Verse 10
10. the love of money—not the money itself, but the love of it—the wishing to be rich (1 Timothy 6:9) —"is a root (ELLICOTT and MIDDLETON: not as English Version, 'the root') of all evils." (So the Greek plural). The wealthiest may be rich not in a bad sense; the poorest may covet to be so (1 Timothy 6:9- :). Love of money is not the sole root of evils, but it is a leading "root of bitterness" (1 Timothy 6:9- :), for "it destroys faith, the root of all that is good" [BENGEL]; its offshoots are "temptation, a snare, lusts, destruction, perdition."
coveted after—lusted after.
erred from—literally, "have been made to err from the faith" (1 Timothy 1:19; 1 Timothy 4:1).
pierced— (1 Timothy 4:1- :).
with . . . sorrows—"pains": "thorns" of the parable (1 Timothy 4:1- :) which choke the word of "faith." "The prosperity of fools destroys them" (1 Timothy 4:1- :). BENGEL and WIESINGER make them the gnawings of conscience, producing remorse for wealth badly acquired; the harbingers of the future "perdition" (1 Timothy 4:1- :).
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