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1. Pro 1:13 – “We shall find all precious substance, we shall fill our houses with spoil:”
- Here we find the true motivation of these brutal men: money.
- Their inspiration for conspiring to lurk secretly and lay wait for the blood of the innocent was the insidious sin of covetousness.
- They were so “greedy of gain” that they were willing to “[take] away the life of the owners thereof” to get it (Pro 1:19).
- Evil men will stop at nothing to fulfill their lusts.
- The eyes of man are never satisfied (Pro 27:20).
- As Matthew Henry so eloquently wrote commenting on Lev 11:43-47, “Nature is content with little, grace with less, but lust with nothing.”
- The love of money is the root of all evil (1Ti 6:10).
- Wicked men should consider their ways and ask themselves if filling their houses with spoil is worth losing their own souls (Mar 8:36).
- Life does not consist of the abundance of possessions (Luk 12:15).
- The most important things in life are not things.
- It’s better to make a difference than a fortune.
- We cannot serve God and money, and if a man tries, he will end up hating one or the other (Mat 6:24).
- Walking straddled over a fence is sure to end in pain.
- The desire to be rich will ruin a man (1Ti 6:9; Pro 28:22).
- If a man wants to fill his house with precious substance, he should seek to do so by living righteously and faithfully and working hard (Pro 3:33; Pro 28:20).
- He should not do so by plundering his neighbor, whether on the street corner or at the ballot box (Exo 20:15).
- Even if these thugs were successful in pillaging the innocent and robbing them of their substance, it would be short lived (Pro 10:3; Pro 13:22).
- They may succeed in spoiling their innocent victims, but the LORD will “spoil the soul of those that spoiled them” (Pro 22:22-23).
You reap what you sow (Gal 6:7), and “they that plow iniquity, and sow wickedness, reap the same” (Job 4:8).