Therefore I say unto you, Take no thought for your life,
what ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink; nor yet for your body, what ye shall
put on. Is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment? (Matt. 6:25)
Christ reproves that excessive anxiety, with which men
torment themselves, about food and clothing, and, at the same time, applies a
remedy for curing this disease. When he forbids them to be anxious, this is not
to be taken literally, as if he intended to take away from his people all care.
We know that men are born on the condition of having some care.
But immoderate care is condemned for two reasons: either
because in so doing men tease and vex themselves to no purpose, by carrying
their anxiety farther than is proper or than their calling demands; or because
they claim more for themselves than they have a right to do, and place such a
reliance on their own industry, that they neglect to call upon God.
We ought to remember this promise: though unbelievers shall
“rise up early, and sit up late, and eat the bread of sorrows,” yet believers
will obtain, through the kindness of God, rest and sleep, (Psalm 127:2.) Though
the children of God are not free from toil and anxiety, yet, properly speaking,
we do not say that they are anxious about life: because, through their reliance
on the providence of God, they enjoy calm repose.
Hence it is easy to learn, how far we ought to be anxious
about food. Each of us ought to labor, as far as his calling
requires and the Lord commands; and each of us ought to be led by his own wants
to call upon God. Such anxiety holds an intermediate place between indolent
carelessness and the unnecessary torments by which unbelievers kill themselves.
But if we give proper attention to the words of Christ, we shall find, that he
does not forbid every kind of care, but only what arises from distrust. Be not
anxious, says he, what you shall eat, or what you shall drink. That
belongs to those who tremble for fear of poverty or hunger, as if they were to
be in want of food every moment. (Commentaries)
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