as silver … hid treasures It has been supposed that there is reference here to the eagerness and effort connected with the discovery and working of a silver mine, and to the search for treasure hidden in the earth. See, for example, Dean Plumptre's interesting note on this verse in the Speaker's Commentary. It may well be doubted, however, whether by silverbe not rather meant, money, or wealth, generally. LXX. ἀργύριον, Vulg. pecuniam. Comp. φιλαργυρία, 1 Timothy 6:10; ἀφιλάργυρος, Hebrews 13:5. (See Smith's Bible Dict., Art. Silver: "its chief use was as a medium of exchange, and throughout the O.T. we find ceseph, silver, used for money, like the Fr. argent.") We are told that silver, as a metal, was "nothing accounted of in the days of Solomon," 1 Kings 10:21. So again it is doubtful whether any great stress is to be laid upon "hidtreasures" (Matthew 13:44). The word here is lit. "hidden things," and so, treasures, because we hide them for safety (Genesis 43:23, A.V. and R.V. Comp. Isaiah 45:3). The LXX. render ἐὰν … ὡς θησαυροὺς ἐξερευνήσῃς, Vulg. si … sicut thesauros effoderis. It is rather the value set upon Wisdom, than the difficulty of search for her that is here in view. She is a gift, after all (Proverbs 2:6), though a gift to those only who seek her diligently (Luke 11:5-13).

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