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Text -- 1 Timothy 5:6 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
5:6 But the one who lives for pleasure is dead even while she lives.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Worldliness | Women | Widows | Widow | Pleasure | Minister | GIVE | Death | DEACONESS | Commandments | Amusements and Worldly Pleasures | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: 1Ti 5:6 - -- She that giveth herself to pleasure ( hē spatalōsa ). Present active participle of splatalaō , late verb (Polybius) from spatalē (riotous, ...

She that giveth herself to pleasure ( hē spatalōsa ).

Present active participle of splatalaō , late verb (Polybius) from spatalē (riotous, luxurious living). In N.T. only here and Jam 5:5.

Vincent: 1Ti 5:6 - -- Liveth in pleasure ( σπαταλῶσα ) Only here and Jam 5:5. See note. Twice in lxx, Sir. 21:15; Eze 16:49.

Liveth in pleasure ( σπαταλῶσα )

Only here and Jam 5:5. See note. Twice in lxx, Sir. 21:15; Eze 16:49.

Vincent: 1Ti 5:6 - -- Is dead while she liveth ( ζῶσα τέθνηκεν ) Comp. Rev 3:1; Eph 4:18. " Life in worldly pleasure is only life in appearance" (Holt...

Is dead while she liveth ( ζῶσα τέθνηκεν )

Comp. Rev 3:1; Eph 4:18. " Life in worldly pleasure is only life in appearance" (Holtzmann).

Wesley: 1Ti 5:6 - -- Delicately, voluptuously, in elegant, regular sensuality, though not in the use of any such pleasures as are unlawful in themselves.

Delicately, voluptuously, in elegant, regular sensuality, though not in the use of any such pleasures as are unlawful in themselves.

JFB: 1Ti 5:6 - -- The opposite of such a widow as is described in 1Ti 5:5, and therefore one utterly undeserving of Church charity. The Greek expresses wanton prodigali...

The opposite of such a widow as is described in 1Ti 5:5, and therefore one utterly undeserving of Church charity. The Greek expresses wanton prodigality and excess [TITTMANN]. The root expresses weaving at a fast rate, and so lavish excess (see on Jam 5:5).

JFB: 1Ti 5:6 - -- Dead in the Spirit while alive in the flesh (Mat 8:22; Eph 5:14).

Dead in the Spirit while alive in the flesh (Mat 8:22; Eph 5:14).

Clarke: 1Ti 5:6 - -- But she that liveth in pleasure - Ἡ δε σπαταλωσα· She that liveth delicately - voluptuously indulging herself with dainties; it doe...

But she that liveth in pleasure - Ἡ δε σπαταλωσα· She that liveth delicately - voluptuously indulging herself with dainties; it does not indicate grossly criminal pleasures; but simply means one who indulges herself in good eating and drinking, pampering her body at the expense of her mind. The word is used in reference to what we term petted and spoiled children; and a remarkable passage, is produced by Kypke, from an epistle of Theanus to Eubulus, found in Opusc. Myth. Galaei, page 741, where he says: "What can be done with that boy, who, if he have not food when and as he pleases, bursts out into weeping; and, if he eats, must have dainties and sweetmeats? If the weather be hot he complains of fatigue; if it be cold, he trembles; if he be reproved, he scolds; if every thing be not provided for him according to his wish, he is enraged. If he eats not, he breaks out into fits of anger. He basely indulges himself in pleasure; and in every respect acts voluptuously and effeminately. Knowing then, O friend, ὁτι τα σπαταλωντα των παιδιων, ὁταν ακμασῃ προς ανδρας, ανδραποδα γινεται, τας τοιαυτας ἡδονας αφαιρει· that boys living thus voluptuously, when they grow up are wont to become slaves; take away, therefore, such pleasures from them."I have introduced this long quotation, the better to fix the meaning of the apostle, and to show that the life of pleasure mentioned here does not mean prostitution or uncleanness of any kind, though such a life may naturally lead to dissolute manners

Clarke: 1Ti 5:6 - -- Is dead while she liveth - No purpose of life is answered by the existence of such a person. Seneca, in Epist. 60, says of pleasure-takers, and thos...

Is dead while she liveth - No purpose of life is answered by the existence of such a person. Seneca, in Epist. 60, says of pleasure-takers, and those who live a voluptuous life: Hos itaque animalium loco numeremus, non hominum: quosdam vero ne animalium quidem, sed mortuorum - mortem antecesserunt . "We rank such persons with brutes, not with men; and some of them not even with brutes, but with dead carcasses. They anticipate their own death."Such persons are, as the apostle says elsewhere, dead in trespasses, and dead in sins.

Calvin: 1Ti 5:6 - -- 6.. She who is in luxury. After having described the marks by which real widows may be known, he now contrasts them with others that ought not to be ...

6.. She who is in luxury. After having described the marks by which real widows may be known, he now contrasts them with others that ought not to be received. The Greek participle which he employs, σπαταλῶσα, means one who allows herself every indulgence, and leads an easy and luxurious life. Accordingly, Paul (in my opinion) censures those who abuse their widowhood for this purpose, that, being loosed from the marriage yoke, and freed from every annoyance, they may lead a life of pleasant idleness; for we see many who seek their own freedom and convenience, and give themselves up to excessive mirth.

Is dead while she liveth When Paul says that such persons “are dead while they live,” this is supposed by some to mean that they are unbelievers; an opinion with which I do not at all agree. I think it more natural to say that a woman “is dead,” when she is useless, and does no good; for to what purpose do we live, if it be not that our actions may yield some advantage? And what if we should say that the emphasis lies in the word liveth? For they who covet an indolent life, that they may live more at their ease, have constantly in their mouth the proverbial saying: —

“For life is not to live, but to be well.” 89

The meaning would therefore be: “If they reckon themselves happy, when they have everything to their heart’s wish, and if they think that nothing but repose and luxury can be called life, for my part, I declare that they are dead.” But as this meaning might seem liable to the charge of excessive ingenuity, I wished merely to give a passing glimpse of it, without making any positive assertion. This at least is certain, that Paul here condemns indolence, when he calls those women dead who are of no use.

TSK: 1Ti 5:6 - -- she : 1Sa 25:6; Job 21:11-15; Psa 73:5-7; Isa 22:13; Amo 6:5, Amo 6:6; Luk 12:19; Luk 15:13, Luk 16:19; Jam 5:5; Rev 18:7 in pleasure : or, delicately...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 1Ti 5:6 - -- But she that liveth in pleasure - Margin, "delicately."The Greek word ( σπαταλάω spatalaō ) occurs nowhere else in the New Test...

But she that liveth in pleasure - Margin, "delicately."The Greek word ( σπαταλάω spatalaō ) occurs nowhere else in the New Testament, except in Jam 5:5, "Ye have lived in pleasure on the earth."It properly means to live in luxury, voluptuously; to indulge freely in eating and drinking; to yield to the indulgence of the appetites. It does not indicate grossly criminal pleasures; but the kind of pleasure connected with luxurious living, and with pampering the appetites. It is probable that in the time of the apostle, there were professedly Christian widows who lived in this manner - as there are such professing Christians of all kinds in every age of the world.

Is dead while she liveth - To all the proper purposes of life she is as if she were dead. There is great emphasis in this expression, and nothing could convey more forcibly the idea that true happiness is not to be found in the pleasure of sense. There is nothing in them that answers the purposes of life. They are not the objects for which life was given, and as to the great and proper designs of existence, such persons might as well be dead.

Poole: 1Ti 5:6 - -- H de sqatalwsa , she that is wanton, Jam 5:5 , she that spends her money in needless costs, as to meat, drink, or apparel, is spiritually dead, dead...

H de sqatalwsa , she that is wanton, Jam 5:5 , she that spends her money in needless costs, as to meat, drink, or apparel, is spiritually dead, dead in sin, while she liveth a temporary voluptuous life, in vanity, and luxury, and impurity of flesh and spirit.

Haydock: 1Ti 5:6 - -- For she that liveth in pleasure, (i.e. that seeks to live in ease and plenty) is dead [3] while she is living, by the spiritual death of her soul...

For she that liveth in pleasure, (i.e. that seeks to live in ease and plenty) is dead [3] while she is living, by the spiritual death of her soul in sin. See St. John Chrysostom with non less eloquence than piety, expounding this riddle, as he terms it, to wit, what it is to be at the same time alive and dead. (Witham)

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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

St. John Chrysostom, ( Greek: log. ig. p. 301.) Greek: touto phusin ainigma, &c.

Gill: 1Ti 5:6 - -- But she that liveth in pleasure,.... Voluptuously, and deliciously; lives a wanton, loose, and licentious life, serving divers lusts and pleasures:, ...

But she that liveth in pleasure,.... Voluptuously, and deliciously; lives a wanton, loose, and licentious life, serving divers lusts and pleasures:,

is dead while she liveth; is dead in trespasses and sins, while she lives in them; is dead morally or spiritually, while she lives a natural or corporeal life. There is a likeness between a moral and a corporeal death. In a corporeal death, the soul is separated from the body; and in a moral death, souls are separated from God, and are alienated from the life of God; and are without Christ, who is the author and giver of spiritual life; and have not the Spirit, which is the Spirit of life: death defaces and deforms the man, and a moral death lies in the defacing of the image of God, first stamped on man, and in a loss of original righteousness; for as death strips a man naked of all, as he was when he came into the world, so sin, which brings on this moral death, has stripped man of his moral righteousness, whereby he is become dead in law, as well as in sin: and as in death there is a privation of all sense, so such who are dead, morally or spiritually, have no true sense of sin, and of their state and condition; are not concerned about sin, nor troubled for it, but rejoice in it, boast of it, plead for it, and declare it: between such persons and dead men there is a great similitude; as dead men are helpless to themselves, so are they; they can do nothing of, nor for themselves, in matters of a spiritual nature; and as dead men are unprofitable unto others, so are they to God, and man; and as dead men are hurtful and infectious to others, so they by their evil communications corrupt good manners; and as dead bodies are nauseous and disagreeable, so are such persons, especially to a pure and holy Being; and as dead men are deprived of their senses, so are these: they are blind, and cannot see and discern the things of the Spirit of God; they have not ears to hear the joyful sound of the Gospel, so as to understand it, approve of it, and delight in it; they have no feeling, nor are they burdened with the weight of sin; nor have they any taste and savour of the things of God, but only of the things of men; so that in a spiritual sense they are dead, while they are alive. It is a common, saying to be met with in Jewish writers, רשעים בחייהן קרויין מתים, "the wicked while alive are said to be dead" s. And they say t also, that men are called מתים, "dead", from the time they sin; and that he that sins is accounted כמת, "as a dead man" u.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 1Ti 5:6 For “is dead even” the Greek text reads “has died.”

Geneva Bible: 1Ti 5:6 ( 8 ) But she that liveth in pleasure is dead while she liveth. ( 8 ) The third rule: let widows that live in pleasure, and neglect the care of their...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: 1Ti 5:1-25 - --1 Rules to be observed in reproving.3 Of widows.17 Of elders.23 A precept for Timothy's health.24 Some men's sins go before unto judgment, and some me...

MHCC: 1Ti 5:3-8 - --Honour widows that are widows indeed, relieve them, and maintain them. It is the duty of children, if their parents are in need, and they are able to ...

Matthew Henry: 1Ti 5:3-16 - -- Directions are here given concerning the taking of widows into the number of those who were employed by the church and had maintenance from the chur...

Barclay: 1Ti 5:3-8 - --The Christian Church inherited a fine tradition of charity to those in need. No people has ever cared more for its needy and its aged than the Jews. ...

Constable: 1Ti 5:3-25 - --C. How to deal with widows and elders 5:3-25 Paul now addressed how Timothy was to deal with the two mai...

Constable: 1Ti 5:3-16 - --1. Provisions for widows 5:3-16 Paul gave instructions concerning the church's responsibility for its widows to clarify how and for whom the church sh...

College: 1Ti 5:1-25 - --1 TIMOTHY 5 VI. RELATIONSHIPS WITHIN THE CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY (5:1-6:2) In this section Paul gives Timothy instructions for dealing with special grou...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) First Timothy Probably a.d. 65 From Macedonia By Way of Introduction Assuming the Pauline authorship the facts shape up after this fashion. Pau...

JFB: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) GENUINENESS.--The ancient Church never doubted of their being canonical and written by Paul. They are in the Peschito Syriac version of the second cen...

JFB: 1 Timothy (Outline) ADDRESS: PAUL'S DESIGN IN HAVING LEFT TIMOTHY AT EPHESUS, NAMELY, TO CHECK FALSE TEACHERS; TRUE USE OF THE LAW; HARMONIZING WITH THE GOSPEL; GOD'S GR...

TSK: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) This Epistle bears the impress of its genuineness and authenticity, which are corroborated by the most decisive external evidence; and its Divine insp...

TSK: 1 Timothy 5 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 1Ti 5:1, Rules to be observed in reproving; 1Ti 5:3, Of widows; 1Ti 5:17, Of elders; 1Ti 5:23, A precept for Timothy’s health; 1Ti 5:24...

Poole: 1 Timothy 5 (Chapter Introduction) TIMOTHY CHAPTER 5

MHCC: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) The design of the epistle appears to be, that Timothy having been left at Ephesus, St. Paul wrote to instruct him in the choice of proper officers in ...

MHCC: 1 Timothy 5 (Chapter Introduction) (1Ti 5:1, 1Ti 5:2) Directions as to the elder and younger men and women. (1Ti 5:3-8) And as to poor widows. (1Ti 5:9-16) Concerning widows. (1Ti 5:...

Matthew Henry: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The First Epistle of St. Paul to Timothy Hitherto Paul's epistles were directed to churches; now follow...

Matthew Henry: 1 Timothy 5 (Chapter Introduction) Here the apostle, I. Directs Timothy how to reprove (1Ti 5:1, 1Ti 5:2). II. Adverts to widows, both elder and younger (1Ti 5:3-16). III. To elde...

Barclay: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) A GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO THE LETTERS OF PAUL The Letters Of Paul There is no more interesting body of documents in the New Testament than the letter...

Barclay: 1 Timothy 5 (Chapter Introduction) The Duty To Reprimand (1Ti_5:1-2) The Relationships Of Life (1Ti_5:1-2 Continued) Church And Family Duty (1Ti_5:3-8) An Honoured And A Useful Old...

Constable: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical background Timothy apparently became a Christian as a result o...

Constable: 1 Timothy (Outline) Outline I. Salutation 1:1-2 II. Timothy's mission in Ephesus 1:3-20 A. T...

Constable: 1 Timothy 1 Timothy Bibliography Andrews, J. N. "May Women Speak in Meeting?" Review and Herald. January 2, 1879. Reprint...

Haydock: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) THE FIRST EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL, THE APOSTLE, TO TIMOTHY. INTRODUCTION. St. Paul passing through Lycaonia, about the year 51, some of the brethr...

Gill: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 1 TIMOTHY Timothy, to whom this epistle is written, was eminent for his early piety and acquaintance with the sacred Scriptures; hi...

Gill: 1 Timothy 5 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 1 TIMOTHY 5 In this chapter the apostle lays down rules about the manner of rebuking persons, suitable to their several ages; gives...

College: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) FOREWORD A movement which prides itself in its back-to-the-Bible underpinnings and its plea for unity should welcome any effort of the stature of the...

College: 1 Timothy (Outline) OUTLINE I. THE SALUTATION - 1:1-2 II. PAUL'S CHARGE TO TIMOTHY - 1:3-20 A. The Charge and the False Teachers - 1:3-7 B. The Lawful Use of...

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