Matthew 6:28 - Ellicott's Commentary On The Whole Bible

Bible Comments

Why take ye thought for raiment? — The question might well be asked of every race of the whole family of man. Yet we ought not to forget its special pointedness as addressed to a people who reckoned their garments, not less than their money, as part of their capital, and often expended on them the labour of many weeks or months. (Comp. Matthew 6:20; James 5:2.)

Consider the lilies of the field. — Here again we may think of the lesson as drawn immediately from the surrounding objects. The hill-sides of Galilee are clothed in spring with the crown imperial, and the golden amaryllis, and crimson tulips, and anemones of all shades from scarlet to white, to say nothing of the commoner buttercups and dandelions and daisies; and all these are probably classed roughly together under the generic name of “lilies.” And these, with what we may reverently speak of as a love of Nature, the Lord tells His disciples to “consider,” i.e., not merely to look at with a passing glance, but to study — to learn, as it were, by heart — till they have realised every beauty of structure and form and hue.

Matthew 6:28

28 And why take ye thought for raiment? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin: