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Matthew 6:2
2Therefore when you do merciful deeds, don`t sound a trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, that they may get glory from men. Most assuredly, I tell you, they have received their reward.
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"As the age progresses toward its climax, anxiety increases—wars, rumors of wars, economic uncertainty. But Jesus' word stands: 'Do not worry.' The Father who provided through every dispensation will provide through the last. His faithfulness is not age-dependent." — Warren Wiersbe.
"The poor know real anxiety—hunger, homelessness, insecurity. 'Do not worry' is not dismissal but invitation: God sides with the anxious poor. And the church must become God's provision—sharing bread, creating security, bearing burdens. Our solidarity answers their anxiety." — Gustavo Gutiérrez.
"Anxiety disturbs the soul's stillness—hesychia. 'Do not worry' is the path to inner peace. Through the Jesus Prayer, through trusting the Father's providence, we quiet the anxious mind. The birds and lilies teach us: existence in God is enough. Rest in Him." — St.
"Empire produces anxiety—scarcity mentality, competitive striving, fear of not having enough. Jesus counters: 'Do not worry.' This is resistance to the anxiety economy. Trust in God's abundance subverts the empire's lie that we must grasp and hoard to survive." — Walter Brueggemann.
"We are not given grace for tomorrow's troubles today. Worry borrows suffering from the future; trust lives in the present. The birds don't worry about tomorrow's food; today's is enough. 'Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof'—and sufficient is the grace." — C.S.
"Jesus speaks to YOU: do not worry about YOUR life. YOUR heavenly Father knows what YOU need. He feeds the birds; He will feed YOU. He clothes the lilies; He will clothe YOU. This is personal: YOUR Father cares for YOU.
"The little way is trust without anxiety. As a child trusts a parent completely, so we trust our heavenly Father. The birds do not worry; the flowers do not strive. Abandonment to Divine Providence is the soul's rest. Do not worry—only trust." — St.
"STOP worrying! Jesus COMMANDS it! Your Father KNOWS what you need! Look at the birds—GOD FEEDS THEM! Look at the flowers—GOD CLOTHES THEM! How much MORE will He care for YOU? Cast that anxiety on Him! Trade worry for WORSHIP!" — Joyce Meyer.
"'Do not worry' is a command—one we obey through practice. Trust is cultivated; anxiety is overcome through spiritual discipline. Cast your cares on Him daily; choose faith over fear repeatedly. Grace enables what nature cannot: peace that surpasses understanding." — John Wesley.
"Jesus lived without worry—wholly dependent on the Father, free for others. Following Him means learning His freedom. Anxiety binds us to ourselves; trust in Christ frees us for discipleship. 'Do not worry' is possible only in union with the One...
"Do not worry—your heavenly Father knows what you need. If He feeds the birds and clothes the lilies, will He not much more care for you? Worry is practical atheism; it acts as if God does not exist.
"'Give us this day our daily bread'—God provides day by day, not year by year. Worry grasps for tomorrow; faith receives today. The same God who gave His Son will give all else. What can we lack when we have Christ?
"'Do not worry' is addressed to a community—we bear one another's burdens. The birds are fed; but we feed each other. Worry decreases as community increases. Together we practice trust, share resources, embody God's provision for each other. This is church." — Stanley Hauerwas.
"The disinherited have much to worry about—real threats, real needs, real dangers. Yet Jesus says 'do not worry.' This is not denial but defiance: refusing to let anxiety rule when oppressors want you afraid. Trust in God is resistance; peace is protest." — Howard Thurman.
"God's providence extends to sparrows and lilies—how much more to His covenant children! Worry doubts providence; trust honors it. The God who numbers your days and hairs will not abandon you. Rest in sovereign care; anxiety insults the Father's wisdom and love." — John Calvin.
Provider God, the bills are real, the numbers don't add up, and I'm scared. I've tried to be responsible. I've prayed for provision. But I still don't see a way through. Help me trust that You see my need even...
God of peace, my mind is already racing with today's worries, and the day hasn't even started. You said, "Do not be anxious." I hear it. I want to obey it. But I need Your help.
Teaching on Simplicity from Desert Fathers: Desert Fathers: Radical Simplicity of Life
Teaching on Simplicity from Thomas a Kempis: Thomas a Kempis on Inward Simplicity
Teaching on Sabbath and Rest from John Chrysostom: Chrysostom on Rest from Anxiety