Verse explainer
Not a call to ignore planning — it's a ban on anxious, consuming dread about a future only God holds.
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.
BSBTherefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Today has enough trouble of its own.
The plain meaning
Jesus has spent vv. 25–33 pointing to birds and wildflowers as evidence that God provides for what he made. The command in v. 34 is the landing point of that whole argument, not a stand-alone slogan. The word translated 'take no thought' (Greek merimnao) means gnawing, dividing anxiety — not prudent forethought. The verse doesn't say tomorrow doesn't matter; it says tomorrow has its own weight, and piling tomorrow's imagined troubles on top of today's real ones is a burden no one was built to carry. The cure Jesus offers is not indifference but trust: seek the kingdom first (v. 33), and the daily needs fall into place. Living one day at a time isn't laziness — it's the only scale on which human beings can actually act.
The common misreading
What the commentators say
JFB reads the verse as a practical maxim of uncommon wisdom: each day arrives with its own load of care, and to anticipate the next day's troubles is simply to double the present burden. The phrase 'the morrow shall take thought for itself' means tomorrow will bring its own anxieties in due time — there is no need to borrow them in advance.
Henry emphasizes that Christ forbids the distraction of the mind by future uncertainties, not the use of lawful foresight. To be anxious about what may never happen, when today's duties already demand full attention, is both faithless and practically self-defeating. God gives grace for today's trouble; he has not yet given grace for tomorrow's because tomorrow has not yet arrived.
Barnes notes that 'sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof' uses 'evil' in the sense of trouble or hardship — not moral wickedness. Every day carries enough real difficulty to occupy a person fully. The verse counsels against the habit of manufacturing fresh distress by rehearsing future calamities that may never come, when present duties require the whole of one's energy and faith.
The word behind it
'To be anxious, to have a divided mind.' From merizo, to divide or split. The word pictures the mind being pulled apart by worry rather than held together by a single focus. It appears six times in vv. 25–34 — Jesus is targeting not reasonable planning but the gnawing, circular dread that splits attention and implies God cannot be trusted with the outcome. The same word appears in Philippians 4:6: 'be anxious for nothing.'
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