Brothers and sisters,
today we look at one of Jesus’ most challenging and most misunderstood teachings. It comes from Matthew 5:22, where Jesus says that anger, insults, and certain harsh words can bring a person under judgment—even leading to what He calls “the fire of Gehenna.” Many people hear this and panic: “Does this mean if I got angry once, I’m doomed?” Or, “If I ever said something foolish in frustration, am I condemned?”
But if we listen carefully—not only to the words but to the heart of Jesus behind the words—we discover something much deeper and far more liberating. We discover that Jesus is not trying to frighten us into silence. He is trying to protect us from a danger we seldom recognize: the danger of letting anger turn into judgment, and judgment into the destruction of our own souls.
1. Jesus is not condemning vocabulary—He is revealing the heart
Jesus mentions two insults in this passage: “raka” and “you fool.” They sound different to us, but in Jesus’ time they meant almost the same thing. One was Aramaic, the other Greek. They were both common words people used when they were upset.
Here is something important:
Jesus Himself uses the word “fool” later on when speaking to the Pharisees.
So the word itself is not what makes a person guilty before God.
It’s not the sound of the syllables that matters.
What matters is the spirit behind the word, the attitude of the heart.
2. Jesus describes two different kinds of anger
Jesus isn’t talking about a moment of frustration when someone cuts you off in traffic. He isn’t saying that a single slip of the tongue seals a person’s fate. No—He is showing how anger changes shape as it grows.
The first insult in the passage reflects a quick outburst—the kind of thing that comes out when tempers flare. It is wrong, and Jesus names it as something that needs to be brought before God and dealt with honestly.
But the second insult—the one connected to “Gehenna”—is something far more serious. That is not just an outburst. That is a verdict, a moral sentence we pass on another person. It is anger that has grown roots and taken a seat on the judge’s bench.
In that moment, we no longer simply express pain.
We declare ourselves superior.
We decide that we can condemn, we can label, we can judge the heart of another.
And it is that posture—the posture of judging from above—that Jesus warns destroys the very person who adopts it.
3. The real danger is not being insulted—but becoming the one who retaliates
Jesus places this teaching right after the commandment “Do not murder.” Why?
Not because anger and murder are identical on the outside, but because they share a deadly seed on the inside: the desire to harm, to take, to control, to destroy.
Murder destroys the body.
But Jesus says that retaliation, vengeful judgment, condemnation—these destroy something even more precious: our own souls.
Many people imagine that Jesus is speaking harshly to the offenders.
But look closely: He is speaking just as much—maybe even more—to the offended.
He is speaking to the hurt, the wounded, the mistreated.
And He is saying to them:
“Be careful. Your anger is understandable, but if you turn it into revenge, it will poison you. You will become trapped in the same darkness that hurt you.”
This is Jesus caring not only for victims and not only for justice—He is caring for your heart.
4. Jesus wants to free us from the inner courtroom
The whole Sermon on the Mount is filled with teachings against retaliation:
- “Do not resist the evil person.”
- “Love your enemies.”
- “Bless those who curse you.”
- “Do not judge, or you yourself will be judged.”
Jesus knows how easily pain can turn into pride, and pride into a private courtroom where we sit behind the judge’s bench. And once we sit in that seat—once we declare ourselves the moral judge over others—we invite that same standard to fall back on us.
Not because God is eager to punish us,
but because when we condemn others,
we close the door through which mercy could return to us.
Jesus wants to keep us out of that courtroom.
He wants us to remain free from the poison of vengeance.
5. The love of Christ rescues both the offender and the offended
This verse, when read carefully, shows the compassion of Christ. He is not here to increase fear or guilt. He is here to show us that the greatest spiritual danger lies not in being wronged, but in choosing to repay wrong with judgment.
The one who insulted you has done something harmful, yes.
But the one who retaliates harms himself even more.
And Jesus loves us too much to let us fall into that trap.
He stands between the sinner and the avenger and speaks to both:
To the sinner: “Let go of anger; it harms others.”
To the avenger: “Let go of judgment; it will destroy you.”
That is not harshness. That is Jesus’ mercy.
6. Closing: the way of peace
So what is the invitation of Matthew 5:22?
It is the invitation to let Christ guide our hearts before anger becomes condemnation. To let Him transform our reactions before we sit in the judge’s seat. To let His mercy flow through us, not only toward others but toward ourselves.
The path Jesus shows may look hard, but it is the path of life. It is the way that keeps our hearts soft, our minds clear, and our souls free from the chains of vengeance.
May God give us the grace to let go of judgment, the strength to forgive, and the courage to walk in the mercy of Christ.
Amen.