THE EPISTLE OF PAUL TO TITUS
The precise period of St. Paul's visit to Crete for the purpose of
preaching the gospel and organizing Christians, as already stated in
the INTRODUCTION, is not certainly known. But from the great
similarity between certain parts of this epistle and the First Epistle
to... [ Continue Reading ]
Ver. 2. _In hope of eternal life_ ἐπ ʼ ἐλπίδι, on this as
the basis. But to what did it form the basis? Was it St. Paul's office
as an apostle, or that which it ministered to namely, the faith and
knowledge of God's elect? Manifestly, this latter is the more natural
reference. That faith and knowled... [ Continue Reading ]
Ver. 3. The structure of the sentence here has a somewhat irregular
appearance; but it is better to leave it so, and give a natural
interpretation of the words as they stand, than for the sake of a
formal correctness to put a strain upon the meaning. It would have
seemed to us, perhaps, the most ord... [ Continue Reading ]
Ver. 5. _For this cause I left thee behind in Crete, that thou
shouldst further set in order the things which are wanting_ general
indication of the work which had been assigned to Titus in Crete,
which the apostle, for want of time to do it himself, left him behind
(ἀπέλιπόν) (The best supported re... [ Continue Reading ]
Ver. 6. _If any one is blameless_ that is, such an one only as is
blameless _husband of one wife, having faithful children, not accused
of profligacy_ (lit. not in accusation of it, in a position that such
accusation could be brought), _or unruly._ The qualifications have
already been considered at... [ Continue Reading ]
Vers, 7, 8. _For a pastor must be blameless_ δεῖ εἶναι,
ought to be so, should not be a pastor unless he is blameless _as Gods
steward_: showing at once the original identity of elder and
_episcopos_, by the substitution here of the one name for the other,
and the weighty reason why he should be of... [ Continue Reading ]
Ver. 9. Then follows at the close what more especially pertained to
the teaching function of his office: _holding fast the faithful word
according to the teaching, in order that he may be able with the sound
doctrine both to exhort and to convince_ (or reprove) _the
gainsayers._ There can be no reas... [ Continue Reading ]
Vers. 10, 11. The apostle now, taking occasion from the last clause in
the preceding verse, proceeds to discourse of the peculiar character
of the adversaries whom the infant church in Crete had to contend
against: _For there are many unruly vain talkers and deceivers,
especially they of the circumc... [ Continue Reading ]
Ver. 12. The apostle now passes on to the Cretans generally. They had
in a measure been referred to already; for while persons of the Jewish
race had been more particularly noticed, it was only as forming the
most troublesome and dangerous class of adversaries to the cause of
Christ in Crete. But th... [ Continue Reading ]
Ver. 14. Further, and with the view especially of securing real
soundness of faith, the apostle would have them exhorted not to give
heed to _Jewish fables and commandments of men, who turn away from the
truth._ The same exhortation substantially was given at 1 Timothy 1:4
and 1 Timothy 4:3. The lyi... [ Continue Reading ]
Ver. 15. _To the pure all things are pure:_ a great counter principle
set over against that on which those Jewish semi-Gnostic sciolists
were trading to the perversion of their own and other people's
consciences, Judaism in part, and Gnostic asceticism still more,
associated moral good and evil with... [ Continue Reading ]
Ver. 16. The description is wound up by a fearful announcement of
their morally shipwrecked and hopeless condition: _they confess that
they know God, but in works deny [Him] being abominable and
disobedient, and unto every good work reprobate._ The description, it
must be borne in mind, relates to t... [ Continue Reading ]