In general, Ed Welch's prose is just hard for me to enter into. I'm not sure why it comes across to me as choppy, but it does. It's hard for me to follow his trains of thought, though I respect his wisdom. This problem, for me, was compounded by the fact that these were also short, choppy chapters: one or two pages long, often not building on each other. Still, I found many beneficial thoughts:
"If we are servants of Jesus, we take less offense when people wrong us. We think instead, How can I represent my Master now?" (26)
"We want what we want, and we don't want [God]. We believe that independence is our best strategy. For the moment, at least, we have become God's enemy" (44).
"In fact, in our anger and outrage, we have decided that we want to be God rather than submit to him, as if we would do a better job of it" (46).
"Does [1 Peter 2:23] leave you deaf, blind, and mute in the face of personal injustices? No, it leaves you so that you are not mastered by the injustices of others. Anger might feel powerful but it is not. It renders you a servant of the one who hurt you" (54).
"With human anger, you run for cover. It is never an invitations to discourse. But God had made a proposal to Moses for the very purpose of being talked out of it. That's why God's anger deserves a different name, such as patience, faithfulness, or love" (123).
"The occasions that would normally bring out our anger are the perfect tests for our soul. They are gifts to help us follow Christ. Will we follow the Lord when life is inconvenient and we are not treated well?" (136)
On 1 Peter 2:21-23: "In his humanity [Jesus] gave up his divine right to judge the world. He gave that right to his Father in heaven. When you are fully confident that your Father is just, you know that injustice will not prosper. . . . The secret does not reside in knowing the details of the Father's judgments. . . . Rather, the secret resides in knowing the Judge and trusting him to do right" (162).
These were the ideas that I chewed on long after I'd read, and I record them here for easy access because I want to remember them for life.