It is better for others to betray me than for me to betray others.
Be generous and be charitable.
In addition, I would like to recommend an idiom that suits the meaning you want:
qīng cái hào shī qīng cái hào shī
The idiom explains light: despise; good: Like; give: give alms. Treat property very lightly and be willing to give alms and help others.
Commonly used to a certain extent
Emotionally neutral words
Idiom structure conjunctions
Grammar usage as predicate, attributive, object; refers to Very generous people.
Occurred in ancient times
The allusion comes from "Three Kingdoms·Wu Zhi·Zhu Jujuan" by Chen Shou of Jin Dynasty: "Be humble in receiving scholars, be light on wealth and love charity, although the salary and gifts are abundant but constant Not enough."
Idiom examples: Volume 8 of "The Strange Case of Bao Qingtian" written by an unknown person: "The surname is Weng, the name is Jian, and the family is very wealthy, ~"
The synonyms are as follows: wealth
Antonym of love money as much as life
Idiom story During the Three Kingdoms period, Zhu Ju, the Marquis of Yunyang in the Kingdom of Wu, humbly took over his disciples, took wealth lightly and was good at giving. Sun Quan recognized him as a versatile civil and military man, and married the princess to him. he. Zhu Ju's troops received 30,000 strings of pay and silver defrauded by Wang Sui. The commander Lu Yi suspected that Zhu Ju was embezzling, so he reported it to Sun Quan. Sun Quan felt that this was not like him and ordered to find out the truth.