Secular Versus Christian Anger Management Therapy
Cindy Gonzalez
Anger is more than just an emotion. It is a physiological reaction that is part of your body’s fight-or-flight response to perceived threats to your physical or emotional well-being, or to your self-esteem or self-worth.
Most people experience flashes of anger at some point in life, but anger that is intense, prolonged, and unmanageable is an indication that something is out of balance. When left unaddressed, it can damage your relationships, interfere with your career, harm your physical and mental health, and lead to problems in every aspect of your life.
Anger management therapy can help you uncover what lies beneath the surface of your rage so you can understand where it is coming from. This therapy can equip you with practical techniques to help you ground your emotions, maintain your cool, and respond in healthier, more regulated ways.
Goals of Anger Management Therapy
There are multiple goals of anger management therapy. These include helping you identify triggers, creating a space that gives you time to think before you respond rather than react impulsively, and learning how to channel your anger in a healthy way that does not harm anyone.
Indications That You Might Benefit From Anger Management Therapy
You may be a good candidate for anger management therapy if you have repeated conflicts with family, friends, or colleagues; your days are marked by frequent emotional outbursts; you feel embarrassed, remorseful, or ashamed about your blowups. Health issues such as high blood pressure, tension headaches, and feeling physically exhausted may also arise
Ways Anger Management Therapy Can Help You Manage Your Anger
The following are some of the ways anger management therapy can help you reduce angry outbursts and lay a foundation for emotional stability and resilience. This enables you to respond to your triggers in a calmer, more controlled manner.
Develop self-awareness
Anger management therapy can help you gain awareness of the people, places, and situations that trigger your anger, as well as provide insight into the patterns of undesirable behavior they elicit.
Explore underlying issues
Anger management therapy can help you identify and process deeper emotions your anger may be masking, such as shame, fear, guilt, hurt, or resentment. These emotions can often fuel your outbursts when triggered.
Develop self-regulation skills
Anger management therapy equips you with practical stress management skills such as deep breathing, mindfulness exercises, muscle relaxation, and other calming techniques that can help regulate your emotions and enable you to pause before reacting to a trigger. This can prevent your anger from escalating and decrease the frequency and intensity of anger episodes.
Improve communication skills
Anger management therapy can help you expand your emotional vocabulary beyond anger to include other emotions such as anxiety, disappointment, or feeling overwhelmed. You can learn how to be assertive without being aggressive, and express your needs in a considerate way that does not antagonize or create conflict.
Most Commonly Used Types of Therapy for Anger Management
Anger management therapy is not one-size-fits-all. There are different approaches to choose from that address specific needs and circumstances. The following are some commonly used options.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy is an evidence-based, research-backed approach that is the gold standard treatment of choice for anger management therapy. Its premise is that our thoughts influence our emotions and behavior. CBT focuses on helping you recognize the negative thought patterns that fuel your anger, question your assumptions, and reframe them with more positive, realistic ones.Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT)
Dialectical Behavioral Therapy is a modified form of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy that focuses on equipping you with emotional regulation and distress tolerance skills to help you manage intense anger by regaining emotional control.
Mindfulness-based therapy
Mindfulness-based therapy teaches you to manage your anger by centering yourself in the present moment and becoming aware of your emotions without judging them. Studies have shown that making a habit of doing this can significantly reduce anger, physical aggression, and hostility.
A Biblical View of Anger
Anger is viewed as a natural emotion that everyone experiences as a part of life, but we are exhorted not to hold on to it, allow it to cause us to sin, or let it have control over us.
My dear brothers and sisters, take note of this: Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry, because human anger does not produce the righteousness that God desires. – James 1.19-20, NIV
Anger should not be our first response to a situation.
“In your anger do not sin”. Do not let the sun go down while you are still angry. – Ephesians 4.26, NIV
We should resolve anger so we can rest and avoid sin.
Refrain from anger and turn from wrath; do not fret – it leads only to evil. – Psalm 37.8, NIV
Anger can lead to struggles and evil.
Good sense makes one slow to anger, and it is his glory to overlook an offense. – Proverbs 19.11, ESV
Wisdom makes us slow to anger, and this is more like Christ.
Be not be quickly provoked in your spirit, for anger resides in the lap of fools. – Ecclesiastes 7.9, NIV
Our spirit should not jump right into anger.
Whoever is slow to anger is better than the mighty, and he who rules his spirit than he who takes a city. – Proverbs 16.32, ESV
It is best to control our spirits than to react in anger.
An angry person stirs up conflict, and a hot-tempered person commits many sins. – Proverbs 29.22, NIV
Anger can cause us to make more conflict and sin.
Get rid of all bitterness, rage, and anger, brawling and slander, along with every form of malice. Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you. – Ephesians 4.31-32, NIV
We should live like Christ, free from anger.
Secular Versus Christian Anger Management Therapy
Secular and Christian anger management therapy counselors have the same advanced degree requirements of a Master’s degree in counseling. They need to comply with the same steps and standards overseen by state licensing boards, and demonstrate the same competencies.
Both secular and Christian counselors are required to pass the same licensing exams and maintain the same continuing education credits on the latest best practices. They share the same goal of helping you achieve mental wellness and use the same evidence-based techniques to help you develop anger management coping skills.
Even though secular and Christian anger management counselors both use similar techniques, they differ significantly in their perspectives and worldviews surrounding the following.
Self vs. God
Secular anger management counselors focus on self-empowerment. They view you as an autonomous being, responsible for your own happiness and destiny, and able to change your feelings and emotions yourself.
Christian counselors, though they affirm the reality of mental health struggles and the efficacy of scientific techniques, recognize God’s sovereignty. They take the focus off you and cast it onto Him, acknowledging Him as the ultimate healer and redeemer.
One-on-one interaction vs. a triadic relationship
Secular therapy tends to be a one-on-one interaction between patient and therapist in an objective clinical environment. Christian therapy, on the other hand, changes the dynamic and deepens the therapeutic process by adding a triadic connection with God.
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) vs. the Bible
Secular counselors look solely to the DSM as the ultimate authority on mental health conditions and treatments. Christian counselors rely on the Bible as the foundation and incorporate it with tools such as the DSM into their clinical intervention.
Symptom relief vs. transformative change
Traditional therapy separates faith and mental health and focuses on the mind and its connection to your emotions. Christian therapy adds a spiritual dimension. It incorporates biblical principles and prayer aimed at healing the soul and spirit as well as the biological and physical needs.
Choosing Which One Is Right for You
If your faith is central to your identity, you want your spiritual beliefs to be part of your healing journey, and you want a counselor who will integrate biblical principles, prayer, and spiritual guidance into the therapy process, choose Christian therapy. If, however, you prefer a non-religious, strictly psychological, science-backed approach, secular therapy would be a better fit.
If you have questions about this article on anger management therapy, or would like an appointment to meet with a faith-based counselor at our location, please call us.
“Studying”, Courtesy of Priscilla Du Preez, Unsplash.com, CC0 License

