Christianity: Details about 'Matthew 6 34'

Index / Christianity / Sermon On The Mount / Matthew 6 34 /

Web christianity-guide.com

Navigation

Home
One level up
Back
Index of contents
Links
Jesus-Shop

Useful Links


Christianity Portal
History of christianity Jesus Christ Old testament New testament Apocrypha Christian_music
Roman catholic Orthodox Christianity Protestantism Christian movements Mormons Baptists

Matthew 6:34 is the thirty-fourth, and final, verse of the sixth chapter of the Gospel of Matthew in the New Testament and is part of the Sermon on the Mount. This verse concludes the discussion of worry about material provisions.

In the King James Version of the Bible the text reads:

Take therefore no thought for the morrow: for
the morrow shall take thought for the things of
itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.

The World English Bible translates the passage as:

Therefore don’t be anxious for tomorrow,
for tomorrow will be anxious for itself.
Each day’s own evil is sufficient.

Luz notes that there are two interpretations of this verse: an optimistic and a pessimistic one. The optimistic view is that this verse is a rephrasing of the ancient idea of carpe diem, live each day to it fullest because one never knows what will happen tomorrow. The more pessimistic view, which Luz thinks is more likely, is that the evil of each individual day is so great and so overbearing that it is hard enough to get through one day, much less worry about those coming. Luz argues that while the previous verse is optimistic that in the long run the Kingdom of Heaven will be proclaimed and



all will be well, in the short run the future is little more than misery.

There are other interpretations of this verse. Fowler argues that one should not worry about tomorrow, as one is being presumptuous that one will live to see tomorrow, when God has not yet granted that extra day. Morris feels that the verse should be read as an argument to always defer worry to tomorrow, and that by doing so one will never have to worry today.

This verse is not found in Luke, and Schweizer, and other scholars, feel it was most likely a composition of the author of Matthew, a concluding remark for what had gone before. Morrow can either mean the next day in particular, or the future in general. The word here translated as evil, can mean that, but more likely it simply means trouble or difficulty, rather than the evil of Satan.

References

  • Fowler, Harold. The Gospel of Matthew: Volume One. Joplin: College Press, 1968
  • Luz, Ulrich. Matthew 1-7: A Commentary. trans. Wilhlem C. Linss. Minneapolis: Augsburg Fortess, 1989.
  • Morris, Leon. The Gospel According to Matthew. Grand Rapids: W.B. Eerdmans, 1992.
  • Schweizer, Eduard. The Good News According to Matthew. Atlanta: John Knox Press, 1975


Gospel of Matthew
Preceded by:
Matthew 6:33
Chapter 6Followed by:
Matthew 7:1


Visitors who viewed this also viewed:

Christianity: Cardinal Catholicism
Christianity: Coptic Orthodox Patriarch Of Alexandria
Christianity: Jewish Christian
Buddhism: Parinirvana
New Age: Qi


 





Click here for our Jesus-Shop


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Matthew_6:34". A list of the wikipedia authors can be found here.