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THE FIRST EPISTLE
OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO
TIMOTHY
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
CHAPTER 1
@1Ti
1:1-20. ADDRESS: PAUL'S DESIGN IN HAVING LEFT TIMOTHY AT
EPHESUS, NAMELY, TO CHECK FALSE TEACHERS; TRUE USE OF THE
LAW; HARMONIZING WITH THE GOSPEL; GOD'S GRACE IN CALLING
PAUL, ONCE A BLASPHEMER, TO EXPERIENCE AND TO PREACH IT;
CHARGES TO TIMOTHY.
1. by the commandment of God--the authoritative injunction,
as well as the commission, of God. In the earlier Epistles
the phrase is, "by the will of God." Here
it is expressed in a manner implying that a necessity was
laid on him to act as an apostle, not that it was merely at
his option. The same expression occurs in the doxology,
probably written long after the Epistle itself [ALFORD] (@Ro
16:26).
God our Saviour--The
Father (@1Ti
2:3 4:10 Lu 1:47 2Ti 1:9 Tit 1:3 2:10 3:4 Jude 1:25). It
was a Jewish expression in devotion, drawn from the Old
Testament (compare @Ps
106:21).
our hope--(@Col
1:27 Tit 1:2 2:13).
2. my own son--literally, "a genuine
son" (compare @Ac
16:1 1Co 4:14-17). See Introduction.
mercy--added here, in
addressing Timothy, to the ordinary salutation, "Grace
unto you (@Ro
1:7 1Co 1:3, &c.), and peace." In @Ga
6:16, "peace and mercy" occur. There
are many similarities of style between the Epistle to the
Galatians and the Pastoral Epistles (see Introduction);
perhaps owing to his there, as here, having, as a leading
object in writing, the correction of false teachers,
especially as to the right and wrong use of the law
(@1Ti
1:9). If the earlier date be assigned to First Timothy,
it will fall not long after, or before (according as the
Epistle to the Galatians was written at Ephesus or at
Corinth) the writing of the Epistle to the Galatians, which
also would account for some similarity of style.
"Mercy" is grace of a more tender kind, exercised
towards the miserable, the experience of which in
one's own case especially fits for the Gospel MINISTRY.
Compare as to Paul himself (@1Ti
1:14,16 1Co 7:25 2Co 4:1 Heb 2:17) [BENGEL]. He did not
use "mercy" as to the churches, because
"mercy" in all its fulness already existed towards
them; but in the case of an individual minister, fresh
measures of it were continually needed. "Grace"
has reference to the sins of men; "mercy"
to their misery. God extends His grace to men
as they are guilty; His "mercy" to them as they
are miserable [TRENCH].
Jesus Christ--The
oldest manuscripts read the order, "Christ Jesus."
In the Pastoral Epistles "Christ" is often put
before "Jesus," to give prominence to the fact
that the Messianic promises of the Old Testament,
well known to Timothy (@2Ti
3:15), were fulfilled in Jesus.
3. Timothy's superintendence of the Church at Ephesus
was as locum tenens for the apostle, and so was
temporary. Thus, the office of superintending overseer,
needed for a time at Ephesus or Crete, in the absence of the
presiding apostle, subsequently became a permanent
institution on the removal, by death, of the apostles who
heretofore superintended the churches. The first title of
these overseers seems to have been "angels" (@Re
1:20).
As I besought thee to
abide still--He meant to have added, "so I
still beseech thee," but does not complete the sentence
until he does so virtually, not formally, at @1Ti
1:18.
at Ephesus--Paul, in @Ac
20:25, declared to the Ephesian elders, "I know
that ye all shall see my face no more." If, then, as
the balance of arguments seems to favor (see Introduction),
this Epistle was written subsequently to Paul's first
imprisonment, the apparent discrepancy between his prophecy
and the event may be reconciled by considering that the
terms of the former were not that he should never
visit Ephesus again (which this verse implies he
did), but that they all should "see his face no
more." I cannot think with BIRKS, that this verse is
compatible with his theory, that Paul did not actually visit
Ephesus, though in its immediate neighborhood (compare @1Ti
3:14 4:13). The corresponding conjunction to
"as" is not given, the sentence not being
completed till it is virtually so at @1Ti
1:18.
I besought--a mild
word, instead of authoritative command, to Timothy, as a
fellow helper.
some--The indefinite
pronoun is slightly contemptuous as to them (@Ga
2:12 Jude 1:4), [ELLICOTT].
teach no other doctrine--than
what I have taught (@Ga
1:6-9). His prophetic bodings some years before (@Ac
20:29,30) were now being realized (compare @1Ti
6:3).
4. fables--legends about the origin and propagation
of angels, such as the false teachers taught at Colosse (@Col
2:18-23). "Jewish fables" (@Tit
1:14). "Profane, and old wives' fables" (@1Ti
4:7 2Ti 4:4).
genealogies--not
merely such civil genealogies as were common among the Jews,
whereby they traced their descent from the patriarchs, to
which Paul would not object, and which he would not as here
class with "fables," but Gnostic genealogies of
spirits and aeons, as they called them, "Lists of
Gnostic emanations" [ALFORD]. So TERTULLIAN [Against
Valentinian, c. 3], and IRENÆUS [Preface]. The
Judaizers here alluded to, while maintaining the perpetual
obligation of the Mosaic law, joined with it a theosophic
ascetic tendency, pretending to see in it mysteries deeper
than others could see. The seeds, not the full-grown
Gnosticism of the post-apostolic age, then existed. This
formed the transition stage between Judaism and Gnosticism.
"Endless" refers to the tedious unprofitableness
of their lengthy genealogies (compare @Tit
3:9). Paul opposes to their "aeons," the
"King of the aeons (so the Greek, @1Ti
1:17), whom be glory throughout the aeons of aeons."
The word "aeons" was probably not used in
the technical sense of the latter Gnostics as yet; but
"the only wise God" (@1Ti
1:17), by anticipation, confutes the subsequently
adopted notions in the Gnostics' own phraseology.
questions--of mere
speculation (@Ac
25:20), not practical; generating merely curious
discussions. "Questions and strifes of words" (@1Ti
6:4): "to no profit" (@2Ti
2:14); "gendering strifes" (@2Ti
2:23). "Vain jangling" (@1Ti
1:6,7) of would-be "teachers of the law."
godly edifying--The
oldest manuscripts read, "the dispensation of
God," the Gospel dispensation of God towards man (@1Co
9:17), "which is (has its element) in faith."
CONYBEARE translates, "The exercising of the
stewardship of God" (@1Co
9:17). He infers that the false teachers in Ephesus were
presbyters, which accords with the prophecy, @Ac
20:30. However, the oldest Latin versions, and
IRENÆUS and HILARY, support English Version reading.
Compare @1Ti
1:5, "faith unfeigned."
5. But--in contrast to the doctrine of the false
teachers.
the end--the aim.
the commandment--Greek,
"of the charge" which you ought to urge on your
flock. Referring to the same Greek word as in @1Ti
1:3,18; here, however, in a larger sense, as including the
Gospel "dispensation of God" (see on
1Ti 1:4; 1Ti 1:11), which was the sum and substance of the
"charge" committed to Timothy wherewith he should
"charge" his flock.
charity--LOVE; the sum
and end of the law and of the Gospel alike, and that wherein
the Gospel is the fulfilment of the spirit of the law in its
every essential jot and tittle (@Ro
13:10). The foundation is faith (@1Ti
1:4), the "end" is love (@1Ti
1:14 Tit 3:15).
out of--springing as
from a fountain.
pure heart--a heart
purified by faith (@Ac
15:9 2Ti 2:22 Tit 1:15).
good conscience--a
conscience cleared from guilt by the effect of sound faith
in Christ (@1Ti
1:19 1Ti 3:9 2Ti 1:3 1Pe 3:21). Contrast @1Ti
4:2 Tit 1:15; compare @Ac
23:1. John uses "heart," where Paul would use
"conscience." In Paul the understanding is the
seat of conscience; the heart is the seat of love
[BENGEL]. A good conscience is joined with sound faith; a
bad conscience with unsoundness in the faith (compare @Heb
9:14).
faith unfeigned--not a
hypocritical, dead, and unfruitful faith, but faith working
by love (@Ga
5:6). The false teachers drew men off from such a
loving, working, real faith, to profitless, speculative
"questions" (@1Ti
1:4) and jangling (@1Ti
1:6).
6. From which--namely, from a pure heart, good
conscience, and faith unfeigned, the well-spring of love.
having swerved--literally,
"having missed the mark (the 'end') to be aimed
at." It is translated, "erred," @1Ti
6:21 2Ti 2:18. Instead of aiming at and attaining the
graces above named, they "have turned aside (@1Ti
5:15 2Ti 4:4 Heb 12:13) unto vain jangling";
literally, "vain talk," about the law and
genealogies of angels (@1Ti
1:7 Tit 3:9 1:10); @1Ti
6:20, "vain babblings and oppositions." It is
the greatest vanity when divine things are not truthfully
discussed (@Ro
1:21) [BENGEL].
7. Sample of their "vain talk" (@1Ti
1:6).
Desiring--They are would-be
teachers, not really so.
the law--the Jewish
law (@Tit
1:14 3:9). The Judaizers here meant seem to be distinct
from those impugned in the Epistles to the Galatians and
Romans, who made the works of the law necessary to
justification in opposition to Gospel grace. The Judaizers
here meant corrupted the law with "fables," which
they pretended to found on it, subversive of morals as well
as of truth. Their error was not in maintaining the obligation
of the law, but in abusing it by fabulous and immoral
interpretations of, and additions to, it.
neither what they say, nor
whereof--neither understanding their own assertions,
nor the object itself about which they make them.
They understand as little about the one as the other
[ALFORD].
8. But--"Now we know" (@Ro
3:19 7:14).
law is good--in full
agreement with God's holiness and goodness.
if a man--primarily, a
teacher; then, every Christian.
use it lawfully--in
its lawful place in the Gospel economy, namely, not as a
means of a "'righteous man" attaining higher
perfection than could be attained by the Gospel alone (@1Ti
4:8 Tit 1:14), which was the perverted use to which the
false teachers put it, but as a means of awakening the sense
of sin in the ungodly (@1Ti
1:9,10; compare @Ro
7:7-12 Ga 3:21).
9. law is not made for a righteous man--not for one
standing by faith in the righteousness of Christ put on him
for justification,and imparted inwardly by the Spirit for
sanctification. "One not forensically amenable to the
law" [ALFORD]. For sanctification, the law gives
no inward power to fulfil it; but ALFORD goes too far in
speaking of the righteous man as "not morally needing
the law." Doubtless, in proportion as he is inwardly
led by the Spirit, the justified man needs not the law,
which is only an outward rule (@Ro
6:14 Ga 5:18,23). But as the justified man often does
not give himself up wholly to the inward leading of the
Spirit, he morally needs the outward law to
show him his sin and God's requirements. The reason why the
ten commandments have no power to condemn the Christian, is
not that they have no authority over him, but because
Christ has fulfilled them as our surety (@Ro
10:4).
disobedient--Greek,
"not subject"; insubordinate; it is translated
"unruly," @Tit
1:6,10; "lawless and disobedient" refer to
opposers of the law, for whom it is
"enacted" (so the Greek, for "is
made").
ungodly and . . .
sinners--Greek, he who does not reverence
God, and he who openly sins against Him; the opposers
of God, from the law comes.
unholy and profane--those
inwardly impure, and those deserving exclusion from
the outward participation in services of the sanctuary;
sinners against the third and fourth commandments.
murderers--or, as the Greek
may mean, "smiters" of fathers and . . .
mothers; sinners against the fifth commandment.
manslayers--sinners
against the sixth commandment.
10. whoremongers, &c.--sinners against the
seventh commandment.
men-stealers--that is,
slave dealers. The most heinous offense against the eighth
commandment. No stealing of a man's goods can equal in
atrocity the stealing of a man's liberty. Slavery is not
directly assailed in the New Testament; to have done so
would have been to revolutionize violently the existing
order of things. But Christianity teaches principles sure to
undermine, and at last overthrow it, wherever Christianity
has had its natural development (@Mt
7:12).
liars . . .
perjured--offenders against the ninth commandment.
if there be any other
thing--answering to the tenth commandment in its widest
aspect. He does not particularly specify it because his
object is to bring out the grosser forms of
transgression; whereas the tenth is deeply spiritual, so
much so indeed, that it was by it that the sense of sin, in
its subtlest form of "lust," Paul tells us (@Ro
7:7), was brought home to his own conscience. Thus, Paul
argues, these would-be teachers of the law, while
boasting of a higher perfection through it, really bring
themselves down from the Gospel elevation to the level of
the grossly "lawless," for whom, not for Gospel
believers, the law was designed. And in actual practice the
greatest sticklers for the law as the means of moral
perfection, as in this case, are those ultimately liable to
fall utterly from the morality of the law. Gospel grace is
the only true means of sanctification as well as of
justification.
sound--healthy,
spiritually wholesome (@1Ti
6:3 2Ti 1:13 Tit 1:13 2:2), as opposed to sickly,
morbid (as the Greek of "doting" means,
@1Ti
6:4), and "canker" (@2Ti
2:17). "The doctrine," or "teaching,
which is according to godliness" (@1Ti
6:3).
11. According to the glorious gospel--The Christian's
freedom from the law as a sanctifier, as well as a
justifier, implied in the previous, @1Ti
1:9,10, is what this @1Ti
1:11 is connected with. This exemption of the righteous
from the law, and assignment of it to the lawless as its
true object, is "according to the Gospel of the
glory (so the Greek, compare Note, see on
2Co 4:4) of the blessed God." The Gospel manifests
God's glory (@Eph
1:17 3:16) in accounting "righteous" the
believer, through the righteousness of Christ, without
"the law" (@1Ti
1:9); and in imparting that righteousness whereby he
loathes all those sins against which (@1Ti
1:9,10) the law is directed. The term,
"blessed," indicates at once immortality
and supreme happiness. The supremely blessed One is
He from whom all blessedness flows. This term, as applied to
GOD, occurs only here and in @1Ti
6:15: appropriate in speaking here of the Gospel
blessedness, in contrast to the curse on those under
the law (@1Ti
1:9 Ga 3:10).
committed to my trust--Translate
as in the Greek order, which brings into prominent
emphasis Paul, "committed in trust to me";
in contrast to the kind of law-teaching which they
(who had no Gospel commission), the false teachers, assumed
to themselves (@1Ti
1:8 Tit 1:3).
12. The honor done him in having the Gospel ministry
committed to him suggests the digression to what he once
was, no better (@1Ti
1:13) than those lawless ones described above (@1Ti
1:9,10), when the grace of our Lord (@1Ti
1:14) visited him.
And--omitted in most
(not all) of the oldest manuscripts.
I thank--Greek,
"I have (that is, feel) gratitude."
enabled me--the same Greek
verb as in @Ac
9:22, "Saul increased the more in strength."
An undesigned coincidence between Paul and Luke, his
companion. Enabled me, namely, for the ministry.
"It is not in my own strength that I bring this
doctrine to men, but as strengthened and nerved by Him who
saved me" [THEODORET]. Man is by nature "without
strength" (@Ro
5:6). True conversion and calling confer power [BENGEL].
for that--the main
ground of his "thanking Christ."
he counted me faithful--He
foreordered and foresaw that I would be faithful to the
trust committed to me. Paul's thanking God for this
shows that the merit of his faithfulness was due solely to
God's grace, not to his own natural strength (@1Co
7:25). Faithfulness is the quality required in a
steward (@1Co
4:2).
putting me into--rather
as in @1Th
5:9, "appointing me (in His sovereign purposes of
grace) unto the ministry" (@Ac
20:24).
13. Who was before--Greek, "Formerly
being a blasphemer." "Notwithstanding that I
was before a blasphemer," &c. (@Ac
26:9,11).
persecutor--(@Ga
1:13).
injurious--Greek,
"insulter"; one who acts injuriously from arrogant
contempt of others. Translate, @Ro
1:30, "despiteful." One who added insult to
injury. BENGEL translates, "a despiser." I prefer
the idea, contumelious to others [WAHL]. Still I
agree with BENGEL that "blasphemer" is against God,
"persecutor," against holy men, and
"insolently injurious" includes, with the idea of
injuring others, that of insolent "uppishness"
[DONALDSON] in relation to one's self. This threefold
relation to God, to one's neighbor, and to one's self,
occurs often in this Epistle (@1Ti
1:5,9,14 Tit 2:12).
I obtained mercy--God's
mercy, and Paul's want of it, stand in sharp contrast
[ELLICOTT]; Greek, "I was made the object of
mercy." The sense of mercy was perpetual in the mind of
the apostle (compare Note, see on 1Ti 1:2). Those who
have felt mercy can best have mercy on those out of the way
(@Heb
5:2,3).
because I did it
ignorantly--Ignorance does not in itself deserve
pardon; but it is a less culpable cause of unbelief than
pride and wilful hardening of one's self against the truth
(@Joh
9:41 Ac 26:9). Hence it is Christ's plea of intercession
for His murderers (@Lu
23:34); and it is made by the apostles a mitigating
circumstance in the Jews' sin, and one giving a hope of a
door of repentance (@Ac
3:17 Ro 10:2). The "because," &c. does not
imply that ignorance was a sufficient reason for mercy
being bestowed; but shows how it was possible that such a
sinner could obtain mercy. The positive ground of mercy
being shown to him, lies solely in the compassion of God (@Tit
3:5). The ground of the ignorance lies in the unbelief,
which implies that this ignorance is not unaccompanied with
guilt. But there is a great difference between his honest
zeal for the law, and a wilful striving against the Spirit
of God (@Mt
12:24-32 Lu 11:52) [WIESINGER].
14. And--Greek, "But." Not only so
(was mercy shown me), but
the grace--by which
"I obtained mercy" (@1Ti
1:13).
was exceeding abundant--Greek,
"superabounded." Where sin abounded, grace did
much more abound" (@Ro
5:20).
with faith--accompanied
with faith, the opposite of "unbelief" (@1Ti
1:13).
love--in contrast to
"a blasphemer, persecutor, and injurious."
which is in Christ--as
its element and home [ALFORD]: here as its source whence it
flows to us.
15. faithful--worthy of credit, because
"God" who says it "is faithful" to His
word (@1Co
1:9 1Th 5:24 2Th 3:3 Re 21:5 22:6). This seems to have
become an axiomatic saying among Christians the
phrase, "faithful saying," is peculiar to the
Pastoral Epistles (@1Ti
2:11 4:9 Tit 3:8). Translate as Greek,
"Faithful is the saying."
all--all possible;
full; to be received by all, and with all the faculties of
the soul, mind, and heart. Paul, unlike the false teachers
(@1Ti
1:7), understands what he is saying, and whereof he
affirms; and by his simplicity of style and subject,
setting forth the grand fundamental truth of salvation
through Christ, confutes the false teachers' abstruse and
unpractical speculations (@1Co
1:18-28 Tit 2:1).
acceptation--reception
(as of a boon) into the heart, as well as the understanding,
with all gladness; this is faith acting on the Gospel offer,
and welcoming and appropriating it (@Ac
2:41).
Christ--as promised.
Jesus--as manifested [BENGEL].
came into the world--which
was full of sin (@Joh
1:29 Ro 5:12 1Jo 2:2). This implies His pre-existence. @Joh
1:9, Greek, "the true Light that, coming
into the world, lighteth every man."
to save sinners--even
notable sinners like Saul of Tarsus. His instance was
without a rival since the ascension, in point of the
greatness of the sin and the greatness of the mercy: that
the consenter to Stephen, the proto-martyr's death, should
be the successor of the same!
I am--not merely,
"I was chief" (@1Co
15:9 Eph 3:8; compare @Lu
18:13). To each believer his own sins must always
appear, as long as he lives, greater than those of others,
which he never can know as he can know his own.
chief--the same Greek
as in @1Ti
1:16, "first," which alludes to this fifteenth
verse, Translate in both verses, "foremost." Well
might he infer where there was mercy for him, there
is mercy for all who will come to Christ (@Mt
18:11 Lu 19:10).
16. Howbeit--Greek, "But";
contrasting his own conscious sinfulness with God's gracious
visitation of him in mercy.
for this cause--for
this very purpose.
that in me--in my
case.
first--"foremost."
As I was "foremost" (Greek for chief,
@1Ti
1:15) in sin, so God has made me the
"foremost" sample of mercy.
show--to His own glory
(the middle Greek, voice), @Eph
2:7.
all long-suffering--Greek,
"the whole (of His) long-suffering," namely, in
bearing so long with me while I was a persecutor.
a pattern--a sample (@1Co
10:6,11) to assure the greatest sinners of the certainty
that they shall not be rejected in coming to Christ, since
even Saul found mercy. So David made his own case of pardon,
notwithstanding the greatness of his sin, a sample to
encourage other sinners to seek pardon (@Ps
32:5,6). The Greek for "pattern" is
sometimes used for a "sketch" or outline--the
filling up to take place in each man's own case.
believe on him--Belief
rests ON Him as the only foundation on which faith relies.
to life everlasting--the
ultimate aim which faith always keeps in view (@Tit
1:2).
17. A suitable conclusion to the beautifully simple
enunciation of the Gospel, of which his own history is a
living sample or pattern. It is from the experimental sense
of grace that the doxology flows [BENGEL].
the King, eternal--literally,
"King of the (eternal) ages." The Septuagint
translates @Ex
15:18, "The Lord shall reign for ages and beyond
them." @Ps
145:13, Margin, "Thy kingdom is an
everlasting kingdom," literally, "a kingdom of all
ages." The "life everlasting" (@1Ti
1:16) suggested here "the King eternal,"
or everlasting. It answers also to "for ever and
ever" at the close, literally, "to the ages of the
ages" (the countless succession of ages made up of
ages).
immortal--The oldest
manuscripts read, "incorruptible." The Vulgate,
however, and one very old manuscript read as English
Version (@Ro
1:23).
invisible--(@1Ti
6:16 Ex 33:20 Joh 1:18 Col 1:15 Heb 11:27).
the only wise God--The
oldest manuscripts omit "wise," which probably
crept in from @Ro
16:27, where it is more appropriate to the context than
here (compare @Jude
1:25). "The only Potentate" (@1Ti
6:15 Ps 86:10 Joh 5:44).
for ever, &c.--See
note, above. The thought of eternity (terrible as it is to
unbelievers) is delightful to those assured of grace (@1Ti
1:16) [BENGEL].
18. He resumes the subject begun at @1Ti
1:3. The conclusion (apodosis) to the foregoing, "as
I besought thee . . . charge" (@1Ti
1:3), is here given, if not formally, at least
substantially.
This charge--namely,
"that thou in them (so the Greek) mightest
war," that is, fulfil thy high calling, not only as a
Christian, but as a minister officially, one function
of which is, to "charge some that they teach no
other doctrine" (@1Ti
1:3).
I commit--as a sacred
deposit (@1Ti
6:20 2Ti 2:2) to be laid before thy hearers.
according to--in
pursuance of; in consonance with.
the prophecies which went
before on thee--the intimations given by prophets
respecting thee at thy ordination, @1Ti
4:14 (as, probably, by Silas, a companion of Paul, and
"a prophet," @Ac
15:32). Such prophetical intimation, as well as the good
report given of Timothy by the brethren (@Ac
16:2), may have induced Paul to take him as his
companion. Compare similar prophecies as to others: @Ac
13:1-3, in connection with laying on of hands; @Ac
11:28 21:10,11; compare @1Co
12:10 14:1 Eph 4:11. In @Ac
20:28, it is expressly said that "the Holy Ghost
had made them (the Ephesian presbyters) overseers."
CLEMENT OF ROME [Epistle to the Corinthians], states
it was the custom of the apostles "to make trial by the
Spirit," that is, by the "power of
discerning," in order to determine who were to be
overseers and deacons in the several churches planted. So
CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA says as to the churches near Ephesus,
that the overseers were marked out for ordination by a
revelation of the Holy Ghost to St. John.
by them--Greek,
"in them"; arrayed as it were in them; armed with
them.
warfare--not the mere
"fight" (@1Ti
6:12 2Ti 4:7), but the whole campaign; the
military service. Translate as Greek, not "a,"
but "the good warfare."
19. Holding--Keeping hold of "faith" and
"good conscience" (@1Ti
1:5); not "putting the latter away" as
"some." Faith is like a very precious
liquor; a good conscience is the clean, pure glass
that contains it [BENGEL]. The loss of good conscience
entails the shipwreck of faith. Consciousness of sin
(unrepented of and forgiven) kills the germ of faith in man
[WIESINGER].
which--Greek
singular, namely, "good conscience," not
"faith" also; however, the result of putting
away good conscience is, one loses faith also.
put away--a wilful
act. They thrust it from them as a troublesome monitor. It
reluctantly withdraws, extruded by force, when its owner is
tired of its importunity, and is resolved to retain his sin
at the cost of losing it. One cannot be on friendly terms
with it and with sin at one and the same time.
made shipwreck--"with
respect to THE faith." Faith is the vessel in
which they had professedly embarked, of which "good
conscience" is the anchor. The ancient Church often
used this image, comparing the course of faith to
navigation. The Greek does not imply that one having
once had faith makes shipwreck of it, but that they
who put away good conscience "make shipwreck with
respect to THE faith."
20. Hymenaeus--There is no difficulty in supposing
him to be the Hymenæus of @2Ti
2:17. Though "delivered over to Satan" (the
lord of all outside the Church, @Ac
26:18, and the executor of wrath, when judicially
allowed by God, on the disobedient, @1Co
5:5 2Co 12:7), he probably was restored to the Church
subsequently, and again troubled it. Paul, as an apostle,
though distant at Rome pronounced the sentence to be
executed at Ephesus, involving, probably, the
excommunication of the offenders (@Mt
18:17,18). The sentence operated not only spiritually,
but also physically, sickness, or some such visitation of
God, falling on the person excommunicated, in order to bring
him to repentance and salvation. Alexander here is probably
"the coppersmith" who did Paul "much
evil" when the latter visited Ephesus. The
"delivering him to Satan" was probably the
consequence of his withstanding the apostle (@2Ti
4:14,15); as the same sentence on Hymenæus was the
consequence of "saying that the resurrection is past
already" (@2Ti
2:18; his putting away good conscience, naturally
producing shipwreck concerning FAITH, @1Ti
1:19. If one's religion better not his morals, his moral
deficiencies will corrupt his religion. The rain which falls
pure from heaven will not continue pure if it be received in
an unclean vessel [ARCHBISHOP WHATELY]). It is possible that
he is the Alexander, then a Jew, put forward by the
Jews, doubtless against Paul, at the riot in Ephesus (@Ac
19:33).
that they may--not
"might"; implying that the effect still
continues--the sentence is as yet unremoved.
learn--Greek,
"be disciplined," namely, by chastisement
and suffering.
blaspheme--the name of
God and Christ, by doings and teachings unworthy of their
Christian profession (@Ro
2:23,24 Jas 2:7). Though the apostles had the power of
excommunication, accompanied with bodily inflictions,
miraculously sent (@2Co
10:8), it does not follow that fallible ministers now
have any power, save that of excluding from church
fellowship notorious bad livers.
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