Quotes related to Matthew 6:34
I like to describe worry or anxiety as spending today trying to figure out tomorrow. Let's learn to use the time God has given us for today!
— Joyce Meyer
One of the best ways to be patient is to keep your mind focused on what you are currently doing.
— Joyce Meyer
Trust in Him Are you worrying about tomorrow when you should be focusing on today? Trust God to equip you for whatever comes today, tomorrow, and in the future, so that you can receive the fullness of His gifts today.
— Joyce Meyer
Every time a situation arises that could be stressful or would cause us to be anxious or worried, we have to renew our commitment to trust God instead.
— Joyce Meyer
God will give us the grace to deal with tomorrow, but He won't give it to us until tomorrow gets here.
— Joyce Meyer
Anxiety does not empty tomorrow of its sorrows, but only empties today of its strength. —Charles Spurgeon
— Joyce Meyer
Are you worrying about tomorrow when you should be focusing on today? Trust God to equip you for whatever comes today, tomorrow, and in the future, so that you can receive the fullness of His gifts today.
— Joyce Meyer
As we go to the places where we are called by God—sometimes gladly, sometimes reluctantly, always in anxiety—we are drawn into the newness of God's future.
— Walter Brueggemann
While the prophets are in a way future-tellers, they are concerned with the future as it impinges upon the present. Conversely, liberals who abdicated and turned all futuring over to conservatives have settled for a focus on the present.
— Walter Brueggemann
the book of Matthew and read from chapter 6, verse 27: "'Which of you by taking thought can add one cubit unto his stature?
— Wanda Brunstetter
George MacDonald, the nineteenth-century British preacher and author, said, "It is not the cares of today, but the cares of tomorrow, that weigh a man down. For the needs of today we have corresponding strength given. For the morrow we are told to trust. It is not ours yet. It is when tomorrow's burden is added to the burden of today that the weight is more than a man can bear.
— Darlene Zschech
A true Master Player plays as thought the game is already in the past, according to a script whose every detail is known prior to the play itself.
— James Carse