1 Timothy 6:9-11
9 But those who desire to be rich fall into temptation, into a snare, into many senseless and harmful desires that plunge people into ruin and destruction.
10 For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evils. It is through this craving that some have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves with many pangs.
11 But as for you, O man of God, flee these things. Pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, steadfastness, gentleness.
This passage contains one of the most wrongly quoted verses in the Word of God. How often have you heard someone tell you that money is the root of all evil?
This is ludicrous. Money is an inanimate object, a tool for an exchange of services, a method of allowing equitable exchange of talents for goods. Money, as a subject of discussion is not a moral agent. It does not make choices of good or evil, but is simply a tool for moral agents to use in pursuing good or evil. So many in our culture want to assign personal responsibility to inanimate objects. How far have we drifted from common sense!
No, Paul is teaching us that the problem is the constant craving. Even the craving, this desire within us is not necessarily evil, for the term is used elsewhere in the New Testament to describe a craving for a noble office
1 Timothy 3:1 The saying is trustworthy: If anyone aspires to the office of overseer, he desires a noble task.
Elsewhere, an apostle speaks of pilgrims leaving behind the temporal cities of this earth, craving a better country.
Hebrews 11:16 But as it is, they desire a better country, that is, a heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God, for he has prepared for them a city.
So money doesn’t contain a bucket of evil within it, staining every person who touches it. Even the craving for something doesn’t necessarily carry with it a sense of wickedness.
It is the marrying of these two topics that causes concern. And before I forget, this isn’t a rich man’s disease, for the poor man is as susceptible to this trap as the rich man. Paul does not say that the love of lots of money is the root of all evil. No no no.
Love a dime? You got a potential problem! What will you allow in your life in order to gain a nickel? What type of evil will accompany your that craving you succumb to for that nickel?
But back to our topic at hand for the believer. Paul is writing to a young pastor, seeking to guide him into fruitful service for the Master, providing him examples of believers who have caused damage to their faith. For Paul, he describes the outcome of a believer’s love of money as two fold.
- Wandered away from the faith.
Notice the definite article, directing Timothy to the truth provided by the Scriptures. The believer who wanders off based on a craving for money, leaves behind the truth of the Scriptures. May I ask my reader if a believer is a believer if he doesn’t believe the message of his belief?
Leaving behind the message of the Scriptures in an effort to satisfy a craving, in this case Paul speaks of money, puts the believer in a dangerous situation!
- Pierced themselves with many pangs
When Paul speaks of piercing, he uses a word that means to pierced thoroughly, completely. To fully pierce. The term is only used once in the NT and it is describing the result of following after the craving of loving money, loving an inanimate article that is a tool for good or bad. (Are we not to love the good, not the tool?)
Suffice it to say, the piercing is thorough, and the result is to experience pangs, or as other translators understand, griefs. This term does not necessarily refer to suffering physical torments, but of distress, and I can imagine this may be the result of one who uses people to make money, as opposed to one who uses money to make people. We so often get it all backwards!
It is interesting that Paul prescribes a number of Christian characteristics after this death trap of loving money. One of these characteristics is tithing, giving money away, placing offerings in a plate.
Did you read the passage? It said nothing of the sort. Paul speaks to Timothy, telling him to pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, steadfastness, gentleness.
Why does he not tell him to give all his money away? Again, let us remember it is a heart issue. A destitute man can still have an insatiable craving for cash, a longing that will allow for many “allowances” in his Christian life.
Whatever funds, possessions, stocks, bonds, real estate, coins, investments, vehicles, or such that you own, it is your decision to be ready to loose it all for Him. Holding onto the penny, or chasing the nickel will produce pangs of grief eventually, and in the end, it will prove to be temporal. A temporary tool.
Use the possessions you have to make people, to minister to those who need encouragement, to feed those who are in need (in deed) and to provide assistance for those less fortunate. As Paul mentions above, pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, steadfastness, gentleness. Seek after these qualities, and when the topic of money comes up, let these qualities direct your goals!
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