Verse MeaningLukeEasy to understand
Luke 21:2: Meaning Explained
And he saw also a certain poor widow casting in thither two mites.
Luke 21:2
“He also noticed a destitute widow putting in two small copper coins.”
What it means
Jesus saw a poor widow who had almost nothing put in two tiny copper coins.
What’s Happening Here
After observing wealthy people giving, Jesus notices someone who is very poor also giving.
Key Words
DestituteExtremely poor; having almost nothing
WidowA woman whose husband has died
Why It Matters
This widow becomes an example of true generosity despite her poverty.
Did You Know?
Widows were among the poorest people in ancient society because they had no husband to support them.
Tradition Spectrum
Word Study
G1492
he sawεἶδεν
G1161
Andδέ
G2532
alsoκαὶ
G5100
a certainτινα
G5503
widowχήραν
G3998
poorπενιχρὰν
G906
castingβάλλουσαν
G1563
in thitherἐκεῖ
G1417
twoδύο
G3016
mitesλεπτὰ
Cross References
Frequently asked questions
What does Luke 21:2 mean?
Jesus saw a poor widow who had almost nothing put in two tiny copper coins.
What is the context of Luke 21:2?
After observing wealthy people giving, Jesus notices someone who is very poor also giving.
Why does Luke 21:2 matter?
This widow becomes an example of true generosity despite her poverty.
What's a surprising detail about Luke 21:2?
Widows were among the poorest people in ancient society because they had no husband to support them.
Continue Exploring
Read Luke 21:2 in the Bible reader, or explore the full chapter summary.
References
- Orr, J. (ed.) (1915) The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. Chicago: Howard-Severance Company. [Public Domain]
- Abbott-Smith, G. (1921) A Manual Greek Lexicon of the New Testament. Edinburgh: T&T Clark. [Public Domain]
- Brown, F., Driver, S.R. and Briggs, C.A. (1906) A Hebrew and English Lexicon of the Old Testament. Oxford: Clarendon Press. [Public Domain]
- Church of England (1769) The Holy Bible, Authorized (King James) Version. [Public Domain]
Commentary on Luke 21:2
You that are rich cannot do good works in the church, because your eyes, saturated with blackness and covered with the shadows of night, do not see the needy and the poor. Do you, rich and wealthy, think that you celebrate the Lord’s feast? You do not at all consider the offering. You come to the Lord’s feast without a sacrificial offering and take a part of the sacrifice that the poor offered. Look in the Gospel at the widow mindful of the heavenly commandments, doing good in the very middle of the pressures and hardships of poverty. She throws two mites that were her only possessions into the treasury.… She was a greatly blessed and glorious woman, who even before the judgment day merited…
While [Jesus] stood in the temple, he also gave the verdict of which we are speaking. In the following verses, you have: “Jesus spoke these words in the treasury while teaching in the temple. And no one seized him.” What is the treasury? It is the contribution of the faithful, the bank of the poor, and the refuge of the needy. Christ sat near this and, according to Luke, gave the opinion that the two mites of the widow were preferable to the gifts of the rich. God’s word preferred love joined with zeal and generosity rather than the lavish gifts of generosity.Let us see what comparison he made when he gave such judgment there near the treasury, for with good reason he preferred the widow who…
For here I perceive that Jesus also looks on willingly at the gifts of the rich men, when they are put into the treasury. All too little, at the same time, is it if gifts are cast into the treasury by the rich alone; and so there are the two mites of the poor widow which are also received with gladness; and in that offering verily something is exhibited that goes beyond what Moses prescribed on the subject of the receipt of moneys. For he received gifts from those who had; but Jesus receives them even from those who have not.
(Hom. 1. in Ep. ad Heb., Hom. 28.) For God regarded not the scantiness of the offering, but the overflowing of the affection. Almsgiving is not the bestowing a few things out of many, but it is that of the widow emptying, herself of her whole substance. But if you cannot offer as much as the widow, at least give all that remains over.
Although the spite of some people does not grow gentle with any kindness, nevertheless the works of mercy are not fruitless, and kindness never loses what is offered to the ungrateful. May no one, dearly beloved, make themselves strangers to good works. Let no one claim that his poverty scarcely sufficed for himself and could not help another. What is offered from a little is great, and in the scale of divine justice, the quantity of gifts is not measured but the steadfastness of souls. The “widow” in the Gospel put two coins into the “treasury,” and this surpassed the gifts of all the rich. No mercy is worthless before God. No compassion is fruitless. He has given different resources to hum…
A hermit said, ‘One man eats a lot and is still hungry. Another eats a little and has had enough. The man who eats a lot and is still hungry has more merit than the man who eats the little that satisfies him.’
In the Greek language, φυλάξαι signifies to keep, and gaza in Persian means riches, hence gazophylacium is used for the name of the place in which money is kept. Now there was a chest with an opening at the top placed near the altar, on the right hand of those entering the house of God, into which the Priests cast all the money, which was given for the Lord's temple. But our Lord as He overthrows those who trade in His house, so also He remarks those who bring gifts, giving praise to the deserving, but condemning the bad. Hence it follows, And he saw also a certain poor widow casting in thither two mites. For whatever we offer with an honest heart is well pleasing to God, who hath respect un…
And he saw a poor widow casting in two small coins, and said, "Truly I tell you, this poor widow has put in more than all of them." This place morally communicates to us how acceptable to God anything we offer with a good heart is, for He undoubtedly weighs the heart and not the substance, and does not consider how much is given in His sacrifices, but from how much it is given. According to the laws of allegory, the rich who were casting gifts into the treasury represent Jews puffed up by the righteousness of the law, while the poor widow signifies the simplicity of the Church. She is rightly called poor because she has cast away either the spirit of pride or sins as if they were the riches…