Proverbs 13:22 — "A good man leaves an inheritance to his children's children. The sinner's wealth is laid up for the righteous." This compact verse contains one of Scripture's most counter-cultural commands: think three generations ahead, not three months.
In an age of consumer debt and live-paycheck-to-paycheck spending, Proverbs 13:22 calls believers to a longer time horizon. Multi-generational wealth-building rooted in righteousness, not greed.
This guide unpacks the Hebrew, the historical context, and the practical implications for Christian families in 2026.
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The Hebrew word: nachal
Hebrew nachal (נָחַל) — "to inherit, take possession of, give as inheritance". Is the same verb used for Israel inheriting the Promised Land (Numbers 33:54). Inheritance in biblical thinking is not just money. It is land, identity, story. Spiritual legacy passed down a family line.
The phrase "children's children" (Hebrew bene banim) literally means grandchildren. Solomon is calling for thinking three generations ahead. Beyond your own retirement, beyond your children's comfort, into a horizon you will never personally see.
The two halves of the verse
- "A good man leaves an inheritance to his children's children" — the righteous build long-term wealth and pass it down, blessing generations they will never meet.
- "The sinner's wealth is laid up for the righteous" — God ultimately reroutes the wealth of the wicked into the hands of the righteous (compare Ecclesiastes 2:26; Job 27:16-17).
Why three generations?
- It outlives short-term consumption — a horizon that long forces saving, investing, and discipline.
- It blesses people you will never meet — a profoundly anti-selfish form of stewardship.
- It builds family identity — multi-generational wealth is also multi-generational story.
- It enables ministry beyond your lifetime — endowed generosity, family foundations, kingdom investment.
- It models God's own way — God promises blessing "to the third and fourth generation of those who love me" (Exodus 20:6).
What "inheritance" includes
- Financial assets — investments, real estate, business equity, life insurance.
- A debt-free home — paid-off real estate is a powerful inheritance.
- Education funded — paid-for college eliminates the modern student debt trap.
- A family business — equity passed down with skill.
- Wisdom and skill — financial literacy taught from childhood.
- Spiritual legacy — Scripture, prayer, and faith passed down (2 Timothy 1:5).
- Reputation and good name — Proverbs 22:1.
Practical 3-generation plan
- Get out of consumer debt (snowball).
- Build a 3-6 month emergency fund.
- Pay off your home aggressively.
- Fully fund retirement (15% of gross).
- Begin 529 college savings for children.
- Add a "generations" investment account — index funds untouched for 25+ years.
- Write a will and update beneficiaries.
- Teach your children financial literacy + biblical stewardship.
- Model generosity so they inherit a giving heart, not just dollars.
Inheritance vs. enabling
Proverbs 13:22 is not a license for spoiling children with unearned luxury. The same Bible warns against laziness and entitlement (Proverbs 20:4; 2 Thessalonians 3:10). Wise inheritance is structured: lump sums tied to milestones, education funded, businesses passed with mentorship, family foundations governed by criteria. The goal is to bless, not to enable.
What about the second half — "the sinner's wealth"?
This is not vindictive triumphalism. It is providential observation. Wealth not built on righteousness tends to dissipate (Proverbs 13:11; 21:6). What the wicked accumulate, God often reroutes to the righteous through markets, generations, ministry, or judgment. Compare Ecclesiastes 2:26: "to the sinner he has given the business of gathering and collecting, only to give to one who pleases God."
BUILD A LEGACY
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