March 17 – Do Not Worry About Tomorrow

Matthew 6:34 – "Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own."

Reflection: Stay focused on today’s mission. God is already in your tomorrow, preparing the way.

In Matthew 6, Jesus delivers the Sermon on the Mount, teaching about faith, trust, and God's provision. In this chapter, He reassures His followers that worrying about the future is unnecessary because God is in control.

In Matthew 6:34, Jesus says:

  • "Do not worry about tomorrow." – Worrying about the future is a distraction from what God is doing today.
  • "For tomorrow will worry about itself." – The future is not for us to control—God has already planned it.
  • "Each day has enough trouble of its own." – Instead of being anxious about the unknown, focus on the present mission and trust God with what’s ahead.

This verse is a call to trust in God’s provision, reminding believers that faith is about living in the present, not being consumed by what’s ahead.

How This Applies to a Soldier’s Faith

For a soldier, Matthew 6:34 is a command to stay mission-focused and trust that God has already secured the future. Here’s how this verse applies:

  1. Focus on Today’s Mission
    • A soldier must stay focused on the present objective, not get distracted by future battles.
    • This verse reminds believers to carry out today’s duties with discipline and let God handle tomorrow.
  2. God is Already in the Future
    • Military operations involve uncertainty, but soldiers trust their commanders’ strategy.
    • Spiritually, God has already prepared the way, so believers can move forward without fear of the unknown.
  3. Worry Weakens Readiness
    • In combat, anxiousness about the future can be a distraction and a liability.
    • Jesus teaches that trusting in God removes the burden of worry, keeping soldiers mentally and spiritually sharp.
  4. Faith Requires Trust in God’s Daily Provision
    • Just as soldiers rely on supply chains for daily provisions, believers must trust that God will provide exactly what they need each day.
    • Worrying about the future won’t change it—faith and obedience will.

ENDEX

Matthew 6:34 is a soldier’s reminder to stay focused on today’s mission. Just as warriors trust their leadership to handle future battles, believers must trust God to lead the way. Fear of the unknown is a distraction, but faith in God keeps a soldier steady and ready for whatever comes next. God has already secured the future—move forward with confidence.


Comments

  1. My first night in Iraq set the tone for the entire deployment—not because of an enemy attack, but because of how people reacted to a near miss.

    A Chinese 107mm rocket landed in our camp. It didn’t explode. Instead, it rolled through some tents, startled some soldiers, and cost us a few hours of sleep. While the EOD team worked to determine if it was still live, two groups of leadership had very different responses.

    One group—the Lieutenants—focused on personal recognition. They paced out the impact distance, referenced regulations that could justify awarding a Combat Infantry Badge (CIB), and ordered Specialists to take pictures as evidence.

    The other group—the Majors—prepared for an attack that wasn’t coming. They scrambled to coordinate resources, forgetting that we were on a large, well-defended base and didn’t even have ammunition yet.

    Meanwhile, our actual mission was simple:

    Land.
    Get some rest.
    Wait for our ride to Baghdad.
    Instead, 300 exhausted soldiers baked in the sun the next day, tempers flared, and grudges formed. That single, unnecessary distraction created division that never fully healed.

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