No one can serve two masters
Inspirational
I've Heard That All My Life!
Familiar Expressions from the Bible
Object:
Expression: No one can serve two masters
Location: Matthew 6:24
Verse: No man [one] can serve two masters; for either he [or she] will hate the one, and love the other; or else he [or she] will hold [be loyal] to the one, and despise the other. Ye [you] cannot serve God and mammon.
Mammon is a Semitic word for money or riches. We cannot place God first in our lives if we really have our hearts in this world of material wealth and possessions rather than on the world to come. This world lasts only for a little while, whereas God's world to come lasts forever. Halley's Bible Handbook says it so well:
Christians are citizens of heaven, sojourners here a while, cumbered with daily earthly cares, but their eyes ever fixed on the eternal homeland. An estate there which we build here. Only that which we give to God is ours forever. Said one man to another, of an acquaintance who had just died, "How much did he leave?" Answered the other, "He left it all." Even so. Shortly we must, everyone of us, quit our earthly tent, and leave to others that which we called ours. Fortunate for us if we have sent on ahead for a reservation in the Eternal Mansions of God.
All must make a choice. Jesus said that the one that is not with me is against me (Matthew 12:30). No one can serve two masters.
Location: Matthew 6:24
Verse: No man [one] can serve two masters; for either he [or she] will hate the one, and love the other; or else he [or she] will hold [be loyal] to the one, and despise the other. Ye [you] cannot serve God and mammon.
Mammon is a Semitic word for money or riches. We cannot place God first in our lives if we really have our hearts in this world of material wealth and possessions rather than on the world to come. This world lasts only for a little while, whereas God's world to come lasts forever. Halley's Bible Handbook says it so well:
Christians are citizens of heaven, sojourners here a while, cumbered with daily earthly cares, but their eyes ever fixed on the eternal homeland. An estate there which we build here. Only that which we give to God is ours forever. Said one man to another, of an acquaintance who had just died, "How much did he leave?" Answered the other, "He left it all." Even so. Shortly we must, everyone of us, quit our earthly tent, and leave to others that which we called ours. Fortunate for us if we have sent on ahead for a reservation in the Eternal Mansions of God.
All must make a choice. Jesus said that the one that is not with me is against me (Matthew 12:30). No one can serve two masters.

