Matthew 11:30

Matthew 11:30

For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.

King James Version (KJV)

Read this verse in context with translation switching:

Read Full Chapter →

Context

This verse concludes Jesus' invitation to the weary, explaining why His yoke brings rest rather than added burden.

What Does Matthew 11:30 Mean?

Jesus assures us that the yoke He gives is well-fitting and the burden He places on us is light. This brief verse completes His great invitation, explaining why coming to Him brings rest. The word translated "easy" carries the sense of being kind, good, or well-fitted -- a yoke shaped to the one who bears it, not chafing or crushing. Jesus does not promise a life without responsibility; following Him still involves a yoke and a burden. But His burden is light because He carries it with us and because it flows from love rather than from cold demand. The contrast is with the heavy loads laid on people by rigid rule-keeping and the weight of trying to earn acceptance through effort alone. In Christ, obedience becomes a response to grace rather than a desperate striving. The lightness comes not from the absence of cost but from the presence of the One who shares the load and gives strength to bear it. To walk with Jesus is to discover that what once exhausted us becomes, in His company, a path of rest.

In the Original Language

The Greek chrestos, rendered "easy," means kind, good, or well-fitted; phortion is a burden or load that one carries.

Application

Walk closely with Christ in daily obedience, trusting that what He asks is fitted to you and that He shares the weight of every step.

Related Verse Explanations

Keep Studying Matthew 11

Read the whole chapter in KJV, ASV, or WEB, or go deeper with the chapter study guide and key themes.