
Look at the birds of the air, for they neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns; yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not of more value than they? Which of you by worrying can add one cubit to his stature? (Matthew 6:26-27)
Adding Cubits
Linear measurements were established using the proportions of the human body as guides, including the fingers, the palm, the forearm, and the distance from the tip of one middle finger to the other middle finger, with the arms extended. Four fingers equaled a palm, three palms equaled a span, two spans equaled a cubit, and four cubits equaled a fathom. The measure of a cubit was generally the length from the elbow to the end of the middle finger (sometimes only to the root of the hand at the wrist).
The cubit was a small unit, roughly 22 inches long. Jesus, the master teacher, uses a common story of everyday life to illustrate how short life is and how useless it becomes to worry about the affairs of life. In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus shows the disciples that laying up treasures on earth is an exercise in futility. Treasures of earth are destroyed by moths (garments), metal rusts, and thieves break in and steal. The heart must be singularly on the will of God, trusting the Lord to provide all things. Jesus emphasizes that no man can serve two masters. Trying to gain the riches of the world and the riches of eternal life cannot be done. Serving two masters is a life of conflict because it is impossible to serve God and mammon at the same time.
Life can bring its problems with caring for the family. Food must be gathered, provisions for nourishment must be made, and coverings must be provided to protect the family. All these things are necessary parts of life as man lives in a fallen world. When God punished Adam for transgressing the word of God, the Lord burdened humanity with the toil of life to provide for the family. Jesus is not suggesting that honest labor is a problem. Still, when the heart is so focused on providing the necessities of life, he forgets the necessities for eternal life, and he fails God, himself, and his family.
Becoming consumed with the worries of life is like trying to add even a small portion of life. Jesus taught that there was nothing a man could do to increase his stature even in the smallest degree. Paul declared to the Athenians that God has established the habitation of man. God created man to live on the earth, not the ocean. He can visit the ocean for a time, but is unable to sustain life without returning to his world. There is a lot of discussion about space travel, but humans cannot live in space as their home. The moon will never be a human colony. The point Jesus is making is that all the worry men put into life will not add one cubit or small measure to what God has created.
Nothing man can do will avert his appointment with death. Life is not about the world that is lived on earth. Eternal life is all that matters because that is all that will last. The birds of the air have no worries because they trust in the Lord and know He will care for them. They are not trying to add cubits to their lives. It is only man, made in the image of God, that deludes himself into thinking he can extend himself larger than what God has made him. A man can spend his life worrying about life and end up living a wasted life. There is no joy and no profitability to his worry. Stop trying to add cubits to something that will destroy the soul.








