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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 Timothy 6:9

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 Timothy 6:9

But they that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and [into] many foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in destruction and perdition.

9. they that will be rich ] In so wealthy a city as Ephesus the temptation would be very great to the teacher to adapt his ‘wares’ of doctrine to the popular Asiatic speculations, so as to get and keep name and means; and his hearers would be equally tempted to accept such a compromise. There would be the genius loci to whisper ‘si possis, recte; si non, quocunque modo, rem;’ ‘ye know that by this business we have our wealth.’ Hence the specially appropriate warning now addressed to those that are desiring to be rich, as we must render exactly. Chrysostom’s words ‘not “ the rich,” for one may have money and dispense it well and disesteem it all the while,’ are well quoted here. But G. Herbert’s words are still better ( Priest to the Temple, c. 3), ‘The country parson is very circumspect in avoiding all covetousness, neither being greedy to get, nor niggardly to keep, nor troubled to lose any worldly wealth; but in all his words and actions slighting and disesteeming it, even to a wondering that the world should so much value wealth, which in the day of wrath hath not one dram of comfort for us.’

temptation and a snare ] There seems no reason to depart from the usual rendering elsewhere of the phrase ‘into temptation’ as R.V. does ‘into a temptation,’ because of the words coupled with it; ‘a snare’ naturally follows, just as ‘deliver us from the evil one’ follows ‘bring us not into temptation,’ Mat 6:13; it is the thought present to the Apostle’s mind at this time; see above 1Ti 3:7, ‘lest he fall into reproach and the snare of the devil’ where the conjunction of words is very similar, and from whence some mss. have even added here ‘of the devil;’ and 2Ti 2:26, ‘that they may recover themselves out of the snare of the devil.’ See Appendix, K.

lusts, which drown men ] The lengthened generalised relative here is properly ‘of a kind which,’ ‘which indeed naturally,’ so R.V. such as. Cf. 1Ti 3:15. The simple use of the passive of ‘drown’ in Luk 5:7, ‘they were being sunk,’ is the only other N. T. use of the verb; the noun from which it comes is used by St Paul of his (unrecorded) shipwreck, 2Co 11:25, ‘a night and a day I have been in the deep.’

destruction and perdition ] The two words give solemnity to the idea of the ruin to be incurred, though it is too much to assign ‘ruin of body’ to the one and ‘ruin of soul’ to the other. The compound word is instinctively chosen (see 1Ti 6:8) to complete the terrible picture.

Chrysostom gives many instances of these ‘snares and lusts’ in his day leading to ‘destruction and perdition.’ To the example (almost forced upon the memory by the word) from Holy Scripture itself of ‘the son of perdition’ (Joh 17:12), may well be added G. Herbert’s searching words to his brethren; ‘they, who, for the hope of promotion, neglect any necessary admonition or reproof sell (with Judas) their Lord and Master.’ The Priest to the Temple, ch. 2.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

But they that will be rich – Further to enforce the duty of contentment, the apostle refers to some of the evils which necessarily attend a desire to be rich. Those evils have been so great and uniform in all ages, and are so necessary accompaniments of that desire, that, even amidst many inconveniences which may attend the opposite condition, we should he contented with our lot. Indeed, if we could see all, it would only be necessary to see the evils which the desire of wealth produces in the world, to make us contented with a most lowly condition of life. Perhaps nothing more would be necessary to make a poor man satisfied with his lot, and grateful for it, than to be acquainted with the perplexities and cares of a rich man. There is more emphasis to be placed on the word will, here, in the phrase, will be rich, than might be supposed from our translation. It is not the sign of the future tense, but implies an actual purpose or design to become rich – hoi boulomenoi. The reference is to those in whom this becomes the object of earnest desire, and who lay their plans for it.

Fall into temptation – That is, they are tempted to do wicked things in order to accomplish their purposes. It is extremely difficult to cherish the desire to be rich, as the leading purpose of the soul, and to he an honest man.

And a snare – Birds are taken in a snare, and wild beasts were formerly; see the notes on Job 18:8-9. The net was sprung suddenly upon them, and they could not escape. The idea here is, that they who have this desire become so entangled, that they cannot easily escape. They become involved in the meshes of worldliness and sin; their movements are so fettered by cares, and inordinate desires, and by artificial needs, that they are no longer freemen. They become so involved in these things, that they cannot well break away from them if they would; compare Pro 28:20.

And into many foolish and hurtful lusts – Desires, such as the love of wealth creates. They are foolish – as being not such as an intelligent and immortal being should pursue; and they are hurtful – as being injurious to morals, to health, and to the soul. Among those desires, are the fondness for display; for a magnificent dwelling, a train of menials, and a splendid equipage; for sumptuous living, feasting, the social glass, company, and riotous dissipation.

Which drown men in destruction and perdition – The word which is here rendered, drown – buthizo – means, to sink in the deep, or, to cause to sink; and the meaning here is, that they become submerged as a ship that sinks. The idea of drowning is not properly that of the apostle, but the image is that of a wreck, where a ship and all that is in it go down together. The destruction is complete. There is a total ruin of happiness, of virtue, of reputation, and of the soul. The ruling desire to be rich leads on a train of follies which ruins everything here, and hereafter. How many of the human family have thus been destroyed!

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

1Ti 6:9-11

But they that will be rich.

Covetousness


I.
The dangers of this temper of mind are obvious.

1. It leads many to deception and dishonesty.

2. To get advantage to oneself is a false aim for any Christian life. If you know how insidious these and other perils are, you may well pray: Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.


II.
Defences against such evils are within our knowledge, and many are finding moral security through using them.

1. Watch against the tendency to extravagant living. The absence of simplicity in some households leads to more evils than you think. Be brave enough to be simple in your habits. Seek to live without ostentation.

2. On the other hand, see to it that you do not bow down to worship the golden calf. No idolatry is more prevalent than this.

3. Cultivate love for higher things than the world offers. Good will conquer evil by its own inherent force.

4. Pray for the spirit of heroism in common life. (A. Rowland, LL. B.)

Temptation

A careful examination of our text will show that it is in no sense exclusive. Those addressed in it are not such as have riches, but such as want riches, and are determined, whether or no, to obtain them. By further consideration of the chapter you will see that the reference to such as would be rich in our text, is only made as an illustration of the great truth for which the apostle is endeavouring to find impressive utterance. He selected the simplest and commonest illustration. He might with equal truth have said: They that will be wise; they that will succeed; they that will get pleasure. I want to bring out into the light the general truth he illustrates, which appears to be this: There are certain kinds of character which are singularly exposed to the influence of temptation, and certain conditions of body and mind which seem to lay us open to the power of temptation. What Paul seems to say in our text, put into other words, is this: Those with this moral disposition, the wish to be rich, are, in consequence of that disposition, exposed to the force of peculiar temptations; and so he leaves us to infer that what is true of that particular state will apply to many other similar conditions. The laws which regulate our mental and spiritual natures can often be understood by the help of analogous laws which we observe to rule our bodily frames.


I.
There are certain classes of character singularly exposed to temptation.

1. Strong-willed and ambitious men. These fall into temptation and a snare. From some points of view these strong-willed men may be regarded as the noble men of earth. They have a purpose in life, which holds in and guides, as with bit and bridle, all the forces of their being. They are the great men in our mills and warehouses; the foremost as statesmen, and in carrying out great social and national enterprises. Yet this disposition lays men open to peculiar dangers. It comes too often to be opposed to that spirit of contentment which the apostle here intimates is peculiarly suitable to godliness, and which is the result of a daily thaukful dependence on that living God, who giveth us all things richly to enjoy. Especially do we find that this strong-will is liable to become self-will. And if you observe these strong-willed men carefully, you will find they are sadly often falling into sin in relation to their dependents and servants; becoming imperious in their manners, forgetting the ordinary charities of social intercourse, and treating those who serve them as though they were an inferior kind of creature; which is, in the sight of the one God who made us all, a sad and mournful sin against the common brotherhood. They that will be anything fall thereby into temptation and a snare. If such is your disposition, remember, that is the side of your nature on which you are peculiarly exposed to danger. Do you then ask, May a Christian man be ambitious? May he say, I will–I will be rich; I will be great; I will be successful?–I reply, Yes, he may; but only when he can add, If God sees best. He may be ambitious if he can keep leaning on God all the while he pursues his ambitions.

2. Now, let us consider together two opposite classes of character–intense impulsive men, and inactive, sluggish men. These also fall into temptation and a snare. They are very liable to sins of commission. So feebly swayed by prudential considerations, they often do things which they live very greatly to regret. In connection with Christian life and work, they are exposed to the sins of discouragement and failing perseverance. They, too, often live a butterfly life, emptying the nectar from no flower on which they settle, but flying hither and thither from flower to flower, and gathering no stores of honey. They are like those streams which are only fed by mountain rains, or melting snows; they sometimes flow along in a very passion of excitement, but only for awhile; they soon subside; for weeks there is but a trick ling rill, and often the stones lie bleaching in the sun for months together. There are few things which do more injury to a Church than the ebb and flow of its hopes and efforts through the influence of its impulsive members. There are many of the opposite disposition. It is exceedingly difficult to arouse them at all. They seem to have no personal wills. They are always requiring to be urged and pressed. Such persons have their peculiar liabilities to temptation; mostly to sins of omission, the sins which come in connection with procrastination; sins arising from neglect of duty.

3. Only one other phase of character I will mention. Men who must have company. These also fall into temptation and a snare. God has set the solitary in families. It is not good that man should be alone. But you must have observed that this spirit possesses some men very much more than others. There are some who feel as if they could not live without company. They feel restless in their very homes if no one beside their family is found there. I do not say that, on the very face of it, this is wrong; but need I point out to you how perilous such a disposition becomes? Need I remind you how many have, through it, been led astray into drinking habits, and so ruined in heart and in home, in body and in soul?


II.
There are certain times in a mans life when temptation has peculiar force. One of the wonderful discoveries of this scientific age is that of the successive changes through which our bodies pass in the course of our lives. Now, these bodily changes are very remarkably associated with our moral conditions; especially are they connected with the varying force of bodily passions. In some conditions of our frame, no temptation to the indulgence of any bodily lust would exert an effective power on us. In other conditions of our frame, the least exposure seems to involve our fall, we feel to be actually overtaken, overwhelmed. There are three periods of life in which, for the most part, men fall under the power of evil. Most men that fall, fall either into young mens peril, full-grown mens sins, or old mens sins. The devil never appears so much like an angel of light as when tie clothes himself to meet the rising passions of early manhood. A mourn ful proportion of our youth fall into temptation and a snare, and are drowned in destruction and perdition. Many a man has conquered the sins of youth, and then fallen before the sins of manhood. Sensual passion seems to acquire a new force then. The lust of gold. The thirst for position and fame urges men then. Men begin, for the most part, to be misers, or drunkards, or sensualists about this age. A hoary head is a crown of glory if it be found in the way of righteousness. Yet old age has its special evils. Temptations to those sins which the Bible gathers up in the word uncleanness. Often uncleanness of word and conversation; often, alas! of life and conduct also. It would appear that bodily lust and passion gathers itself in old age for one last struggle to gain the mastery. (R. Tuck, B. A.)

The love of money

You will notice, in the first place, the emphasis which is to be put upon the opening of this passage. They–not they that will be rich; because riches are ordained of God, and, rightly held and rightly used, are an instrument of most beneficent power, salutary to the possessor as well as the recipient of bounty–They that will be rich whether or not fall into temptation, etc. They are willing to give the whole force and power of their being; for they will have it. They are men who, because they will be rich, cannot be conscientious; and who learn soon to say that most beggarly of all things, A man cannot be a Christian and be in my business. How came you in it then? Yea, they have not time to cultivate refinement; they have not time for the amenities of life; they have not time for their household; they have not time for friendship; they have not time for love. And so, because they will be rich, they give up their heart also. And having given all these up, God blesses and blasts them: blesses, for they are rich, and that is what they call blessing; blasts, because it is not in the nature of God Himself, without an absolute change of the laws by which He works, to make a man happy who has, for the sake of gaining wealth, divested himself of those elements in which happiness consists. For what if the harp, in order to make itself blessed, should sell, first, its lowest base string, and then its next one, and then its next string, and then its next, and its next, until finally every string of the harp is sold? Then, when all the heaps of music are piled up before it, and it wants to play, it is mute. It has sold the very things out of which music must needs come. And men that will be rich give up sensibility, affection, faith, manhood, coining them all, emptying themselves: and when they get possession of their wealth, what is there left for them to enjoy it with? Their marrow is gone. There is no string in the harp on which joy can play. Not only will they who will be rich sacrifice everything, but they will not hesitate to do everything that is required–only, as men that will be rich require impunity, it must be safe. And so comes the long, detestable roe of mining, subterranean conduct, the secrecy of wickedness, collusions, plotting, unwhispered things, or things only whispered; that long train of webbing conduct which makes man insincere, pretentious hypocrites, whited sepulchres that are fair without, but that are inwardly full of death and dead mens bones. Men begin at first to make a little; they find how easy it is; they enlarge their ambition, and the conception dawns upon them, Why am not I one of those who are appointed to be millionaires. In the beginning of life, a few thousands would have satisfied their ambition. Now, hundreds of thousands seem to them but a morsel. They grow more and more intense. Temptations begin to fall upon them. You can no more make money suddenly and largely, and be unharmed by it, than a man could suddenly grow from a childs stature to a mans stature without harm. There is not a gardener who does not know that a plant may grow faster than it can make wood; that the cellular tissue may grow faster than the ligneous consolidation; and that then it cannot hold itself up. And many men grow faster in riches than they can consolidate. Men who are tempted to make money suddenly, are almost invariably obliged to traverse the canons of morality. Avarice in its earliest stages is not hideous, though at the bottom it is the same serpent thing that it is at last. In the beginning it is an artist, and the man begins to think, I will redeem my parents. Oh! I will repurchase the old homestead. Ah I will I not make my village to bud and blossom as a rose? How many things do men paint in the sky which clouds cover and winds blow away, and which fade out with the morning that painted them. But where do you find a man who begins to make money fast, that does not begin to have narrower, baser, and avaricious feelings? Such men begin to be tempted to believe that success atones for faults. Men are tempted as soon as they get into this terrific fire of avarice, to regard morality as of little avail compared with money-making. They are dazzled. You will recollect our Saviours words, The deceitfulness of riches. Men are snared when they are given up to fiery avarice. They are snared because the very things by which they propose to gain success become in the long run the means of their own destruction. Cheating is another snare. No man cheats once without cheating twice. Like a gun that fires at the muzzle and kicks over at the breach, the cheat hurts the cheater as much as the man cheated. Cheating is a snare, and will always be a snare. The cheater falls into it. Conceit is another snare. Men lose wisdom just in proportion as they are conceited. It is astonishing to see how conceited men are in power. I have noticed how soon those that will be rich at any hazard, fall into drinking habits. They have come into a sphere in which they begin to fall not simply into temptation and a snare, but into divers lusts. Now comes extravagance. With extravagance come many more mischievous lusts. And when you see a man given to licentious indulgence, you may be sure that he will come to want a crust. Mark that man. Poverty is on his track; and he shall be surely overcome and destroyed by it. We are not to understand that money is the root of all evil; but the love of it–bestowing that which we have a right to bestow only on undying and immortal qualities upon God, and angels, and men–bestowing love, idolatrously, upon material gain. It is not said that all evil springs from this cause; but at one time and another this may become the cause of all evil. It has corrupted in its time every faculty and every relation in which a man stands connected with his fellows. It has divided families, it has parted friendships, it has corrupted purity. The love of money, often, is stronger than the love of kindred. I observe that as men come into this, one of two things takes place; they forsake the house of God, they forsake religious society, because either they have no taste for it, or because it irritates them, or annoys them, and they will not bear the restraint or else, on the other hand, they betake themselves to religion because under certain circumstances, religion is an atonement for misconduct. It is a policy of life-insurance to men that are in iniquity. It is not, What is true? but, What will make me feel good while I am a wicked man? That they seek. They err from the faith. But now comes the solemn sentence, They pierce themselves through with many sorrows. I wish you could see what I have seen. A sword is merciful compared with the sorrows that pierce men with pain through life. You do not dare to adopt economic courses, because men would rush in on you, and take possession of you. And so men go under false appearances. How they suffer! Ah! if a man is going to be ruined, and has the testimony of his conscience that he has been an honest man, there is some alleviation to his suffering; but frequently it is a ruin carrying with it blight. Is it not a terrible thing to see a man, in the middle of life, count death better than life? Thank God, a man does not need to be very rich to be very happy, only so that he has a treasure in himself. A loving heart; a genuine sympathy; a pure unadulterated taste; a life that is not scorched by dissipation or wasted by untimely hours; a good sound body, and a clear conscience–these things ought to make a man happy. A man may be useful and not be rich. A man may be powerful and not be rich; for ideas are more powerful than even dollars. If God calls you to a way of making wealth, make it; but remember do not love money. If God calls you to make wealth, do not make haste to be rich; be willing to wait. If God calls you into the way of wealth, do not undertake to make yourself rich by gambling. (H. W. Beecher.)

The love of money

The passion exists under various modifications. In some few of its subjects, it appears to be pure, unmixed, exclusive; terminates and is concentrated upon just the money itself–(that is, the property) the delight of being the owner of so much. It is mine! so much I But, in much the greater number of instances, the passion involves a regard to some relative objects. In some it is combined with vanity; a stimulating desire of the reputation of being rich; to be talked of, admired, envied. In some it has very much a reference to that authority, weight, prevailing influence, in society, which property confers; here it is ambition rather than avarice. In some the passion has its incitement in an exorbitant calculation for competence. So much, and so much, they shall want; so much more they may want, for themselves or their descendants. So much more they should like to secure as a provision against contingencies. Some are avaricious from a direct dread of poverty. Amidst their thousands, they are haunted by the idea of coming to want. And this idea of danger, from being undefined, can always hover about a man, and force its way into his thoughts. So described, this spirit, possessing and actuating such a number of our fellow mortals, bears an ill and a very foolish aspect. Let us now specify a few of its evil effects, with a note of admonition on each of them. One obvious effect is–that it tends to arrogate, and narrow, and impel the whole action and passion of the soul toward one exclusive object, and that an ignoble one. Almost every thought that starts is to go that way. Silver and gold have a magnetic power over his whole being. The natural magnet selects its subject of attraction, and will draw only that; but this magnetism draws all that is in the little world of the mans being. Or it is an effect like that of a strong, steady wind; every thing that is stirred and moveable, that rolls on the ground, or floats on water or air, is driven in that one direction. If it were a noble principle–if it Were religion, that exerted over him this monopolizing and all-impelling power, what a glorious condition! The brief admonition upon this is, that if a man feel this to be mainly the state of his mind, it is a proof and warning to him that he is wrong. Observe, again, that this passion, when thus predominant, throws a mean character into the estimate of all things, as they are all estimated according to the standard of money-value, and in reference to gain. Thus another value which they may have, and, perhaps, the chief one, is overlooked, unseen, and lost. Again, this passion places a man in a very selfish relation to other men around him. He looks at them very much with the eyes of a slave-merchant. He cannot sell them, but the constant question is, What, and how, can I gain by them? When this principle has the full ascendency, it creates a settled hardness of character. The man lives, as to the kinder affections, in the region of perpetual ice. He is little accessible to the touches and emotions of sympathy; cannot give himself out in any generous expansion of the affections. And here observe, again, that the disposition in question operates, with a slow but continual effect, to pervert the judgment and conscience. It is constantly pressing the line that divides right from wrong; it removes it, bends it away, by slight degrees. The distinction becomes less positive to the judgment. Self-interested casuistry is put in operation. But it comes nearer to the object of Christian admonition to observe the operation of this evil principle in ways not incompatible with what may be called integrity. It withholds from all the generous and beneficent exertions and co-operations, in which pecuniary liberality is indispensable; and excites against them a spirit of criticism, exception, cavil, and detraction. They are sanguine, extravagant. This is not the time. They are unnecessary, impracticable. There are many evil consequences. It causes to forego opportunities for gaining a beneficial influence over mens minds. It puts an equivocal and inconsistent character on Providence. As to my own interests, Providence is not at all to be trusted–I must take the whole care on myself. We only add, it fatally counteracts and blasts internal piety, in all its vital sentiments. (J. Foster.)

The love of money

The love of money, says the apostle, is the root of all evil; not that all evils have, but that all may have, their root therein. Take a rapid glance of a fewer these, to which it certainly gives birth. And first, what root it is of idolatry; or rather it is not so much a root of this, as itself this idolatry–Covetousness, which is idolatry (Col 3:5). This sounds a hard saying, but it is one which can justify itself. For what is the essence of idolatry? Is it not a serving and loving of the creature more than the Creator; a giving to the lower what was due only to the higher, what was due only to Him who is the highest of all? And as this love of money disturbs the relations of men to God, drawing off to some meaner object affections due to Him, so it mingles continually an element of strife and division in the relations of men with one another. Again, what a root of unrighteousness, of untruthful dealing between man and man, of unfair advantage taken of the simple and the ignorant, of falsehood, fraud, and chicane, does the love of money continually show itself to be! And then–for time would fail me if I dwelt at large on all the mischiefs that spring from this, which even the heathen poet could style the accursed hunger of gold–what treading on the poor; what thrusting of them on unwholesome and dangerous occupations, with no due precautions taken for their health and safety; what shutting up of the bowels of compassion from the Lazarus lying at the gate; what wicked thoughts finding room in mens hearts, secret wishes for the death of those who stand between them and some coveted possession, have all their origin here. Consider, then, first, how powerless riches are against some of the worst calamities of our present life; how many of the sorrows which search men out the closest, which most drink up the spirit, these are utterly impotent to avert or to cure. Ask a man in a fit of the stone, or a victim of cancer, what his riches are worth to him; why, if he had the wealth of the Indies ten times told, he would exchange it all for ease of body, and a little remission of anguish. But why speak of bodily anguish? There is an anguish yet harder to bear, the anguish of the man whom the arrows of the Almighty, for they are His arrows, have pierced; who has learned what sin is, but has stopped short with the experience of the Psalmist, Day and night Thy hand is heavy upon me; my moisture is like the drought in summer (Psa 32:4), and never learned that there is also an atonement. What profits it such a one that all the world is for him, so long as he feels and knows that God is against him? Then, too, how often we see a man comparatively desolate in the midst of the largest worldly abundance. These considerations may do something; but take now another and a more effectual remedy against this sin. Let a greater love expel a less, a nobler affection supersede a meaner. Consider often the great things for which you were made, the unsearchable riches of which you have been made partakers in Christ; for coveteousness, the desire of having, and of having ever more and more, sin as it is, is yet the degeneration of something which is not a sin. Man was made for the infinite; with infinite longings, infinite cravings and desires. But finally, the habit of largely and liberally setting apart from our income to the service of God and the necessities of our poorer brethren is a great remedy against covetousness. (R. C. Trench.)

Fruit of covetousness–

(1) oppression:The love of money is a root of every evil, and oppression is one of its many bitter fruits. The subject of this discourse is the multiform oppression of the poor, that results from a too eager pursuit of wealth. In ruder times, the rich often oppressed the poor in a very direct manner. When might took the place of right, they who had the power did not always take the trouble of covering their rapacity under legal forms. They kept back the labourers hire, or seized his patrimonial field, or enslaved his person, according to the measure of impunity which their circumstances permitted them to enjoy. In this country, and in the present day, such vulgar robbery cannot be perpetrated. Love of money, a spring in the heart, when one channel of issue is blocked up, will force its way by another. Accordingly, this passion as certainly, and perhaps we should say as extensively, oppresses the poor now, as in ruder nations at earlier times. The same native evil is compelled to adopt more refined modes of action: but the oppression may be as galling to the poor and as displeasing to God although it keep strictly within the letter of human law. I have no doubt the law of Christ is violated amongst us–thoughtlessly, in ignorance, and in company with a multitude, it may be–but still sinfully violated, to a most alarming extent, in connection with the money-making efforts of this mercantile community. You have seen a street thronged from side to side with human beings, men, women, and children, all moving in one direction. The mass moves like a river. If every one keep his own place and glide along with the current, the motion will be gentle and harmless. But two or three strong men in the midst of that crowd conceive a desire to proceed at a much quicker rate than their neighbours. Yielding to that impulse, they bound forward with might and main. Observe the effect of their effort. They press on the persons that are next them. If these be strong men too, the only effect will be to push them faster forward, and the greater pressure may be only a pleasant excitement. But the pressure extends on either side, and is felt even to the outer edge of the crowd. Wherever there is a woman, a child, or a cripple, the feeble goes to the wall. The person originating the pressure may not be in contact with that sickly passenger–there may be many persons between them; but the pressure goes through all the intermediate links, not hurting any till it come to one who is unable to bear it, and hurting the helpless. In such a crowd you may sometimes see the selfishness of human nature in all is undisguised odiousness. The man seeks his own advantage, heedless of the injury that his effort may inflict on others. He is not guilty of a direct deed of injustice. He would not lift his hand to strike the feeble; he would not illegally wrest away his property. He endeavours to act justly: nay, he sometimes opens his hand in charity to the distressed. But really, though indirectly, he is an oppressor. He wriggles forward, although his movements necessarily hurt the poor. He looks to his own things; and disregards the things of others. He breaks the law of Christ. The oppressions which abound in our day, as the fruits of covetousness, are chiefly of this nature. They are by no means so gross as the tyranny which the feudal lords of the Middle Ages exercised on their serfs; but they spring from the same source, and are essentially of the same character in the estimation of the Judge. I shall now enumerate and briefly illustrate some of the forms which oppression assumes in modern society.

1. The reduction of wages below the point at which a labouring man can support his family, or a woman support herself.

2. The labour of children is another evil more or less remotely an effect of the haste to be rich.

3. Sabbath labour is one of the oppressions that the prevalence of the money-interest inflicts upon mankind. It is an evil that cries loud to the Lord of Hosts.

4. Yet another oppression let me name–the poor are in a great measure cooped up in crowded lanes, and miserable houses. This is one bitter fruit of a general selfishness. Conceive the force operating now within this city in the direction of money-making. If all the energies that are expended in that direction were added, how vast would the sum of them be! I know not a speculation more interesting than this. It would represent a power which, if collected and united, and turned upon the citys filth, and poverty, and ignorance, would sweep them away, as the stream of a mighty river rolling down our streets would carry off the mire that accumulated on their surface. (W. Arnot.)

Fruit of covetousness–

(2) dishonesty:


I.
The path by which covetousness leads to dishonesty is marked off step by step by the apostle in the text.

1. They wilt be rich (verse 9). A class of persons are here characterized. They are described by the leading aim of their lives. It is not said what their religious profession was. Perhaps their belief was orthodox, and their zeal warm. All that we learn about them is, that in Gods sight money was their chief end. This is not a right–not a safe aim for an immortal being.

2. They fall into temptation. The word conveys the idea of an unexpected fall–a stumble into a pit which you did not expect to be there. If the real movement of a mans life be toward money, while he diligently keeps his face turned round to maintain the appearance of being a Christian, he will certainly fall into every pit that lies in his way. The motion, too, is uneasy. Those who set out in pursuit of riches, making no other profession, get on more smoothly.

3. They fall into temptation. A man does not all at once go into vicious practices. He glides, before he is aware, into a position where he is exposed to the pressure of a strong temptation. Those who have rightly measured their own strength will avoid persons and places that put it to a severe test. He that trusteth to his own heart is a fool.

4. A snare marks another stage of this downward progress. The man who has thoughtlessly and in foolhardiness placed himself in the way of temptation, is soon surrounded–the meshes of a net compass him about. He got easily in, but he finds it impossible to get out again. He has recourse to a false entry, a forgery, or some other of the thousand tricks that the wit of hard-pressed men has invented, and the complicated forms of business has served to conceal. Behold the desperate, helpless fluttering of the bird in the snare of the fowler–dashing itself on the sides of an iron cage!

5. The next step is into many foolish and hurtful lusts. These raging lusts are, as it were, watching, ready to fasten on their victim as soon as they see him in the toils of the net. You may have observed that a man whose pecuniary affairs are in a desperate position is peculiarly liable to fall into meaner vices. How frequently do the agonies and embarrassments that precede a shameful disclosure precipitate a man into the abyss of secret drunkenness! These lusts that covetousness leads to are foolish and hurtful; they pretend to cure, but they only deepen the wound. They apply a balsam that soothes the sore for a moment, but fixes disease more firmly in the flesh. I shall not trace this progress farther.


II.
The dishonesty to which covetousness leads. Flee these things, but follow after righteousness. The vices that the love of money lands in are not named at length. In general, they are said to be foolish and hurtful. But the opposite graces are individually specified. The first on the list is righteousness. Of course, the opposite vice to which covetousness tends, and against which his warning is directed, is injustice. Righteousness is required in all our transactions–righteousness, not according to the conventional rules of society, which shift like the sand, but according to the immutable standard of the Divine law. The righteous Lord loveth righteousness. How many are at this day put to shame for detected dishonesty, who once would have resented the supposition of it as keenly and sincerely as you! I do not know your hearts: and what is more, you do not know them yourselves. One who does know them, however, testifies that they are deceitful above all things. Some forms of dishonesty, such as a false balance, that are prominently condemned in Scripture, we shall pass over without particular notice, because in modern society, though they still exist, they have been comparatively cast into the shade by other inventions. Dishonesty is obliged to hide itself now under more elaborate devices. I mean the adulteration of goods offered for sale by the mixture of other ingredients. A false representation to a customer as to the original cost of your wares, or the rate of your profit, is manifestly dishonest. Above all things, you who have others, especially young persons, employed in selling your goods, charge them to be true and honest. I speak now not for the purchasers, but for the salesmen. Breach of trust is a form of dishonesty alarmingly frequent in our day. Righteousness is one and unchangeable. It compasses about your mighty trafficking, and lays bonds on it, as completely and as easily as the smallest bargainings between a huckster and a peasant at the wayside: even as the same law with equal ease retains a little water in a cup, and the oceans wave within the oceans bed. (W. Arnot.)

Haste to be rich

Now, why should haste be condemned? for this is the voice of the Old Testament, not once or twice, but many times, either in direct terms or their equivalents. Why should haste to be rich be inveighed against, if riches are a great blessing? In the first place, riches may either be produced or collected. For the most part, the riches that bless men are the riches that are either produced, or are so improved by methods of ingenuity and industry that their service is much greater than it would be in the form of raw material. The foundation of all prosperity is production. The stone is good for nothing until it has been shaped. Now, the man that produces wealth is the foundation man. But that is a slow work. It is impossible to hasten nature very much. A man that could sow his wheat every night, and reap in the morning, would consider himself very fortunate and very happy. A man that, owning an iron mine, could draw metal as he did water from a fountain, and ship it abroad, would consider himself very fortunate. But a man can do neither. Man is the servant of the seasons. He sows in the autumn or spring. With long patience he waits, as James says, like the husbandman for the harvest; and little by little, and year by year, the man attains larger and larger means, greater competency, and, by and by, to riches; and any man that undertakes to run ahead of processes of this kind in producing runs against natural law. Natural, do we say? It is moral law, just as much as any other law. It is the law of the production of wealth, that a man should render an equivalent for every stage of value. Sudden wealth is not hasty wealth, necessarily; I am speaking of the production and development of riches. The production of wealth connects itself with benevolence, with sympathy. A man that manufactures agricultural implements receives a certain reward for that; but he is a benefactor; he abbreviates labour everywhere. What is left at the end of every year, that which was not necessary to maintain the conditions of life, is what we may call the permanent wealth of a man. It is a slow accumulation, taking the world at large. Collectors of wealth that other men have produced may get rich speedily and safely; but producers of wealth, by the very Divine law, must go patiently, and continue through long times. So he that makes haste to get rich is liable to fall into the violation of this fundamental law of equivalents–that is, into fraudulent ways. But every man that is developing or producing riches is, at the same time, educating himself in morals, or should be; for the fundamental conditions of increase lie in the man himself. So, the development of wealth requires time, not only from the nature of production, but also because God designed it to be an education in all the minor moral qualities–as, for example, in moderation, in industry, in temperance, in loyalty, in fidelity, in respect for others rights that co-operate with men; for in the immense complication of riches men are in partnership with men they never saw. Haste to be rich is also a great danger to men, because it tempts them to employ illegitimate means–sleights, crafts, disingenuous ways, greed, violations of honesty. Men have been fools to go through such long processes; they have taken these circuitous routes, and have had a superstitious observance of moralities; if they had the courage to go cross-lots they could come to the same results in less than half the time; and so they jump the boundary line, and run across the great roads that have been unfolded and developed by experience–and come to destruction. They think they are weaving cordage; but they are only running spiders webs up and down their ship; and the first storm will break and destroy the whole of them. A man, therefore, that is making haste to be rich is tempted to ostentation; for riches quickly earned are like new wine, which is strong. But ostentation is expensive, and there is many a man that is tempted to ostentation by the sudden increment of his riches, whether it be in houses, in lands, in equipage, in luxurious furnishings, in a sumptuous table, in yachts, in horses and hounds, in coaches, or what not. Men having sudden wealth are apt to become cruel through indifference to ether mens rights. There is such a thing as a society-robber. Then, too, anxiety, haste, is apt to change into idolatry; and the very ends which men have in life are neglected, and the mans wealth becomes as an idol which he worships. (H. W. Beecher.)

Peril in handling wealth

In Washington, U.S., recently, it was found that some lady clerks engaged in sorting bank bills in the Treasury department found sores breaking out on their face and hands, and were obliged to leave. This led to an inquiry, when it was found that the cause was the arsenic employed in the manufacture of the paper. I have known, says a journalist, a half-dozen cases where ladies have been compelled to resign their positions. There are three who were here six years before they were afflicted with sores. About three months ago they were so visited by them that they had to quit work. They have been away ever since, and the physicians certificate in each case says that their blood is poisoned with arsenic. This fact may be regarded as an illustration of the unnoticed peril sometimes lurking in handling wealth.

Wealth a fatal weight

At Long Branch, some visitors, strolling on the beach, observed a large fish hawk swoop down into the waters of the bay and strike its talons into a huge plaice. The bird rose with its prey, but its weight proved too great and dragged him down. Several times the bird struggled to ascend, but failed, and, exhausted, it finally fell into the water still clinging to its captive. Its talons were so embedded in the fish that it could not release them, and it was drowned. The fish died of its wounds, and both were washed ashore, where with difficulty they were separated. The death of the hawk in this effort to carry off its prize is typical of a disaster very common in life. Covetousness and avarice only too often prompt men to struggle for a great financial prize, and in the struggle they sacrifice honour, integrity, and sometimes even life, natural and eternal.

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 9. But they that will be rich] . The words are emphatic, and refer to persons who are determined to get riches; who make this their object and aim in life; who live to get money; who get all they can, save all they can, and keep all they get; and yet are apprehensive of no danger, because they seek to be rich by honest means; for it is likely that the apostle does not refer to those who wish to get riches by robbery, plunder, extortion, c.

By the term rich it is very likely that the apostle refers to what he had said above: Having food and raiment, let us be therewith content. He that has more than these is rich in the sense in which the apostle uses the term.

Fall into temptation and a snare] , Of the devil, is added by D*FG, Vulgate, Itala, and many of the fathers. It is in consequence of the temptation of the devil that they have determined to be rich this temptation once received, others quickly succeed: and when they have swallowed down the temptation to the thing, then they drink in a thousand temptations to the means; and all these lead them , into an unforeseen and concealed trap. signifies a net, trap, gin, snare, springe, or pit dug in the ground filled with sharp stakes, and slightly covered over; so that when a man, or any animal, steps upon it, he tumbles in, and is taken or destroyed. Such a snare is that into which those who will be rich must necessarily fall. But who will believe this? See note on 1Ti 6:10.

And into many foolish and hurtful lusts] The whole conduct of such a person is a tissue of folly; scraping, gathering, and heaping up riches, and scarcely affording to take the necessaries of life out of them for himself. These lusts or desires are not only foolish, but they are hurtful; the mind is debased and narrowed by them; benevolent and generous feelings become extinct; charity perishes; and selfishness, the last and lowest principle in mental degradation, absorbs the soul; for these foolish and hurtful lusts drown men in destruction and perdition-the soul is destroyed by them here, and brought through them into a state of perdition hereafter. The apostle considers these persons like mariners in a storm; by the concurrence of winds, waves, and tide, they are violently driven among the rocks, the vessel is dashed to pieces, and in a moment they are all ingulfed in the great deep! Such is the lot and unavoidable catastrophe of them that will be rich, even though they should strive to accomplish their desires by means the most rigidly honest.

In this place I beg leave to refer the reader to a sermon on this text by the late Rev. JOHN WESLEY, in which the whole of this subject is treated by the hand of a master; and, for usefulness, the sermon is superior to every thing of the kind ever published. It is entitled, The Danger of Riches; and is found in his WORKS, Vol. 2, page 248, American edit.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

But; or, for.

They that will be rich; they who, out of a covetous and immoderate desire of being rich in this worlds goods, will use any arts, and do any unlawful thing, without any just regard to the law of God.

Fall into temptation and a snare; fall into many temptations and snares, are exposed to impetuous inclinations and motions to that which is evil, and may and will be snares to their souls.

And into many foolish and hurtful lusts; kindling in them many foolish and pernicious desires, contrary to the law of God.

Which drown men in destruction and perdition; have a direct tendency to the eternal ruin of their souls, not to be prevented but by the force and powerful grace of God.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

9. will be richhave more than”food and raiment.” Greek,wishto be rich”; not merely are willing, but are resolved,and earnestly desire to have riches at any cost (Pro 28:20;Pro 28:22). This wishing(not the riches themselves) is fatal to “contentment” (1Ti6:6). Rich men are not told to cast away their riches, but not to”trust” in them, and to “do good” with them(1Ti 6:17; 1Ti 6:18;Psa 62:10).

fall into temptationnotmerely “are exposed to temptation,” but actually “fallinto” it. The falling into it is what we are to prayagainst, “Lead us not into temptation” (Jas1:14); such a one is already in a sinful state, even before anyovert act of sin. The Greek for “temptation” and”gain” contains a play on soundsporasmus, peirasmus.

snarea further stepdownwards (1Ti 3:7). He fallsinto “the snare of the devil.”

foolishirrational.

hurtfulto those whofall into the snare. Compare Eph4:22, “deceitful lusts” which deceive to one’s deadlyhurt.

lustsWith the one evillust (“wish to be rich”) many others jointhemselves: the one is the “root of all evils” (1Ti6:10).

whichGreek,“whatever (lusts).”

drownan awfuldescending climax from “fall into”; this is the last stepin the terrible descent (Jas 1:15);translated “sink,” Lu 5:7.

destruction . . .perditiondestruction in general (temporal or eternal),and perdition in particular, namely, that of body and soul inhell.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

But they that will be rich,…. Not they that are rich; for some rich men are good men; and do much good with their riches; and are as free from temptations and snares, and foolish and hurtful lusts, as other persons, as Abraham, Joseph of Arimathea, Gaius, and others were; but such that would be rich, who labour after, make haste for it, and are resolved upon it, at any rate, right or wrong, as there be thousands, who never attain to it; so that the apostle does not point at rich men particularly, but at such who are determined to be rich, whether they ever are so or not: these

fall into temptation; not in such sense in which the phrase is used in Jas 1:2 but in such sense as Christ uses it, Mt 6:13 namely, a falling into temptation to sin, so as to be drawn away by it, and overcome with it:

and a snare; the Vulgate Latin version reads, “the snare of the devil”, and so Beza’s Claromontane copy; which perhaps is taken from 1Ti 3:7, and though this seems not to be the genuine reading, yet it may give the true sense: Satan may be compared to a fowler; his temptations to sin are his nets and snares; and they that will be rich, are the birds that are caught and entangled therein, out of which sometimes it is impracticable to extricate themselves:

and into many foolish and hurtful lusts; carnal and worldly lusts, the lusts of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride of life, which are the things that are in the world and draw the affections to them; yea, what sin is there but such persons may, and do fall into; as defrauding of the neighbour, oppressing the poor, lying, perjury, theft, murder, rapine, violence, and injustice of every kind? so that they may be said to be “many”, and some of them are “foolish”. All sin is folly, and every wicked man is a foolish one, and acts a part quite contrary to reason; but some evil ways are notoriously silly, weak and foolish, and which they that will be rich make use of to get money; though others of them are sly and artful enough, and all of them are “hurtful” to their credit and reputation, or to the health of their bodies, and especially to the welfare of their immortal souls. So the phrase , “their foolish lust”, is used by the Targumist in Eze 20:25 and the corruption of nature in general is by the Jews called the old and foolish king, in Ec 4:13. They ask p,

“why is he called a king? because all obey him; why is he called old? because he is joined to him (a man) from his birth to his old age; and why is he called , “foolish?” because he teaches him an evil way, which he knows not how to warn him of again.”

Which drown men in destruction and perdition; that is, in utter ruin, in the ruin both of soul and body; and which is irrecoverable, like that of the drowning of a man in the sea, with a millstone about his neck; such folly and danger do those expose themselves to, who will be rich at any rate.

p Midrash Kohelet, fol. 70. 2.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

Desire to be rich ( ). The will () to be rich at any cost and in haste (Pr 28:20). Some MSS. have “trust in riches” in Mr 10:24. Possibly Paul still has teachers and preachers in mind.

Fall into ( ). See on 3:6 for and 3:7 for (snare).

Foolish (). See Gal 3:1; Gal 3:3.

Hurtful (). Old adjective from , to injure, here alone in N.T.

Drown (). Late word (literary Koine) from (bottom), to drag to the bottom. In N.T. only here and Lu 5:7 (of the boat). Drown in the lusts with the issue “in destruction and perdition” ( ). Not annihilation, but eternal punishment. The combination only here, but for , see 1Thess 5:3; 2Thess 1:9; 1Cor 5:5 and for , see 2Thess 2:3; Phil 3:19.

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

They that will be rich [ ] . Better, they that desire to be rich. lt is not the possession of richess but the love of them that leads men into temptation.

Fall [] . o P. Lit. fall into; but invariably in N. T. with eijv into. Temptation [] . See on Mt 6:13.

Foolish [] . Foolish answers to several words in N. T., ajnohtov, ajsunetov, afrwn, mwrov. Anohtov not understanding; a want of proper application of the moral judgment or perception, as Luk 24:9 5; Gal 3:1. See notes on both. Afrwn is senseless, stupid, of images, beasts. Comp. Luk 12:20, note. Asunetov approaches the meaning of ajnohtov unintelligent. See Sir. 22 13, 15; 27 12. It also implies a moral sense, wicked, Wisd. 1 5; 11 15; Sir. 14 7. On the etymological sense, see on Mt 11:25; Mr 12:33; Luk 2:47. Mwrov is without forethought, as Mt 7:26; Mt 25:3; without learning, as 1Co 1:27; 1Co 3:18; with a moral sense, empty, useless, 2Ti 2:23; Tit 3:9; and impious, godless, Mt 5:22; Psa 43:8; Jer 5:21. Hurtful [] . N. T. o. LXX once, Pro 10:26.

Drown [] . Only here and Luk 5:7, note. A strong expression of the results of avarice.

Destruction [] . See on 1Th 1:9, and additional note. Perdition [] . It is unsafe to distinguish between oleqrov destruction in general, and ajpwleia as pointing mainly to destruction of the soul. Apwleia sometimes of spiritual destruction, as Phi 1:28; but also of destruction and waste in general, as Mr 14:4; Act 8:20. One is reminded of Virgil, Aen 3:56 : “Quid non mortalia pectora cogis, Auri sacra fames?”

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

1) “But they that will be rich” (oi de boulomenoi ploutein) “But those resolving of their own accord to be rich, plutocratic,” those who have a compulsive, selfish will to be rich are restless without contentment. These make the getting of riches their aim, goal, objective of life for selfish ends, Luk 12:19-21.

2) “Fall into temptation and a snare” (empiptousin eis peirasmon kai pagida) “Fall (deep) into temptation and an entrapment or snare.” What is condemned is not ambition to succeed for godly purposes. but for selfish, lustful motives. Wealth honorably gotten and used honors God, Deu 8:18.

3) “And into many foolish and hurtful lusts” (kai epithumias pallas anetous kai blaberas) “And into many foolish and injurious lusts;” To wit, the prodigal son, Luk 15:11-24 and the Rich young ruler, Mat 19:16-26 and one choked with worldly cares, Mat 13:22.

4) “Which drown men in destruction and perdition.” (aitines buthizousin tous anthropous eis olethron kai apoleian) “Which cause such self-willed men to sink into ruin and destruction of their influence,” or usefulness to God, 1Ti 6:17; Jas 5:1-2.

To gain wealth honestly, with integrity, to help, to serve God and ones’ fellowman, develops character and is honorable, but the one who “cuts corners,” deals deceitfully, treacherously, and dishonestly to get riches for self or for selfish motives alone shall not go unpunished, Gal 6:7-8; Pro 28:20-22; 2Ki 5:22-27; Pro 13:11; Pro 20:21; Pro 23:4. Let labor never be for the motive of riches for self, merely money-grubbing for self alone.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

9 They who wish to be rich After having exhorted him to be content, and to despise riches, he now explains how dangerous is the desire of having them, and especially in the ministers of the Church, of whom he expressly speaks in this passage. Now the cause of the evils, which the Apostle here enumerates, is not riches, but an eager desire of them, even though the person should be poor. And here Paul shews not only what generally happens, but what must always happen; for every man that has resolved to become rich gives himself up as a captive to the devil. Most true is that saying of the heathen poet, — “He who is desirous of becoming rich is also desirous of acquiring riches soon.” (123) Hence it follows, that all who are violently desirous of acquiring wealth rush headlong.

Hence also those foolish, or rather, mad desires, which at length plunge them into perdition. This is, indeed, a universal evil; but in the pastors of the Church it is more easily seen; for they are so maddened by avarice, that they stick at nothing, however foolish, whenever the glitter of gold or silver dazzles their eyes.

(123) “ Dives fieri qui vult, Et cito vult fieri.” — Juvenal.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

THE RUIN IN RICHES

1Ti 6:9-12

THERE are some texts that need no light from Heaven to interpret them. They are best read when read in the streets, and find their truest commentary in the busy life of mortals in their eager races after the things of time. When Henry Ward Beecher was about to speak on The Love of Money, he said, Wall Street is my commentary. Broadway is my commentary. Life is a better commentary on the practical sides of the Bible than anything else.

In that sentence Beecher proved the prophetic spirit within him. There was never a time in which the Word of God was being read in the light of street lamps, and in the midst of the multitudes who crowd our great thoroughfares, as now. The most helpful and stimulating preachers of the hour are not those who look most sharply to homiletical effect, or to the art of sounding periods, or to the end of pleasing the aesthetic tastes; but those who are studying lifes dangers, and seeking to understand the safeguards of the soul, in the light of the Gospel of Gods Son.

It will always be so, that the secluded study, a cloister, if you please, will furnish the best place for perfecting religious discourses, but the streets and lanes of the city, the great highways of life, domestic, social and political, are the sources whence the material of the true prophet must be brought. The language of our text this evening is strong language, but stand on the street corner where men pass and repass in their race to be rich, and you will conclude that it is the speech of no idealist, no dreamer, no false prophet!

The marts and tricks of trade, the avarice and ingenuity of designing men, the wild extravagance and the growing greed of our times, all tell on the text, But they that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and into many foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in destruction and perdition.

There are several strong suggestions in this text that find ample illustration in the money-mania of the hour.

In the first place, we must learn from this text some of the dangers that accompany the determination to be rich.

The Apostle did not particularize those dangers. He only hinted at the multitude and ruinous character of them. Many foolish and hurtful lusts.

It is doubtful if any speaker will ever be able to tell them all, or describe the exceeding hurtfulness of those that are most manifest.

But some of them are so patent, and so injuriously powerful, that every student of this mania for money must face both them and their results. They that determine to be rich, at whatever cost, are in danger of deceiving themselves.

There are only a few men who seem to be bad from birth. Even the twenty years of childhood and early youth seldom develop a vicious and abandoned spirit. The vast majority of young men and women come to their independence with a good degree of generosity in their hearts, and enter upon life with some high and holy resolve. We can scarcely think that the pushing, keen-sighted, longheaded young man, destined one day to be a millionaire, is an exception to this rule! In common with his less nobly endowed business competitors, he is free-hearted and frank, and thinks no ill toward anyone. But his distinguishing trait is moneymaking and money-keeping! He finds himself capable of competing with the shrewdest in the market and with a consciousness of capability comes a fixed purpose to surpass, and pile up wealth.

At first he has no thought of doing wrong to get gain. His plans are all laid in righteous reflections, and his first bargains are driven with a clean conscience. He purposes that it shall always be so! Alas, for the blinding power of Satan! If many a young man who is beginning to heap up gold could only see himself forty years hence, a coarse, conscienceless, grasping, greedy miser, how he would start back and say, I do not want riches at such a price! But that is what he cant see because blinded by the god of this world. You remind him of the history of a hundred men who acquired great wealth and came to be stenches in the nostrils of their fellows, and he replies by citing some Peter Cooper, and says, I will end after his sort! I will keep my conscience. I will keep my business integrity. I will keep my tender sympathy with my fellow-men, and my benevolent spirit toward the unfortunate and suffering. I will keep every faith in God.

You tell him that when he gets the power of money behind him, he will cease to remember the unfortunate; he will come to think of his fellows as subjects to be fleeced; he will oppress and rob, and with Hazael he answers, What, is thy servant a dog, that he should do this great thing? Young men, you dont want to be misers, and mean? Then dont be deceived into thinking that your determination to be rich, whether or no, can come to any better end!

Again, they that will be rich are in as much danger of self-conceit as of self-deception. These two go naturally together. It is always a species of conceit that deceives men into the notion that they can walk the very paths that have ruined their fellows, and yet escape all hurt.

On the Board of Trade there are scores of young men today, who know full well the history of Old as he was called, and many others of similar character. They saw him succeed only to fail both in pocket-book and brain; and yet, with that conceit which accompanies temporary success, they are saying to themselves, We will not go as he went, as others have gone. We will be shrewder still, and our minds will stand the strain and our fortunes shall rival Rockefellers! They despise the unwisdom that caused a thousand of their predecessors in that Trade to leave the pit in pauperism and despair. They look with contempt on the conservative, conscience-keeping men, who make money slowly and by the sweat of the brow. Some time ago, such a speculator boasted that he had made two millions of dollars in a week and a paper commented on the fact, It does not require a high education to make a success in speculation. If God has given a man a head to work with, an education is not all essential to money-making! The versatile author of those sentences doubtless supposed himself to be treating the Twentieth Century to a novel idea in finance. But everybody knows that the worlds brainy men have not aspired, and in the nature of things never can aspire, to bag its boodle. The small souls who sell conscience and self-respect and soul for a few millions will continue to exercise the conceit that their money-making ability is an evidence of superiority. But long after such men are in the graves of disgrace, long after their estates have been wasted by fighting heirs, long after their memories have perished from the earth on which they gambled, long after the moment when their deceived souls have been assigned a place in the pit, the man who kept his mind for nobler ends, his heart in better service, and his spirit in touch with God, will live in the memory of good men, in the company of angels, and in the eternal favor of God.

Such conceited men are snared by Satan, and are walking with him, and yet such is the deception of money-blindness that only God can tear the bandages from the eyes of small men who make some financial success. They know too much of business to suffer the preachers counsel in that realm; they are so far in advance of father, that his honest notions are fogyism, and even if men fresh from the bruises of such business bring them a word of warning, they turn from it as from those who knew not enough to manage their own affairs, and of course are incapable of advising others; Conceit! It is the toboggan slide that makes many a man proud of his progress at the beginning of his race, and leaves him a bruised and lifeless heap, filling some deep ditch of destruction at the end.

Then there is the temptation to dishonesty.

Who, that determines to be rich, is likely to escape that temptation altogether, or successfully resist it when it comes? It is one of the most certain temptations to come. Every trend of the life that makes money-getting its chief aim lies in that direction. You enter business with a clean conscience, and honest purposes. Ere long you find men playing unprincipled parts, and in an unsuspecting hour you are caught by some sleek citizen and deceived and practically robbed. The tempter will then come with the suggestion, Get even with the world! It is a dishonest pool. Why should you be playing a straight hand? The law in this realm is, Every fellow for himself, and if you want to keep pace with the sharp procession you must learn their tricks and beat them at their own game. How many men have been taken by that satanic bait and landed at last on the banks of moral bankruptcy, having in their mouths the hook of deception and dishonesty.

Then, though one is not evilly entreated by his fellows, the tendency of the money-mania is naturally to dishonest dealing. A man of ordinary talents, of humble birth and breeding, soon sees that financial success makes it possible for him to forge to the front in American society. Among us riches cover a multitude of deficiencies. He who has it may butcher the Queens English to his hearts content without offending the most fastidious; in his manners he may be a veritable boor, and yet outshine a hundred intellectual, refined, yet poverty stricken competitors. In his dress, outlandishness does not disgust, if only a diamond sparkles in the shirt-front. What wonder men determine to have money?

Honesty? Yes, if possible, but if not, then by whatever means found to be most successful. One of the grossest sentiments of modern society is seen just here, and at the judgment of a just God many a society leader will find on his skirts the blood of souls that were tempted to dishonesty for positions sake; and for a place in circles that had more of beauty than brains, and more of boodle than either.

It is not an unusual thing for those men whose purpose of riches has cost them their conscience to console themselves with the reflection that after all they are not so bad. They know that they have secrets locked up in the individual heart, or else safely ensconced in the confidence of companions in crime, that would ruin the business and tarnish their excellent reputations, if only a drop of it should leak. And yet they say to themselves, Business secrets are not so bad! This bank will not burst at once. Why hasten it by letting the stockholders know the danger? This Association is bringing us in rich returns. Why shut off our own main to save the dribble from the faucets of others! This fortune will be squandered soon after the children get it anyhow. Why should not somebody have it who knows how to use it, and who has more right than the administrator?

Seemingly, some men accept only a part of the moral law as binding on the conscience! They subscribe to the commandment, Thou shalt not take the Name of the Lord thy God in vain. They are zealous for its successor, Remember the Sabbath Day, to keep it holy. They say amen when one reads, Thou shalt not kill. They blush at the command, Thou shalt not commit adultery. But there are at least two of the ten articles of the old law that can be conveniently forgottenThou shalt not steal; Thou shalt not covet thy neighbours house * * nor any thing that is thy neighbours. Against the point of those they have steeled their hearts. They may have gotten some of their wealth questionably, but havent they used it to the glory of God? Did they not give away at least two hundred of the questioned five thousand to charitable ends, ten dollars to a needy family, twenty-five to a charitable institution, fifty to the cause of the Gospel and a hundred and fifteen for the improvement of the street that faces their home? Liberal? Ah, yes, God cant condemn a fellow who uses his money so nobly even though he does rob a few widows, wrong hard laborers, crush weak competitors, and embezzle a few funds to get the sum! That was a keen observation that Charles Dickens made upon his miserly character, Ralph Nickleby, and one that has compassed many a kindred spirit. There are some men who, living with the one object of enriching themselves, no matter by what means, and being perfectly conscious of the baseness and rascality of the means which they will use every day toward this end, effect nevertheless, even to themselves, a high tone of moral rectitude, and shake their heads and sigh over the depravity of the world. Some of the craftiest scoundrels that ever walked this earth, or rather, for walking implies at least an erect position and the bearing of a man, that ever crawled and crept through life by its dirtiest and narrowest ways, will gravely jot down in diaries the events of everyday and keep a regular debtor and creditor account with Heaven, which shall always show a floating balance in their own favor.

Who can study such men without feeling the tremendous judgment that our text proclaims in saying,

They that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and into many foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in destruction and perdition.

Better be cast into the sea with a millstone about the neck, than come to judgment with the cries of robbed men, and deceived women, and hungry children following you to the throne whose brightness shall disclose every purpose and plot of dishonest dealing.

They that would be rich, at whatever cost, are tempted to sacrifice all the nobler sentiments of the soul on the altar of Mammon. There is an old saying to the effect that the mind keeps chiseling away at the features. That is one with the saying, As he (a man) thinketh in his heart, so is he, or so he soon becomes. It is utterly impossible for a man to make money-getting his daily thought and nightly dream without becoming a monster of miserliness into whose features Mammon will pencil his hard lines, until the human is worked out and the beast is made prominent.

Have you never seen misers who scarce suggested, or hinted humanity, in that best and most liberal use of the term? Hawthorne in his House of Seven Gables strikingly portrays this dehumanizing effect of the money mania. An Italian organ-grinder was before the House of Seven Gables, out of whose windows Phoebe and Clifford looked on the crowd that gathered to hear the music, but more especially to see the trained monkey perform. That monkeys appearance and actions Hawthorne describes after this manner: The mean and low, yet strangely manlike expression of his witted countenance; the prying and crafty glance that showed him ready to grip at every miserable advantage; his enormous tail (too enormous to be decently concealed under his gabardine) and the deviltry of nature which it betokenedtake this monkey just as he was, in short, and you could desire no better image of the Mammon of copper coin, symbolizing the grossest form of the love of money. Neither was there any possibility of satisfying the covetous little devil. Phoebe then threw down a whole handful of pennies, which he picked up with joyful eagerness, handed them over to the Italian for safe keeping, and immediately recommenced a series of panto-mimic petitions for more. Doubtless more than one New Englander, or let him be of what country he might, it is likely to be the case, passed by and threw a look at the monkey, and went on, without imagining how nearly his own moral condition was here exemplified.

Truly the greed of gain demoralizes the man whom it concerns. When a man gets gold by grinding the lives of those falling under the chariot of his financial triumph, despising the cry of the poor, disregarding the principles of honest dealing, and despising the great virtue of charity, in heaping up millions on millions, he may be lionized and beastly at the same time. Free men are afraid of voracious, conscienceless lions, that go about seeking whom they may devour.

A rich man is Gods man, and loves his fellows, and is loved in turn, and his end is bitterly mourned. There is no more an inherent evil in money than is the devil in a fiddle. On the other hand, it is Gods gift as much as music is, and may be employed to his praise. William E. Dodge was rich, yet not bad! Willeston was rich, yet made many rich beside! Peabody was rich and left behind monuments that no more perpetuate his memory than they honor God. Cooper was rich, and his institutes endowed all America! Rose was rich, but his benefactions were a sweet smelling savor the year around. R. L. Stuart was rich and our land rejoiced. Rockefeller is rich, and many universities and colleges know his generous heart and hand.

Fuente: The Bible of the Expositor and the Evangelist by Riley

CRITICAL AND EXPLANATORY NOTES

1Ti. 6:9. They that will be rich.The cry of the day is against those who are rich; the danger is equally great for those who would be if they could,a somewhat comprehensive saying. Which drown men.The word is found again in Luk. 5:7 only, to describe the swamping of the fishing-boats on Galilee.

1Ti. 6:10. While some coveted after.The word is the same as in 1Ti. 3:1 is rendered desire or seeketh. The R.V. reaching after is more accurate. Many sorrows.Sharp griefs; lit. gnawing pains of remorse (Blomfield). Ellicott denies that the word is derived from the Greek for a tooth. Grimm thinks they may have a common root.

MAIN HOMILETICS OF THE PARAGRAPH.1Ti. 6:9-10

Insatiable Avarice

I. Has its root in the love of money.The love of money is the root of all evil (1Ti. 6:10). Not money, but the love of it, is the root of evil. Hence the warning, If riches increase, set not thy heart upon them. Money has been the bait that has enticed many astray. They ran well for a time, till, as in the fable of Atalanta, a golden ball was cast in their path, and, stooping to pick it up, they lost the race. The love of money kills all other love. Men have sold their consciences, their friends, their family, for pelf. Avarice degrades our manhood.

II. Weans the soul from the truth.Which while some coveted after, they have erred from the faith (1Ti. 6:10). Avarice is a master-passion which subdues and enthrals our better self. God is exchanged for gold, religion for money-getting. A relish for spiritual things cannot coexist with the love of lucre. Faith becomes dim in the presence of shining coins. An American millionaire was so enslaved with money-getting that he complained he was kept on the drive from morning to night. Wealth is a splendid opportunity for doing good, but to the best it is a dangerous temptation.

III. Curses the soul with the pangs of discontent.And pierced themselves through with many sorrows (1Ti. 6:10). The miser is in perpetual dread of poverty. The more he has the more he wants. Avarice is insatiable. Money cannot give health or happiness, nor can it prolong life by a single day. Cardinal Beaufort, Chancellor of England in the reign of Henry VI., as he lay dying exclaimed: Wherefore should I die, being so rich? If the whole realm would save my life, I am able either by policy to get it or by riches to buy it. Fie! will not death be hired? Will money do nothing? The miser is the most miserable of men, and of all men to be the most pitied.

IV. Plunges the soul into a course of sin that ends in perdition.Which drown men in destruction and perdition (1Ti. 6:9). Wealth leads to luxury, self-indulgence, and a host of sins that defile and then damn the soul. Few men can resist the allurements of sudden fortune: they plunge into excesses that soon end them, or their money. The bane of the avaricious man is often the instrument of his punishment. About the time the apostle was denouncing the sin of covetousness in this epistle, Seneca was decrying the same evil and composed his ethics; but as if to show the impotence of his own precepts, he was accused of having amassed the most ample richesa circumstance that was no doubt the cause of his finally falling a victim to the jealousy and avarice of Nero.

Lessons.

1. Avarice grows on what it feeds.

2. The sin of avarice is the parent of many other sins.

3. Avarice unfits the soul to appreciate the truth.

GERM NOTES ON THE VERSES

1Ti. 6:9. The Danger of Riches.

I. Who are the rich?

1. They who desire more than food and covering.

3. They who endeavour after more than food and covering.

3. They who lay up treasures on earth.

4. They who possess more of this worlds goods than they use according to the will of the donor.

5. They who delight in money.

II. Dangers of the rich.

1. They enter into temptation.

2. They fall into silly and hurtful desires.

III. Duties of the rich.

1. Gain all you Song of Solomon 2. Save all you Song of Solomon 3. Give all you Song of Solomon 4. All that is laid out in this manner is really given to God.Wesley.

1Ti. 6:10. The Love of Money

I. Tends to arrogate and narrow and impel the whole action and passion of the soul toward one exclusive object, and that an ignoble one.

II. Throws a mean character into the estimation of all things.They are all estimated according to a standard of money-value, and in reference to gain.

III. Places a man in a very selfish relation to other men around him.

IV. Creates a settled hardness of character.

V. Operates with a slow but continual effect to pervert the judgment and conscience.J. Foster.

Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell

(9) But they that will be rich.Here St. Paul guards against the danger of his words being then or at any future time misinterpreted by any dreamy, unpractical school of asceticism, supposing that voluntary poverty was a state of life peculiarly pleasing to the Most Highthe strange mistake upon which the great Mendicant orders were organised in the Middle Ages. Those who exposed themselves to the winning temptations and deadly sins he was about to speak of were not the rich, but those who longingly plan to be rich.

Fall into temptation.Those longing to be rich will fall into the temptation to increase their worldly goods, even at the sacrifice of principle. Some unlawful method of gratifying their passion for gain will present itself; conscientious scruples will be thrown to the winds, and they who wish to be rich will fall into the temptation. We pray so often His prayer, Lead us not into temptation. In the same hour we longperhaps even with the same breath we praythat our worldly means may be increased, our position bettered, little thinking that the longing for an increase of riches and position will lead us into the most dangerous of all temptations!

And a snare.A very tangle, as it has been well called, of conflicting motiveseach fresh gratification of the ruling passion, perhaps excused under the plausible names of industry, home claims, praiseworthy and healthy enterprise, entangling the unhappy soul more completely.

And into many foolish and hurtful lusts.The lusts or desires into which those who long to be rich fall, are well named foolish, because in so many instances they are passionate desires for things utterly undesirable, the possession of which can afford neither pleasure nor advantagesuch, for instance, is the love of hoarding wealth, so common to those men who have longed for and obtained riches; and hurtful often to the body as well as to the soul do these rich find their longings, when gratified.

Which drown men in . . .Better rendered, which plunge men into . . .

Destruction and perdition.Destruction refers rather to wreck and ruin of the body, whilst perdition belongs rather to that more awful ruin of the eternal soul. The gratification of desires, whether these desires are centred in the lower animal passions of the table, or in the pursuit of yet baser and more selfish passions still, invariably leads to the destruction of the poor frail human body first. This premature breaking up of the earthly tabernacle is the herald and precursor of the final perdition of the immortal soul.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

9. That will That is, determine to be rich; who say, “At all events, honestly if I can, yet certainly, I will be rich.” The certainly will often dismiss the honestly.

Fall into temptation Inducements seduce their will at every turn to get gain at the price of godliness. These inducements in an age of trade and successful venture are stupendous. Men are tempted with a million or half million which can be secretly pocketed; and even if known, the contempt for their dishonesty can be braved for such a price; or it can be dazzled away by the splendid display of the successful knave.

A snare But, alas! the great man is caught, a victim in a net, in a trap; and by whom it is set is significantly hinted in 1Ti 3:7.

Hurtful lusts The wealth acquired induces free gratification of appetites; luxuries, revelries, excesses, which call for gain to sustain them.

Drown men So that a wealthy, luxurious age plunges itself into temporal and eternal destruction; not “mere moral degradation,” says Alford.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

‘But those whose minds are set on being rich fall into a temptation and a snare and many foolish and hurtful longings, such as drown men in ruin and destruction.’

In total contrast again are those who desire to be rich by any means. The slaves may labour without any hope of earthly advancement (1Ti 6:1-2), but at least they avoid the perils of being rich. They can only set their hope on God. In contrast those who set their minds on being rich, soon fall into temptation and a snare, and are entrapped by their foolish longings. They see the glitter of gold or hear the rustle of bank-notes, or moon over their bank statements, and that is what they set their hearts on, and it fails to satisfy them. And such longings finally then result in men drowning in ruin and destruction, either in this world or the next (Luk 12:13-21; Luk 16:19-31). Compare the ‘deceitfulness of riches’ in Mar 4:19.

The pictures are vivid. First they fall into temptation, they cannot resist the call of gold, then they are caught in a snare as their search for money entraps them, then their continued longings lead them into being drowned – in the sea of ruin and destruction. They are like a man who has risked all to obtain a treasure from a sunken wreck, only to find himself entangled in weeds and in danger of drowning with none to help, or seeking treasure in a swamp and finding it, only to find himself being unavoidably sucked in by the quicksand.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

1Ti 6:9 . ] expresses opposition to what immediately preceded. is properly not “become rich,” but “ be rich .”

(cf. 1Ti 3:7 ) ] De Wette explains it inaccurately: “to whom enticing opportunities present themselves for unrighteous gain.” In is contained the indication of the power which the (“the temptation to enrich oneself unrighteously”) exercises over them.

By the is defined to be a power fettering and taking prisoner.

] This is the consequence immediately connected with what precedes: by falling into , they fall into many foolish and hurtful lusts, i.e. these lusts are not only excited in them, but gain power over them. Thus the seductive power of the can be recognised in the . These are also , because instead of the gain which was expected to come from satisfying them, they bring hurt only.

(explanatory: “such as”) ] ; in the literal sense at Luk 5:7 ; 2Ma 12:4 .

Destruction is likewise the deep into which they are plunged by their desires. The expression is strengthened by bringing together the two synonymous ideas. There is no ground for van Oosterzee’s conjecture that denotes the destruction of the body, the destruction of the soul. De Wette incorrectly explains the words of “moral ruin,” against which Wiesinger justly observes: “they are in that already.” stands here as in 1Th 5:3 , 2Th 1:9 ( ); , as in Phi 1:28 (opp. ), Phi 3:19 , and other passages.

There is no good ground (with Olshausen in Wiesinger) for understanding exclusively of temporal destruction.

Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary

DISCOURSE: 2236
LOVE OF MONEY

1Ti 6:9-10. They that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and into many foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in destruction and perdition. For the love of money is the root of all evil: which while some coveted after, they have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows.

THERE is one general sentiment in the world, that riches will contribute greatly to our happiness, and that it is our wisdom to make use of all our time and talents in the acquisition of wealth. But widely different from this was the advice of the Apostle Paul, who tells us, that having food and raiment, we should be therewith content [Note: ver. 8.]; and that the very disposition so universally cherished and inculcated in the world, the love of money, is the root of all evil.

In speaking of the love of money, we will,

I.

Contemplate it as a root

Verily, as a root, it is very widely spread and deeply fixed in the heart of man; and richly does it deserve the character given of it in my text. For it is,

1.

A base principle

[There is no intrinsic worth in money, nor any thing that should make it in any respect an object of our regard. The man that possesses most of it has no advantage from it beyond the beholding it with his eyes [Note: Ecc 5:10-11.]. It is well compared to thick clay adhering to the feet of a man engaged in a race; and which serves only to impede his way, and to endanger his success [Note: Hab 2:6.]. How unworthy it is of the affections of a rational and immortal being, may be seen by the contempt poured upon it by our blessed Lord; who, when he came into the world, was horn in a stable; and when he lived in the world, had not a place where to lay his head.]

2.

A vitiating principle

[There is not a faculty of the soul which the love of money will not debase. It will pervert the judgment; so that we shall not be able to see our way, where a disinterested person would find no difficulty whatever It will blind the conscience; so that, under its influence, we shall put evil for good, and mistake darkness for light It will also harden the heart, and despoil it of all the filler feelings of compassion and love ]

3.

A domineering principle

[No better principle can find scope for operation where this prevails. It will swallow up every other, and govern with unbounded sway. In fact, so completely will it occupy the soul, as to make all its faculties subservient to the acquisition of gain ]

4.

A damning principle

[I am aware that I speak strongly. But would you have me withhold this awful truth? Would it not be cruelty to you to conceal this, or to soften it, when an inspired Apostle warns you, that this principle drowns men in destruction and perdition? Only let it be remembered, that covetousness is idolatry [Note: Col 3:5.]; and it will be seen at once, that the Apostles representation is fully justified Millions upon millions, it is to be feared, are at this very instant bewailing its fatal influence in hell ]

In confirmation of this, let us,

II.

Examine its fruit

See what it brings forth,

1.

In the world at large

[What falsehood, in every species of commercial dealing! What injustice, wherever it exists on the side of power! What cruelty, in enforcing claims, and satisfying its demands! Who does not cry out against his neighbour on account either of oppression or fraud? But what shall I say of thefts, and robberies, and murders? Verily, notwithstanding the vigilance of magistrates, and the terror of legal penalties, these things exist to a vast extent. What, then, would the state of the world be, if these restraints were removed? ]

2.

In the religious world in particular

[Let but the cares of this world, and the deceitfulness of riches, be suffered to grow up in the soul, and they will soon choke all the good seed that has been sown in it, and render it unfruitful [Note: Mat 13:22.]. How many, through its malignant influence, have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows! Unhappy Judas! What a pillar of salt art thou! an everlasting monument of the misery entailed by this fatal principle! Ananias, thou hadst better prospects: thou appearedst superior to these base feelings: but thou hadst not gained the victory: and thou thyself didst fall a victim to this accursed lust. And thou, Demas, thou of whom even St. Paul did entertain so high an opinion as repeatedly to rank thee with the Evangelist St. Luke; what became of thee at last, through thy love of money? Demas hath forsaken us, having loved this present evil world; and is gone to Thessalonica, a trading city, where he may find ample scope for indulging his predominant propensity. And, no doubt, multitudes of professing people, who have not thus openly made shipwreck of their faith, have, by their inordinate anxiety about their worldly interests, destroyed all the comfort of their souls; and, if they have been saved at all, have been saved only so as by fire [Note: 1Co 3:15.].

And here let me guard you against a common mistake. When it is said, They that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and so on, it is supposed to refer to those only who are determined to be rich at all events. But this is not the meaning of the passage: the utmost that it means is, they that are willing and desirous to be rich [Note: .] for the desire, harboured in the soul, is amply sufficient to draw after it all the bitter consequences which axe here said to result from it. We see this in the rich young man, who turned his hack upon the Lord rather than renounce his wealth [Note: Mat 19:22.]: and St. Peter has associated, what will be ever found inseparable, Covetous practices, and cursed children [Note: 2Pe 2:14.].]

Do you ask, How shall I counteract in my soul this sad propensity? I answer,
1.

Think how little the riches of this world can do for you

[Beyond food and raiment, what can you possess? Your food may be of a more luxurious kind; but, after a time, you will not enjoy it more than the labourer his homely provision. And your vestments may administer more to pride, but will not really answer the end better than clothing of a coarser texture. Believe it, brethren, the rich have very little, if any, advantage of the poor. Thousands of servants may see clearly enough that they have even a happier lot than their employers: and those who have amassed wealth to ever so great an extent, will, for the most part, be constrained to acknowledge, that they have rather accumulated troubles, than acquired ease. They are not the happiest who have the largest means of indulgence, but they who have the fewest cares. Let this be well settled in your minds, and the principle we have been speaking of will be divested of its baneful influence upon your souls.]

2.

Think what infinitely better riches are offered you in the Gospel

[In Christ there are unsearchable riches; and all for you, if only you believe in him. Oh! how rich is the soul that has peace with God! how rich the soul that has all the glory and felicity of heaven! Yet is it all yours, if ye are Christs. In your desires after these riches, you cannot be too enlarged. You may covet as earnestly as you will these gifts: nor will this principle ever operate, but for the production of good; good in yourselves, and good to all around you. Nothing but joy will ever result from this: the fruit of this will be joy in time, and glory in eternity. Get this principle rooted in the soul, and all the riches of this world will be as the dust upon the balance, yea, lighter than vanity itself.]


Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)

9 But they that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and into many foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in destruction and perdition.

Ver. 9. But they that will be rich ] That are resolved to have it, howsoever- rem, rem, quocunque modo rem. a “He that hasteth to be rich shall not be innocent,” Pro 28:20 .

And a snare ] As the panther, which so loveth man’s dung, that if it be hanged a height from it, it will leap, and never leave it till it have burst itseff in pieces to get it.

Drown men in destruction and perdition ] Ita demergunt ut in aquae summitate rursus non ebulliant, So as they never show themselves above water any more. b We read of the inhabitants of Oenoe, a dry island beside Athens, that they bestowed much labour to draw into it a river to water it, and make it more fruitful. But when all the passages were opened, and the receptacles prepared, the water came in so plentifully, that it overflowed all; and at the first tide drowned the island and all the people. So fareth it with many covetous caitiffs, (wretches) who seem to be of Nevessan the lawyer’s mind, “He that will not venture his body shall never be valiant; he that will not venture his soul shall never be rich.” Hubertus, an English cormorant, made this will: I yield my goods to the king, my body to the grave, my soul to the devil. How much better Aristippus and Crates the Theban, with their Hinc abite malae divitiae: satius enim eat a me vos demergi, &c.: they threw their riches into the sea, saying, Hence, hence, base trash! better we drown you in the sea than that you should drown us in perdition and destruction. Plutarch reports of one Philoxenus, that finding his heart too fast affected to his wealth, he made away with it; and said, nay, swore, that he would part with it rather than be undone for ever by it. c Christians have a better way to dispose of their riches than to throw them away, Psa 16:3 ; Luk 16:9 . But many rich wretches do as Heliogabalus did, who provided silken halters to hang himself withal, ponds of sweet water to drown himself with, gilded poisons to poison himself with, rather than to fall into the hands of his enemies. So do these strangle, drown, poison their precious souls with profits, pleasures, and preferments, &c., and many times meet with perdition and destruction, that is, with a double destruction, temporal and eternal, as some expound it.

a Divis qui fieri vult, et cito vult fieri. Juv.

b , such a drowning as is desperate.

c , , , ’ . Plut.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

9 .] But (contrast to the last verse) they who wish to be rich (not simply, ‘they who are rich :’ cf. Chrys.: , , , ), fall (reff.) into temptation (not merely ‘ are tempted ,’ but are involved in, cast into and among temptations; “in is implied the power which the exercises over them.” Huther) and a snare (being entangled by the temptation of getting rich as by a net), and many foolish and hurtful lusts (foolish, because no reasonable account can be given of them (see Ellic. on Gal 3:1 ): hurtful, as inflicting injury on all a man’s best interests), such as sink men (mankind, generic) into destruction and perdition (temporal and eternal, but especially the latter: see the usage in reff. of both words by St. Paul: not mere moral degradation, as De W.).

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

1Ti 6:9 . : St. Chrysostom calls attention to the fact that St. Paul does not say, They that are rich , but They that desire to be rich (R.V.), they that make the acquisition of riches their aim. The warning applies to all grades of wealth: all come under it whose ambition is to have more money than that which satisfies their accustomed needs. We are also to note that what is here condemned is not an ambition to excel in some lawful department of human activity, which though it may bring an increase in riches, develops character, but the having a single eye to the accumulation of money by any means. This distinction is drawn in Pro 28:20 : “A faithful man shall abound with blessings: But he that maketh haste to be rich shall not be unpunished”.

. Wetstein notes the close parallel in the words of Seneca: “Dum divitias consequi volumus in mala multa incidimus” ( Ep . 87). Cf. also Jas 1:2 , . refers rather to the consequencess of one’s money-grubbing spirit on others, to its disastrous effect on one’s own character.

: The desires in question are foolish, because they cannot be logically defended; they are hurtful, because they hinder true happiness. See Pro 23:4 , “Weary not thyself to be rich”.

: qualitative, such as .

: The word is found in its literal signification in Luk 5:7 . Moulton and Milligan ( Expositor , vii., vi. 381) illustrate its use here from a papyrus of cent. 1 B.C., [ ] . Bengel notes on . ., “ incidunt: mergunt . Tristis gradatio.” We must not lose sight of . Destruction and perdition are not, strictly speaking, the gulf in which the men are drowned. The lusts, etc., overwhelm them; and the issue is destruction , etc. See reff. on .

Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson

will. App-102.

fall, &c. Compare 1Ti 3:6, 1Ti 3:7.

snare. See 1Ti 3:7.

foolish. Greek. enoetos. See Rom 1:14.

hurtful. Greek. blaberos. Only here.

drown. Greek. bulhizo. Only here and Luk 5:7.

in. App-104,

destruction. Greek. olethros, See 1Co 5:5.

perdition. See Joh 17:12.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

9.] But (contrast to the last verse) they who wish to be rich (not simply, they who are rich: cf. Chrys.: , , , ), fall (reff.) into temptation (not merely are tempted, but are involved in, cast into and among temptations; in is implied the power which the exercises over them. Huther) and a snare (being entangled by the temptation of getting rich as by a net), and many foolish and hurtful lusts (foolish, because no reasonable account can be given of them (see Ellic. on Gal 3:1): hurtful, as inflicting injury on all a mans best interests), such as sink men (mankind, generic) into destruction and perdition (temporal and eternal, but especially the latter: see the usage in reff. of both words by St. Paul: not mere moral degradation, as De W.).

Fuente: The Greek Testament

1Ti 6:9. , wishing) This wish is the enemy of a mind contented with its lot; it is not the wealth itself (that is the enemy of contentment): rich men are not therefore commanded to cast away their wealth, 1Ti 6:17-18.-, to be rich) to have more than food and clothing.–, fall into-drown) A sad gradation.-) There is a Paronomasia [the signification of a word changed by a slight change of the letters]: , . Temptation is opposed to food, likewise to faith: a snare is opposed to clothing and to righteousness: lusts are opposed to a contented mind.-, a snare) Therefore they do not find , true gain.-, destruction) of the body.-, perdition) also of the soul: comp. of all, 1Ti 6:10. This is opposed to that expression, great gain, 1Ti 6:6.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

1Ti 6:9

But they that are minded to be rich fall into a temptation and a snare and many foolish and hurtful lusts,-The eagerness for riches brings temptations to sin. They are led into a snare of Satan. The effort to gain riches and enjoy them excites many hurtful lusts, which burden the heart, destroys the better aspirations and desires of the spirit, and makes one a sordid and selfish being.

such as drown men in destruction and perdition.-There is no truth more plainly taught on the pages of inspiration than all unjust means-or means gained when we make anxiety for money the chief end of our labors-bring ruin, poverty, and shame upon men and their families. The longer it remains in the family the deeper the ruin it works, the more highly it exalts them the deeper in shame it drags them down. Every dollar brought into a family by dishonest and unjust means is a curse, a poverty breeder to that family. [The gratification of desires, whether these desires are centered in the lower animal passions or in the pursuit of yet baser and more selfish passions, still invariably leads to the destruction of the poor, frail human body first. This premature breaking up of the earthly tabernacle is the herald and precursor of the final perdition of the immortal soul.]

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

they: Gen 13:10-13, Num 22:17-19, Jos 7:11, 2Ki 5:20-27, Pro 15:27, Pro 20:21, Pro 21:6, Pro 22:16, Pro 28:20-22, Isa 5:8, Hos 12:7, Hos 12:8, Amo 8:4-6, Zec 11:5, Mat 13:22, Mat 19:22, Mat 26:15, Jam 5:1-4, 2Pe 2:15, 2Pe 2:16, Jud 1:11

snare: 1Ti 3:7, Deu 7:25, Psa 11:6, Pro 1:17-19, Luk 21:35, 2Ti 2:26

many: Mar 4:19, Eph 4:22, 1Jo 2:15-17

which: 1Ti 1:9, Num 31:8, Jos 7:24-26, Mat 27:3-5, Act 5:4, Act 5:5, Act 8:20, 2Pe 2:3

Reciprocal: Gen 13:6 – General Gen 14:12 – who Exo 18:21 – hating Exo 28:40 – glory Num 22:7 – rewards of divination Num 22:19 – General Deu 5:21 – General Deu 17:17 – neither shall he Jos 7:21 – I coveted Jdg 16:5 – we will 2Sa 16:3 – day 1Ki 21:2 – Give me 1Ki 21:6 – Because Job 18:8 – he is cast Job 27:8 – General Psa 10:3 – whom Psa 91:3 – snare Psa 119:36 – and not to Pro 1:13 – General Pro 1:19 – every Pro 28:22 – hasteth to be rich Ecc 5:13 – riches Isa 57:17 – the iniquity Jer 17:11 – he that Jer 22:17 – covetousness Eze 22:12 – greedily Eze 28:16 – the multitude Eze 33:31 – but their Mat 6:24 – mammon Mat 12:44 – he findeth Mat 19:23 – That Mat 22:5 – one Mar 4:7 – General Mar 10:22 – for Luk 8:14 – and are Luk 14:18 – I have Luk 16:9 – mammon Luk 18:24 – How Luk 22:5 – and covenanted Act 19:24 – brought Act 24:26 – hoped 1Co 5:11 – or covetous Eph 2:3 – in the Eph 5:15 – not 1Ti 1:19 – made 2Ti 2:4 – entangleth 2Ti 3:6 – divers Heb 10:39 – unto Heb 12:1 – let us lay Heb 13:5 – conversation Jam 4:2 – lust 1Pe 2:11 – war 2Pe 3:7 – and perdition

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

1Ti 6:9. Will be rich is not a mere statement of a fact that is to come to pass, meaning that someone is going to be rich, but it is a stronger term. It means those who eagerly intend to become rich and who exert themselves to that end. There is no sin in the simple fact that one is rich, for Joseph of Arimathea was a rich man and a disciple of Jesus, yet he is never referred to in any unfavorable light (Mat 27:57-60; Mar 15:43-47; Luk 23:50-51; Joh 19:38). In verses 17-19 of our present chapter, the rich are not told that their wealth is an evil, but only that they must not trust in it and that they should make the proper use of it. It is not a question of how rich a man is, but how did he obtain his wealth and how is he using it? If he obtained it by his own determination, urged by an eager desire to be rich, he will be tempted to engage in wrongful conduct that will snare him in sin. Hurtful lusts means foolish desires that are injurious to one’s moral and spiritual character. Drown is used figuratively because a drowning man is one who is sinking into the water until he is overwhelmed and finally dies. These evil practices of the man so eager to become rich will cause him to be overwhelmed by’ them until his soul will meet destruction of perdition, which means eternal condemnation.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

1Ti 6:9. They that will be rich. The Greek will is more than the simple future: They that wish to be rich. It is not the mere possession of riches, but the cupidity before gaining them, and the trust in them (Mar 10:24) when gained, that constitute their danger.

Foolish. Better senseless; desires that have no root in the nature of things or in our actual wants, the love of display, the vulgar vanity of seeming as rich as others, or richer.

Drown. Literally sink, used of ships as well as men.

Destruction and perdition. The Greek words are of kindred derivation, but are brought together to express the utterness of the ruin; perhaps also in the second word, to give prominence to the thought that it stretches beyond the present life.

Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament

Observe here, 1. The parties described: they that will be rich, that is, whether God will or no; their hearts are set upon the world, they feel it coming, and have it they will, if by any means, right or wrong, they can come at it, ask nobody’s leave, no, not God Almighty’s leave, but rich they are resolved to be.

Observe, 2. Their danger represented: they fall into temptation and a snare, and many foolish lusts, &c.

Learn hence, That a will and resolution to be rich, is the occasion of much mischief to those that cherish and allow it in themselves; a will to be rich, is to make riches our principal business, our main scope, our great work, to pursue the world with the full bent of our wills: now the bent of our wills is discovered, first, by intention, secondly, by industrious prosecution; when the mind is wholly intent upon getting wealth, and unwearied industry is found in the pursuit of it. Now this is to make a god of the world; for that which is a man’s aim, design, and end, is his chief good, and that which is our chiefest good is God. They that will be rich, &c.

Learn, 2. That an hot and over eager pursuit of the world lays a man open to endless temptations, so that it is not only difficult, but impossible, to keep his innocency; and that being irrecoverably lost, drowns a man in perdition and destruction.

Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament

CHAPTER 29

When we were teaching in Wyoming, we were also interim pastor for a while at a little Bible church. The church was in another town about sixty miles from our home. Most Sundays we would drive home or to another town for lunch and enjoy some time alone.

One Sunday one of the couples that we had met but not gotten to know very well invited us to dinner the following Sunday. We accepted and looked forward to the meal and getting to know the folks.

We followed them home from the church. When we drove into the driveway, we were totally shocked by the size of the home. When we walked into the front door, we were even more shocked as the home was much larger than it appeared. We were seated in the informal dinning room just off the kitchen. The table and chair set was most beautiful. The room was decorated in the richest of trappings.

We could see the gorgeous formal dinning room from where we ate dinner. The living room was yet beyond the formal dinning room. After dinner we were given the tour of the basement bedrooms and offices, but did not make it upstairs.

The point being these folks were nothing out of the ordinary in what we had observed of them at the church. Their riches seemingly had no outward effect on them as they related to other people. They were enjoying the riches God had allowed them to acquire but had not allowed the riches to enjoy them.

We will look at the SNARE OF DESIRING RICHES in verse nine, the ERROR OF DESIRING RICHES in verse ten, and the CURE OF DESIRING RICHES in verse eleven.

I. SNARE OF DESIRING RICHES

1Ti 6:9 But they that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and [into] many foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in destruction and perdition.

This passage seems to need little explanation. It is negative to the end. Anyone wanting to be rich and acting on that desire, will fall into temptation, snares, lusts and these items will end in destruction and perdition. Not up for light discussion – FACT.

Snare is simply the snare used to capture animals or birds. The snare is something which acts totally unexpectedly. The prey is certainly startled and shocked at the snare because they did not know it was there, nor were they expecting it.

The desire for riches will turn around and bite you very hard and very unexpectedly.

The thought of destruction and perdition does not necessarily, but can mean eternal damnation. Personally I would assume that this is speaking of eternal damnation because most true believers would not fall into the downward spiral that is described here, but it certainly is an awesome warning for the believer – don’t commit yourself to becoming rich.

Is it wrong to be rich? No, definitely not, but to commit yourself toward that goal is shutting the door to God – remember – you can’t serve God and mammon? If you are to be rich, God is fully capable of making you so! You commit to Him and allow Him to do His work.

That really takes the pressure off – we commit our lives to God and allow Him to create what He wants and we don’t have to do all the straining and laboring of making something of ourselves.

He can zap us rich if that is what He wants for us or He can lead us into activities which can result in riches – but we needn’t seek riches nor strain for them.

When I read this passage I often recall a very good friend from Bible College days. He was called by God to prepare for the mission field. He arrived at the college fully planning to take the Gospel to a particular tribe in South America.

We were able to get to know one another and became good friends. At some point in time he became sidetracked with the thought of going into business to make enough money to get through school and probably help others through school as well.

He ultimately purchased a business so that he could make big bucks. As time went by he dropped out of school because he was spending more and more time at the business. Finally he was totally sidetracked from God’s will for his life.

We lost track of one another, and I do not know if he ever got back on track or not. He certainly was well on the way to total destruction spiritually.

II. ERROR OF DESIRING RICHES

Fuente: Mr. D’s Notes on Selected New Testament Books by Stanley Derickson

6:9 {8} But they that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare, and [into] many foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men in destruction and perdition.

(8) He puts fear into Timothy to avoid covetousness using a different reasoning, that is, because it draws with it an infinite sort of lusts and those very hurtful, with which covetous men do torment themselves to the degree that in the end, they cast away from them their faith and salvation.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

A simple lifestyle demonstrates contentment with the basics of life. [Note: I. Howard Marshall, The Pastoral Epistles, p. 649.] In contrast, greed for more opens the door to temptation. This temptation comes in the form of unwise lustful desires that impede one’s spiritual progress, as a trap holds an animal that gets tangled in it. Eventually the end of the person so snared is spiritual ruin and personal destruction if he or she does not escape its grip and turn from it.

Paul used a second figure to warn against greed (1Ti 6:10 a). That root attitude bears all kinds of evil fruit in wicked actions. Note that it is the love of money, not money itself, that is the snare. It is possible to have very little money and yet to love it. Some people have much money yet do not love it. Love of money contrasts with love of God and neighbor, the two greatest commandments (Mat 22:39; cf. Mat 6:24; Luk 16:13; 1Jn 2:15).

"The connotation in ’the love of money’ (philaguria) is not the acquisition of wealth in order that it may be used in prodigal expenditure but rather the miserly accumulation and hoarding of money for the very love of it. That which should be a means to support life is made the end of life itself." [Note: Hiebert, First Timothy, p. 114.]

Paul pictured a person wandering from the narrow path of truth as he pursues money. He gets caught in thorns that pierce his skin and cause him great pain (cf. Mat 13:22). Paul may have been speaking of these false teachers impaling themselves. [Note: Towner, The Letters . . ., p. 404.]

"The sentiment is, that there is no kind of evil to which the love of money may not lead men, when once it fairly takes hold of them." [Note: Patrick Fairbairn, Commentary on the Pastoral Epistles, p. 239.]

As Christians who live in a materialistic world, we must cultivate Paul’s attitude of contentment very deliberately. This is an especially difficult task in a society like the one in which we live in North America. We are constantly hearing through advertising and the media that we "need" all kinds of luxuries. According to Paul, and Jesus, our personal needs as human beings are very few. Paul’s point was that we should seek godliness more diligently than we seek money and the things it can buy.

"If you are afraid that perhaps the love of money is getting a hold on your soul, start giving some of it away and see how you feel! If you feel really glad then you are still safe, but if it almost breaks your heart then it is time to get down on your knees and pray to be freed from this sin of covetousness! It is going to ruin you unless you are delivered from it." [Note: Ironside, p. 155.]

Compare the attitude of the rich young ruler in Mat 19:22, Mar 10:22, or Luk 18:23.

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)