5-26 The Snare Of The Devil
1 Timothy 3: 6 -7: “Not a novice, lest being lifted up with pride he fall into
the condemnation of the Devil. Moreover he must have a good report
of them which are without; lest he fall into reproach and the snare
of the Devil”.
Popular Interpretation
This is used to suggest that the Devil is a person constantly hunting souls.
Comments
1. The word “soul” does not occur here.
2. Because the Word can overcome the Devil (our evil desires) as we
see from Jesus’ wilderness temptations, we must have it in our hearts
(Ps. 119:11); it is when one is inexperienced in the Word that they
fall to the Devil - in this verse, pride, the “Devil” or the evil
desires of the human mind taking over.
3. The idea of the Devil consciously trying to catch people in v. 7
has to be read into this verse. By contrast it is stressed that he (the
bishop, vs. 1 & 2) may “fall” into the snare of the Devil.
4. The “snare of the Devil” is defined in 1 Timothy 6: 9: “they that
will be rich fall into temptation and a snare...into many foolish and
hurtful lusts”. Thus the snare of the Devil is the temptation that
comes from our lusts, which is exactly what James 1:13-15 says.
Suggested Explanations
1. “The condemnation of the Devil” is that brought about by the
Devil. At the judgment it would be unfair for us to be condemned
personally for how the Devil, in the sense of an external being, had
used us. But we will be condemned on account of letting the Devil - our
evil desires - go unchecked, e.g. “by thy words thou shalt be
condemned” (Matt. 12:37). The Lord taught that He is a Saviour, and He
came more to save than condemn. And yet some will sadly be condemned.
Why? By whom? They will have condemned themselves by their own sinful
behaviour. They will have been condemned by “the Devil”.
2. We have commented earlier how the Word is the power by which we
overcome the Devil: “Thy Word have I hid in mine heart, that I might
not sin against thee” (Ps. 119:11). The Hebrew word for “hid” means to
lay a snare for, as if the evil thoughts enter our consciousness, but
are snared by the Word. Thus the language of the Devil’s victory over
men is also used of man’s spiritual victory over the Devil. Other
examples include the following:
- Men “fall away” because of losing their hold on the Word (Lk.
8:13). The Devil “departed” - same word translated “fall away’ - from
Christ because He held on to the word in His mind (Lk. 4:13). We are
captured either in the Devil’s victory procession (2 Tim. 2:26) or
Christ’s (Eph. 4: 8 N.I.V.).
- 2 Timothy 2:26 A.V. margin says that men are taken alive by the
Devil at his will, but men are caught alive by the Word of the Gospel
(Lk. 5:10). Thus the exhortation comes home again of the great profit
of Bible study and that through it we can conquer the Devil and become
“wise as serpents” (Matt. 10:16).
- We have seen in “The tempter came to him” in our consideration of
the wilderness temptations that our evil desires are described as
coming to us. Yet this same language of physical movement is used about
the Word of God coming to the prophets, and Christ coming to us through
the preaching of the Word (Eph. 2: 17).
3. “Reproach and the snare of the Devil” may refer to the Jewish
Satan/Devil being quick to pick up any shadow that hung over a
Christian leader to discredit Christianity - they would bring reproach
on Christianity if the bishop had a bad “report of them which are
without”. Examples of the Jews and Judaizers using these tactics are in
1 Peter 2:12; 3:16; 2 Peter 2:10 (the “dignities” may be similar to the
“bishops” of 1 Tim. 3); 1 Timothy 5:14; 2 Corinthians 10:10; Acts 21:
28-29.
A novice might “fall into the condemnation of the (Jewish) Devil” by
not being mature enough to resist the inroads of the Judaizers as they
tried to “subvert whole houses” (Titus 1:11) - i.e. house churches -
probably by subverting the bishops or leaders of the churches first.
2 Timothy 2:26: “And that they may recover themselves out of the snare of the Devil, who are taken captive by him at his will”.
Popular Interpretation
This is thought to mean that the Devil is actively capturing people to make them sinful “at his will” - whenever he desires.
Comments
1. If the Devil literally captures anyone he desires, then there is
nothing we can do to stop him. The Word of God is not powerful enough
to stop him in this case.
2. “Recover” really means “awake”. It is through Christians being
spiritually sleepy that they are captured by the Devil; thus ultimately
it is their fault.
3. “Taken captive” means to catch alive, as fish are caught (it is
translated “catch” in Lk. 5:10). The Devil catches people by his snare.
We have defined this “snare of the Devil” in the notes on 1 Timothy 3:
7, Comment No. 5, as the evil desires of man.
4. Knowing the Truth (i.e. the Word of God - Jn. 17:17) and
receiving teaching and instruction (which ultimately only comes from
the Word) are the means of awaking out of the snare of the Devil here
(2 Tim. 2:24-26). The Word of God overcomes our evil desires (Ps.
119:11; cp. Jesus in the wilderness); here, the Word of God overcomes
the snare of the Devil, which is, therefore, our evil desires. It is
therefore implied that through lack of attention to the Word, these
people had been ensnared by the Devil. Thus being ensnared is not due
to an evil being just deciding to make someone sin, but of that
person’s lack of attention to the Word.
5. The word “will” means the “desires”. Most times when it is not
used about the will of God and of Jesus, it is used about the evil
“will” or desires within man:
- Peter defines “the will of the Gentiles” as walking in “lusts” and
fleshly behaviour (1 Pet. 4: 3). In the previous verse he contrasts the
will of God and the lust of men, implying that the lusts of men are the
will of men;
- See, too, 2 Peter 1:21; 1 Corinthians 7: 37; Luke 23:25.
The will of the Devil here in 2 Timothy 2:26 therefore refers to the
evil lusts within our nature, which will ensnare us if we neglect the
Word of God.
Suggested Explanations
1. Apart from the Devil referring to our evil desires here, it may
also apply to the Jewish Devil taking people alive (v. 26 A.V. margin)
in the sense of subverting them to remain within the church in order to
undermine Christianity. The “snare of the Devil” of 1 Timothy 3: 7 is
interpreted that way in the “Suggested Explanations” under that
heading.
2. The context in 2 Timothy 2 seems to be about the Judaizers within
the ecclesia, which would support what is suggested in 1 above.
3. “Profane and vain babblings...foolish and unlearned
questions...that...gender strifes” (vs. 16 & 23) - these sound like
the Jewish fables and genealogies which minister questions of which
Paul had previously warned Timothy (1 Tim. 1: 4; Titus 1:14).
4. “Repentance...that they may recover themselves” (vs.25 & 26)
implies that the people referred to had once believed the Truth.
5. These people are described as “vessels...to dishonour” in v. 20.
This very same expression is used in Romans 9: 21-25 concerning the
Jews after they had rejected the Truth as it is in Christ.
6. “Concerning the truth (they) have erred, saying that the
resurrection is past already” (v. 18). This de-emphasizing of the
future Kingdom on the earth is very necessary in Judaist theology. To
them their reward is to live acceptably before God in this life.
7. They “overthrow the faith of some” (v. 18). “Overthrow” is the
same word translated “subvert”. Nearly every other time it occurs it is
in the context of the Judaizers subverting the Christians - Titus 1:11;
3:9-11 (an equivalent word); Acts 15:24 (the Judaizers “subvert your
souls, saying, Ye must be circumcised, and keep the law”).
8. Note that we are to catch men in our preaching of the Gospel. Yet
Paul uses the same figure here to describe what the Devil does. Men are
caught by one thing or the other- the Devil, or our preaching of
Christ.