
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode, we explore one of Jesus’s most piercing questions: Who, or what, do we actually serve? As we close Matthew 6, Jesus contrasts the loyalty we give to God with the devotion we give to “mammon,” the ancient symbol of wealth and control. He teaches that divided allegiance breeds anxiety, but single-hearted trust brings peace. Through vivid images of birds, lilies, and daily bread, we’re reminded that God’s care is steady and sufficient. The call isn’t to stop planning but to stop panicking. To seek the kingdom first and let trust replace striving.
“Serving” in this passage means full devotion, not part-time faith.
Mammon represents not just money but misplaced trust in control and self-sufficiency.
Divided loyalty leads to anxiety; single devotion leads to peace.
The natural world, birds and lilies, testifies to God’s provision and faithfulness.
“Seek first the kingdom” means reordering priorities toward God’s justice and mercy.
The opposite of anxiety isn’t apathy but trust.
God’s grace meets us daily, like manna in the wilderness. Enough for today.
Freedom grows from letting go of control and resting in God’s care.
The Gospel of Matthew (The Daily Study Bible) — William Barclay
The Divine Conspiracy — Dallas Willard
Homilies on the Gospel of Matthew — Gregory of Nyssa
The HarperCollins Study Bible, notes on Matthew 6:24–34
The Jewish Annotated New Testament, commentary on Matthew 6
City of God — St. Augustine
Gospel at a Glance walks through the gospels one short passage at a time, finding depth, challenge, and comfort in just a few verses. Follow for daily reflections that invite us to see how the kingdom of God still breaks into ordinary life.
Connect:
two masters, anxiety, trust, faith, mammon, Matthew 6, Sermon on the Mount, kingdom of God, daily bread, freedom, discipleship
#GospelAtAGlance #TwoMasters #Matthew6 #SermonOnTheMount #Faith #Trust #KingdomOfGod #Freedom #DailyBread
By Andi
In this episode, we explore one of Jesus’s most piercing questions: Who, or what, do we actually serve? As we close Matthew 6, Jesus contrasts the loyalty we give to God with the devotion we give to “mammon,” the ancient symbol of wealth and control. He teaches that divided allegiance breeds anxiety, but single-hearted trust brings peace. Through vivid images of birds, lilies, and daily bread, we’re reminded that God’s care is steady and sufficient. The call isn’t to stop planning but to stop panicking. To seek the kingdom first and let trust replace striving.
“Serving” in this passage means full devotion, not part-time faith.
Mammon represents not just money but misplaced trust in control and self-sufficiency.
Divided loyalty leads to anxiety; single devotion leads to peace.
The natural world, birds and lilies, testifies to God’s provision and faithfulness.
“Seek first the kingdom” means reordering priorities toward God’s justice and mercy.
The opposite of anxiety isn’t apathy but trust.
God’s grace meets us daily, like manna in the wilderness. Enough for today.
Freedom grows from letting go of control and resting in God’s care.
The Gospel of Matthew (The Daily Study Bible) — William Barclay
The Divine Conspiracy — Dallas Willard
Homilies on the Gospel of Matthew — Gregory of Nyssa
The HarperCollins Study Bible, notes on Matthew 6:24–34
The Jewish Annotated New Testament, commentary on Matthew 6
City of God — St. Augustine
Gospel at a Glance walks through the gospels one short passage at a time, finding depth, challenge, and comfort in just a few verses. Follow for daily reflections that invite us to see how the kingdom of God still breaks into ordinary life.
Connect:
two masters, anxiety, trust, faith, mammon, Matthew 6, Sermon on the Mount, kingdom of God, daily bread, freedom, discipleship
#GospelAtAGlance #TwoMasters #Matthew6 #SermonOnTheMount #Faith #Trust #KingdomOfGod #Freedom #DailyBread