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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MammonMammon - Wikipedia

    The word Mammon comes into English from post-classical Latin mammona 'wealth', used most importantly in the Vulgate Bible (along with Tertullian's mammonas and pseudo-Jerome's mammon).

  2. Feb 23, 2022 · Mammon is a term for earthly goods, property, or riches that can distract us from God. Learn about the biblical warnings and consequences of mammon and how to avoid its temptations.

  3. May 31, 2024 · Mammon, biblical term for riches, often used to describe the debasing influence of material wealth. The term was used by Jesus in the New Testament and has been used in both religious and secular contexts to negatively describe the pursuit of wealth.

    • Melissa Petruzzello
  4. Jan 3, 2017 · Mammon is a demon who embodies greed and influences humans to pursue worldly treasure. Learn about his characteristics, abilities, related creatures, and cultural representation in Christian theology and literature.

  5. Jan 4, 2022 · The city of Babylon (Revelation 18), with all its avarice and greed, is a description of a world given over to the spirit of Mammon. Some scholars cite Mammon as the name of a Syrian and Chaldean god, similar to the Greek god of wealth, Plutus. Just as Wisdom is personified in Proverbs 1:21–33, Mammon is personified in Matthew 6:24 ...

  6. Mammon is a Greek word that can mean money, material wealth or a false deity. Jesus warns against serving mammon and using it wisely as a training tool for righteousness.

  7. MAMMON. This Aram. term, māmōnā' (emphatic state of māmōn), apparently signified “wealth” or “property,” and was of frequent occurrence in the Targum. It appears in the Heb. text of Ecclesiasticus 31:8, in the Mishna Abot 2, 12, and in the Damascus Document p. 14, 20.