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In Matthew 6:25-34, Jesus speaks into one of the most common struggles of human life: worry. He tells His disciples not to worry about life, food, drink, clothing, or tomorrow. This is not a shallow command to pretend problems do not exist. It is a call to trust the Father who knows our needs and cares for His people.
The message considers how worry can become a constant companion, quietly filling the heart with fear and distracting us from faithfulness. Jesus points to the birds of the air and the lilies of the field as reminders of God’s care. If the Father feeds and clothes what is temporary, how much more will He care for His children? The issue is not whether life contains real concerns. It does. The issue is where we take those concerns and what we allow them to rule.
This passage leads us back to one of the great commands of the Sermon on the Mount: seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness. Worry pulls our eyes downward and forward into imagined troubles. Faith lifts our eyes to the Father and calls us to live faithfully today. This message invites us to replace fear with trust, and anxious striving with kingdom pursuit.

