Commentary
Jesus moves from outward acts of righteousness to the inward loyalties that govern them. In giving, prayer, and fasting, the repeated contrast is between hypocrites who want public notice and the Father who sees in secret. The Lord's Prayer teaches disciples to begin with the Father's name, kingdom, and will before asking for bread, forgiveness, and deliverance. The section then turns to treasure, the eye, and two masters, showing that anxiety about food and clothing is bound up with divided allegiance. Kingdom righteousness therefore includes hidden devotion, forgiving prayer, undivided loyalty, and trust in the Father's care.
Jesus teaches that citizens of the kingdom must practice piety for the Father's approval rather than human applause, seek the Father's kingdom above material security, and trust his knowing care instead of serving wealth or surrendering to anxiety.
6:1 "Be careful not to display your righteousness merely to be seen by people. Otherwise you have no reward with your Father in heaven. 6:2 Thus whenever you do charitable giving, do not blow a trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in synagogues and on streets so that people will praise them. I tell you the truth, they have their reward. 6:3 But when you do your giving, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing, 6:4 so that your gift may be in secret. And your Father, who sees in secret, will reward you. 6:5 "Whenever you pray, do not be like the hypocrites, because they love to pray while standing in synagogues and on street corners so that people can see them. Truly I say to you, they have their reward. 6:6 But whenever you pray, go into your room, close the door, and pray to your Father in secret. And your Father, who sees in secret, will reward you. 6:7 When you pray, do not babble repetitiously like the Gentiles, because they think that by their many words they will be heard. 6:8 Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him. 6:9 So pray this way: Our Father in heaven, may your name be honored, 6:10 may your kingdom come, may your will be done on earth as it is in heaven. 6:11 Give us today our daily bread, 6:12 and forgive us our debts, as we ourselves have forgiven our debtors. 6:13 And do not lead us into temptation, but deliver us from the evil one. 6:14 "For if you forgive others their sins, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. 6:15 But if you do not forgive others, your Father will not forgive you your sins. 6:16 "When you fast, do not look sullen like the hypocrites, for they make their faces unattractive so that people will see them fasting. I tell you the truth, they have their reward. 6:17 When you fast, put oil on your head and wash your face, 6:18 so that it will not be obvious to others when you are fasting, but only to your Father who is in secret. And your Father, who sees in secret, will reward you. 6:19 "Do not accumulate for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal. 6:20 But accumulate for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy, and thieves do not break in and steal. 6:21 For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also. 6:22 "The eye is the lamp of the body. If then your eye is healthy, your whole body will be full of light. 6:23 But if your eye is diseased, your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light in you is darkness, how great is the darkness! 6:24 "No one can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and money. 6:25 "Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink, or about your body, what you will wear. Isn't there more to life than food and more to the body than clothing? 6:26 Look at the birds in the sky: They do not sow, or reap, or gather into barns, yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Aren't you more valuable than they are? 6:27 And which of you by worrying can add even one hour to his life? 6:28 Why do you worry about clothing? Think about how the flowers of the field grow; they do not work or spin. 6:29 Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his glory was clothed like one of these! 6:30 And if this is how God clothes the wild grass, which is here today and tomorrow is tossed into the fire to heat the oven, won't he clothe you even more, you people of little faith? 6:31 So then, don't worry saying, 'What will we eat?' or 'What will we drink?' or 'What will we wear?' 6:32 For the unconverted pursue these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. 6:33 But above all pursue his kingdom and righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. 6:34 So then, do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Today has enough trouble of its own.
Observation notes
- The opening command in 6:1 governs the first triad of examples: giving, prayer, and fasting are not rejected, but their motive and audience are tested.
- The refrain 'they have their reward' appears with the hypocrites, while 'your Father who sees in secret will reward you' answers each hidden practice; reward language structures the whole first half of the unit.
- Jesus assumes his disciples will give, pray, and fast; the repeated 'when' or 'whenever' treats these as expected practices rather than optional extras.
- Your Father' or 'your heavenly Father' recurs throughout the chapter, binding secret devotion, forgiveness, provision, and freedom from anxiety to a filial relationship with God.
- The Lord's Prayer begins with God-centered petitions before personal needs, establishing priority: name, kingdom, will, then bread, forgiveness, and deliverance.
- The forgiveness comment in 6:14-15 is not an isolated topic; it grows directly out of the prayer's petition about forgiving debts.
- The transition at 6:19 from piety to possessions is still about inward orientation: treasure determines heart, the eye depicts moral perception, and masters language states the exclusivity of allegiance.
- The 'therefore' in 6:25 links anxiety to the prior impossibility of serving both God and money; worry is not treated merely as an emotion but as a loyalty issue tied to trust and values.
- Nature examples (birds, lilies, grass) are used not romantically but argumentatively: if the Father provides for lesser creatures and transient grass, his care for disciples is the stronger conclusion.
- The contrast with 'the Gentiles' in 6:7 and 6:32 marks patterns of prayer and pursuit characteristic of those outside covenantal knowledge of the Father, not an ethnic slur against non-Jews as such.
Structure
- 6:1 introduces the governing warning: do not practice righteousness before people for the purpose of being seen, or the Father's reward is forfeited.
- 6:2-4 applies the principle to almsgiving through a hypocrite/disciple contrast framed by public praise versus the Father's seeing in secret.
- 6:5-15 applies the principle to prayer: reject ostentatious prayer and pagan verbosity, receive Jesus' pattern prayer, then hear the attached warning about forgiving others.
- 6:16-18 applies the same principle to fasting with the same contrast between visible display and the Father's hidden evaluation.
- 6:19-24 shifts from acts of piety to the heart's treasure, using treasure, eye, and master imagery to expose divided allegiance.
- 6:25-34 draws the practical consequence with a repeated prohibition of worry, grounding freedom from anxiety in the Father's care and culminating in the command to seek first his kingdom and righteousness.
Key terms
dikaiosyne
Strong's: G1343
Gloss: righteous conduct, covenant-right behavior
The issue is not whether righteousness is practiced, but whether it is performed for human notice. This connects the unit to 5:20 and shows that kingdom righteousness includes motives.
hypokritai
Strong's: G5273
Gloss: play-actors, pretenders
The term frames public religiosity as theatrical performance rather than sincere devotion before God.
misthos
Strong's: G3408
Gloss: reward, recompense
The repeated contrast reveals that the same act can terminate in radically different outcomes depending on its audience and motive.
kryptos
Strong's: G2927
Gloss: hidden, concealed
Hiddenness is not an absolute ban on public acts but a demand that devotion be oriented toward God's sight rather than public display.
pater
Strong's: G3962
Gloss: father
This vocabulary grounds ethics in relationship: disciples give, pray, forgive, and trust as those living before a caring and knowing Father.
epiousios
Strong's: G1967
Gloss: for the coming day, daily, necessary for existence
The unusual term supports the chapter's call to daily dependence rather than anxious stockpiling, even though its precise nuance is debated.
Syntactical features
purpose clause governing motive
Textual signal: 6:1 'for the purpose of being seen by them'
Interpretive effect: Jesus forbids righteousness done with display as its aim, not every instance in which righteous acts become visible. This keeps 6:1 from contradicting 5:16, where good works are seen and the Father is glorified.
antithetical but-when pattern
Textual signal: 6:2-4; 6:5-6; 6:16-18 'when you... do not... but when you...'
Interpretive effect: The repeated contrast sharpens the difference between hypocritical performance and genuine devotion without abolishing the practices themselves.
imperatival model prayer introduced by manner language
Textual signal: 6:9 'pray then in this way'
Interpretive effect: The wording permits both using the prayer and letting it function as a pattern. Jesus is regulating the manner and priorities of prayer, not merely supplying a fixed formula.
for-clause explanatory logic
Textual signal: 6:8, 14, 19, 21, 24-33 repeatedly use explanatory clauses
Interpretive effect: The exhortations are grounded in reasons: the Father's prior knowledge, the reciprocity of forgiveness, the heart-treasure link, the exclusivity of masters, and the Father's providential care.
indicative-imperative linkage around pursuit
Textual signal: 6:32-33 'your heavenly Father knows... but seek first'
Interpretive effect: Knowledge of the Father's awareness does not cancel action; it reorders action. Disciples still seek, but their pursuit is kingdom righteousness rather than anxious acquisition.
Textual critical issues
Doxology at the end of the Lord's Prayer
Variants: Some later manuscripts add 'For yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen,' while earlier witnesses omit it.
Preferred reading: The shorter reading without the doxology.
Interpretive effect: The added doxology fits early liturgical use and is theologically fitting, but it is likely not original to Matthew's text and does not alter the prayer's core petitions.
Rationale: The shorter reading has stronger early manuscript support, and the longer form is well explained as a churchly expansion for worship.
Deliver us from evil or the evil one
Variants: The phrase at 6:13 can be taken generically as 'evil' or personally as 'the evil one.'
Preferred reading: The wording is retained as 'the evil one' in sense, though the Greek form itself allows discussion.
Interpretive effect: A personal reading fits Matthew's broader attention to satanic opposition and makes the final petition a request for protection from personal evil agency as well as evil's power.
Rationale: Matthew elsewhere uses similar wording personally, and the pairing with temptation naturally invites a personal adversarial backdrop.
Old Testament background
Isaiah 29:13
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The denunciation of worship that is outward while the heart is elsewhere forms a strong backdrop to Jesus' treatment of hypocritical piety.
Psalm 103:13
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The Father imagery resonates with Old Testament portrayals of the Lord's compassionate fatherly care, now intensified in Jesus' disciple-address.
Proverbs 23:4-5
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The warning that riches are fleeting aligns with Jesus' contrast between earthly treasure subject to loss and heavenly treasure secure from decay and theft.
Exodus 16
Connection type: pattern
Note: The request for daily bread and the ban on anxious hoarding fit Israel's manna pattern of day-by-day dependence on God's provision.
1 Kings 10:4-7
Connection type: echo
Note: Solomon's glory serves as a foil in 6:29; even Israel's royal splendor is surpassed by God's adornment of transient flowers.
Interpretive options
Scope of 'do not practice your righteousness before people' in 6:1
- Jesus forbids all public acts of devotion.
- Jesus forbids practicing righteousness before people when the aim is to be seen and praised by them.
Preferred option: Jesus forbids practicing righteousness before people when the aim is to be seen and praised by them.
Rationale: The purpose clause controls the command, and 5:16 has already commended visible good works that lead observers to glorify the Father rather than the doer.
Function of the Lord's Prayer
- It is a fixed liturgical text to be repeated verbatim.
- It is primarily a pattern that teaches the content, priorities, and posture of prayer, though it may also be prayed verbatim.
Preferred option: It is primarily a pattern that teaches the content, priorities, and posture of prayer, though it may also be prayed verbatim.
Rationale: The introduction 'pray then in this way' points to manner and model, especially in a context criticizing empty repetition.
Meaning of 'epiousios' in 6:11
- Daily bread in the ordinary sense of today's needed provision.
- Bread for the coming day.
- A spiritualized reference to heavenly or sacramental bread.
Preferred option: Daily bread in the ordinary sense of the Father's provision for present needs, with an overtone of day-by-day dependence.
Rationale: The surrounding context is material provision without anxiety, and the chapter's logic favors ordinary sustenance received from the Father one day at a time rather than a sacramental reading.
Sense of the petition about temptation and evil in 6:13
- A request that God never allow testing of any kind.
- A request that the Father preserve disciples from succumbing in testing and rescue them from the evil one's power.
Preferred option: A request that the Father preserve disciples from succumbing in testing and rescue them from the evil one's power.
Rationale: Scripture does not portray God as enticing to evil, so the petition is best read as dependence on divine protection amid testing rather than denial that trials occur.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The unit must be read within the Sermon on the Mount, especially alongside 5:16 and 5:20, so that visible good works and hidden piety are not falsely opposed.
mention_principles
Relevance: medium
Note: Because Jesus mentions giving, prayer, and fasting, one should not assume he is giving an exhaustive doctrine of all worship practices; he selects representative acts that expose motive.
christological
Relevance: medium
Note: Jesus speaks with direct authority about prayer, reward, and the Father's will; the unit should not be reduced to generic moral advice detached from the authority of the Messiah-teacher.
moral
Relevance: high
Note: The repeated contrasts require ethical reading: motive, forgiveness, loyalty, and trust are morally significant and not merely symbolic or rhetorical flourishes.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: medium
Note: The eye, treasure, and two masters sayings use imagery that must be interpreted by their point, not pressed into unrelated allegorical details.
Theological significance
- The repeated address to 'your Father' makes God's fatherly relation the engine of the whole chapter: he sees what is hidden, knows needs before they are voiced, forgives, feeds, clothes, and rewards.
- Jesus treats motive as morally weighty. Giving, praying, and fasting can be genuine acts of devotion or religious theater, depending on whether they are aimed at the Father's approval or public praise.
- The prayer Jesus gives is ordered theologically before it is ordered personally: the Father's name, kingdom, and will frame requests for bread, forgiveness, and protection.
- The comment in 6:14-15 keeps forgiveness from becoming a verbal prayer item only. Those who ask for release of debts must themselves become releasers of debts.
- Treasure, the healthy or diseased eye, and the two masters saying all expose the same issue: wealth easily becomes a competing lord because it claims the trust and desire that belong to God.
- The prohibition of worry is not merely emotional advice. In 6:25-34 anxiety is tied to little faith, misdirected pursuit, and forgetfulness that the Father already knows what his children need.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The chapter is held together by carefully staged contrasts: secret and public, Father and hypocrites, Father and Gentiles, treasure on earth and in heaven, healthy eye and diseased eye, God and money, trust and anxiety. These are not disconnected sayings. They progressively trace how external piety, inward vision, and practical security all disclose a person's true center of allegiance.
Biblical theological: Jesus recasts ordinary acts of devotion around filial relation to God. Giving, prayer, fasting, forgiveness, and material dependence are all drawn into the life of those who can say 'our Father.' The prayer's God-first sequence and the closing command to seek the kingdom first belong together: disciples live from the Father's reign before they live from their own felt shortages.
Metaphysical: The passage assumes a world in which the decisive observer is unseen but fully knowing. Hidden acts are not lost, earthly stores are unstable by nature, and created life is sustained by providence rather than human control. Reality is therefore not closed to what can be counted, displayed, or stockpiled.
Psychological Spiritual: Jesus locates ostentation, unforgiveness, greed, and worry in the inner life. The desire to be noticed, the refusal to release another's debt, the fixation on accumulation, and the fear of tomorrow all reveal a heart trying to secure itself apart from simple trust in the Father.
Divine Perspective: The Father is presented as the one whose evaluation matters most. He is neither manipulated by many words nor inattentive to ordinary needs. He values hidden sincerity over display, forgiving likeness over spiritual posturing, and kingdom priority over acquisitive self-protection.
Category: personhood
Note: God is known here as a personal Father who sees, knows, hears, forgives, and provides.
Category: character
Note: His character combines generosity and moral seriousness: he gives bread and clothing, yet he also opposes hypocrisy and treats unforgiveness as grave.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: The birds and lilies are not decorative examples only; they display God's active providence over the created order.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: Jesus discloses God in relational terms that reshape how disciples pray, give, fast, forgive, and face material need.
- Acts of righteousness may be seen by others, yet they must not be done in order to be seen by others.
- The Father knows needs before disciples ask, yet Jesus still commands them to ask for bread, forgiveness, and deliverance.
- Wealth can be used, yet it cannot be served; the line between possession and mastery is morally decisive.
- Disciples are to attend to today's needs and responsibilities, yet they must refuse tomorrow's anxious self-occupation.
Enrichment summary
Matthew 6 assumes familiar acts of Jewish devotion but relocates their true audience. Giving, prayer, and fasting are not dismissed; they are pulled out of the social marketplace of honor and placed before the Father who sees in secret. The chapter's key images sharpen that point. 'Debts' names sins as liabilities needing release. 'Treasure in heaven' speaks of secure value before God, not celestial finance. The saying about the eye likely concerns moral perception shaped by generosity or greed, which fits its location between treasure and serving money. Read this way, the chapter resists anti-ritual readings, prosperity formulas, and therapeutic reductions of worry.
Traditions of men check
Treating the Lord's Prayer as a mere ritual to recite without regard to its God-centered order and ethical demands.
Why it conflicts: Jesus gives the prayer in a context rejecting empty repetition and immediately ties one of its petitions to the necessity of forgiving others.
Textual pressure point: 6:7-15 connects prayer form, motive, and forgiving practice.
Caution: This should not be used to forbid all liturgical use of the prayer; the concern is mindless repetition divorced from its meaning.
Using 'do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing' as a ban on all organized or visible giving.
Why it conflicts: The saying targets self-conscious display and applause-seeking, not every circumstance in which gifts may become known.
Textual pressure point: 6:1 and 6:2 specify the motive 'to be seen' and 'so that people will praise them.'
Caution: The text should not be used to attack every public report of ministry support; motive and manner remain the controlling issues.
Prosperity-style readings of 6:33 that promise abundance if one performs enough religious acts.
Why it conflicts: The context defines the promise in terms of the Father's provision for necessities and calls disciples away from treasure accumulation.
Textual pressure point: 6:19-34 contrasts heavenly treasure with earthly stockpiling and speaks of food and clothing rather than luxury.
Caution: The passage does teach real divine provision, but not a guarantee of wealth or freedom from hardship.
Therapeutic readings that treat worry only as a mental health category with no theological dimension.
Why it conflicts: Jesus roots worry in little faith, divided loyalties, and Gentile-style pursuit of necessities apart from trust in the Father.
Textual pressure point: 6:24-32 links anxiety to serving money, little faith, and the Father's knowledge.
Caution: This should not be used harshly against sufferers; the text calls for faith-filled reorientation, not simplistic condemnation.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: covenantal_identity
Why It Matters: Jesus speaks as though giving, prayer, and fasting are normal features of covenant life. He does not abolish them; he reorders them around the Father who sees in secret and the communal address 'Our Father.'
Western Misread: Treating the chapter as if Jesus were rejecting structured devotion altogether or reducing the prayer to an individual technique for private spirituality.
Interpretive Difference: The unit reads as purification of covenant piety: ordinary practices remain, but their audience, posture, and aims are radically reset.
Dynamic: honor_shame
Why It Matters: Almsgiving in public, prayer at visible locations, and a deliberately disfigured face while fasting could all function as bids for honor. 'They have their reward' fits that social world exactly: public esteem is the payment they wanted.
Western Misread: Reading hypocrisy only as private insincerity and missing the social economy of prestige that Jesus is directly attacking.
Interpretive Difference: The warning is more concrete than 'be sincere.' Jesus forbids turning devotion into status acquisition.
Idioms and figures
Expression: forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors
Category: idiom
Explanation: "Debts" is moral language for sins and obligations requiring release, not merely financial liability. The prayer binds divine forgiveness to the disciple's concrete treatment of others who owe them relationally or morally.
Interpretive effect: It keeps the petition ethical and relational. Forgiveness here is not a vague feeling of being spiritually refreshed but remission sought from God and extended toward others.
Expression: treasures in heaven
Category: metaphor
Explanation: This is stock language for what is secure before God and lies within his recompense, not a picture of literal heavenly bank deposits or a mechanical merit ledger.
Interpretive effect: It directs the reader to lasting value under God's reign and blocks both cynical dismissal of reward language and crude transactional readings.
Expression: The eye is the lamp of the body... if your eye is healthy... if your eye is diseased
Category: metaphor
Explanation: In Jewish wisdom idiom, the eye can express moral perception and, likely here, a generous versus grasping orientation. The saying sits between treasure and mammon, so it concerns the kind of inner vision that governs one's whole life, not anatomy or mystical luminosity.
Interpretive effect: The passage presses on undivided loyalty and generosity. A greedy or distorted outlook darkens the whole person and prepares for the impossibility of serving both God and money.
Expression: You cannot serve God and money
Category: metaphor
Explanation: "Money" functions as a rival master, not merely a neutral tool. Jesus personifies wealth as a lord demanding allegiance, trust, and obedience.
Interpretive effect: Anxiety and hoarding are exposed as worship problems, not only budgeting issues. The saying raises the chapter from ethics of possessions to exclusive allegiance.
Expression: do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing
Category: hyperbole
Explanation: Jesus uses deliberate overstatement to picture giving so free of self-display that even one's own self-congratulation is excluded.
Interpretive effect: The force falls on hiddenness of motive, not on a literal rule that every gift must remain unknown in all circumstances.
Application implications
- Hidden disciplines are a fitting test of spiritual integrity. If generosity, prayer, or fasting lose their appeal once recognition disappears, the audience has shifted from the Father to other people.
- The Lord's Prayer should train the order of ordinary prayer: God's name, reign, and will are not a pious preface to personal concerns but the frame that rightly governs them.
- Requests for forgiveness cannot be separated from the practice of forgiving. A disciple who clings to another's debt is resisting the very logic of the prayer Jesus teaches.
- How money is stored, spent, and desired reveals where the heart is settling. Concrete financial choices are therefore acts of allegiance, not merely matters of technique.
- The remedy for anxiety in 6:25-34 is not denial of real needs but deliberate trust in the Father's knowledge and care, joined to faithful attention to today's obedience.
Enrichment applications
- Corporate and private prayer are both corrected by the sequence of the Lord's Prayer; requests sound different when they begin with the Father's name, kingdom, and will.
- One useful diagnostic for generosity is not only whether money was given but whether the loss of recognition would make the act feel wasted.
- Choices about savings, spending, and lifestyle belong to discipleship in this chapter because they disclose whether the eye is clear and whether God or wealth is being trusted as master of the future question.
Warnings
- Do not set 6:1 against 5:16 as though Jesus first commands and then forbids visible good works; the difference lies in intended audience and sought glory.
- Do not flatten 'reward' into crass merit theology; in this chapter reward functions relationally within the Father's approval and response to sincere devotion.
- Do not spiritualize bread, treasure, or worry so completely that the material dimension disappears; Jesus is speaking about real provision, possessions, and bodily needs.
- Do not read 6:25-34 as a denial of prudent labor or planning; the target is anxious preoccupation and misplaced pursuit, not responsible stewardship.
- Do not reduce the Gentile references to ethnic disparagement; in context they mark those who do not know the Father and therefore pursue prayer and provision differently.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not claim exact dependence of the Lord's Prayer on later fixed synagogue forms; broad Jewish prayer patterns are enough to clarify the God-centered sequence.
- Do not press the 'good eye/bad eye' background so far that the immediate context of treasure, darkness, and masters is overshadowed.
- Do not use background on almsgiving and reward to construct a mechanical doctrine of merit; Matthew's emphasis remains the Father's seeing and approval.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Treating 6:1-18 as a ban on any public giving, prayer, or fasting.
Why It Happens: The secrecy language is read in isolation from the purpose clause in 6:1 and from the earlier command that good works may be seen in a way that glorifies the Father.
Correction: Jesus prohibits display as an aim. He does not abolish the practices or deny that acts of obedience may at times be visible.
Misreading: Taking 6:14-15 either as a denial of grace or as a warning that can be emptied of force.
Why It Happens: Readers often resolve the tension too quickly in one doctrinal direction instead of letting the saying stand in its immediate connection to the prayer's forgiveness petition.
Correction: The exact theological formulation is debated, but the practical force is plain: a disciple cannot ask the Father for forgiveness while refusing to forgive others.
Misreading: Reading 'treasure in heaven' and 'all these things will be added' as a formula for material prosperity.
Why It Happens: Reward language is detached from the chapter's emphasis on hidden devotion, ordinary provision, and the rejection of hoarding.
Correction: Jesus speaks about the Father's care for genuine needs such as food and clothing, not a mechanism for securing luxury.
Misreading: Turning 6:25-34 into either a rejection of planning or a message about emotional wellness severed from worship.
Why It Happens: The section is separated from 6:19-24, where treasure, the eye, and serving God or money establish the issue of allegiance.
Correction: Jesus addresses anxious preoccupation rooted in rival trust. Responsible labor is not the target; divided mastery is.