction of God’s people and God’s plan. (Psalm 83:3) It’s not when someone cut you off in traffic, or took your seat in church, or pulled out 15 coupons in the “15 Items Or Less” checkout line when you were in a hurry. If those personal offenses are your motive, that reveals more about the condition of your heart than the people with whom you are upset. So if the motive is right, then pray…but don’t just pray for their ruination, pray for their redemption. And by the way, it’s hard to pray angry prayers for very long when you are praying for the redemption of their soul!

Making Life Work
Read: Psalm 83
Focus: Psalm 83:16

Cover their faces with shame so that men will seek your name, O LORD.

“May my enemies know the fiery terror (Psalm 83:14) of your judgment; make them to know the tempest of your storm (Psalm 83:15). Make Edom, the Ishmaelites, the Hagrites, Gebal, Ammon, Amalek, Philistia, Tyre and Assyria (Psalm 83:6-8) like refuse on the ground (Psalm 83:10), nothing more than a tumbleweed tumbling along (Psalm 83:13). Make them pay, Lord!”

Have you ever prayed a “kicking tail and taking names” prayer like that? Have you ever gone before the Lord and named names, calling down the fire and the fury of heaven upon the heads of your enemies? Have you ever got that brutally honest with God?

I wouldn’t necessarily recommend it, unless it’s called for. If you are doing that a lot, it may reveal more about the condition of your heart than the people with whom you are upset. Perhaps you need to do a little soul work, asking God to do a deep work of healing in your heart, teaching you how to truly forgive your enemies and learning how to patiently put judgment in his just hand.

Yet there is a time where it is appropriate for you to get good and angry—not just good, and not just angry, but good and angry! Now the question is, when is that appropriate time? I don’t think I can give you a sure fire answer for every situation, but there is a clue here within this psalm that seems to echo other times in Scripture where good anger was called for. It is when the people who are upsetting you are upsetting you because they are hindering, hurting, or plotting the destruction of God’s people and God’s plan. Psalm 83:3 says,

“With cunning they conspire against your people;
they plot against those you cherish.

So that’s it—that is how you get good and angry. It’s not that someone cut you off in traffic, or took your seat in church, or pulled out fifteen coupons in the “15 Items Or Less” check-out line when you were in a hurry. It’s when their motive, known or unknown to them, is to destroy the work of God. That’s when it is appropriate to pray like the psalmist.

But here’s another clue that will keep you good when you are angry: Don’t just pray for their ruination, pray for their redemption. At the very least, pray that the Divine punishment brought down upon their heads will serve as a witness to others of the glory of God’s great name (Psalm 83:16).

By the way, it’s hard to pray angry prayers for very long when you are praying for the redemption of their soul!

Making Life Work: Now after reading this blog and you can still manage to be angry AND good, then go ahead and offer up a ‘kicking tail and taking names prayer!

Please note: I reserve the right to delete comments that are offensive or off-topic.

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