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THE FIRST EPISTLE
OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO
TIMOTHY
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
INTRODUCTION
GENUINENESS.--The ancient Church never doubted of their
being canonical and written by Paul. They are in the Peschito
Syriac version of the second century. MURATORI'S Fragment
on the Canon of Scripture, at the close of the second
century, acknowledges them as such. IRENĈUS [Against
Heresies, 1; 3.3.3; 4.16.3; 2.14.8; 3.11.1; 1.16.3],
quotes @1Ti
1:4,9 6:20 2Ti 4:9-11 Tit 3:10. CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA
[Miscellanies, 2, p. 457; 3, pp. 534, 536; 1, p.
350], quotes @1Ti
6:1,20; Second Timothy, as to deaconesses; @Tit
1:12. TERTULLIAN [The Prescription against
Heretics, 25; 6], quotes @1Ti
6:20 2Ti 1:14 1Ti 1:18 6:13, &c. @2Ti
2:2 Tit 3:10,11. EUSEBIUS includes the three in the
"universally acknowledged" Scriptures. Also
THEOPHILUS OF ANTIOCH [To Autolychus, 3.14], quotes
@1Ti
2:1,2 Tit 3:1, and CAIUS (in EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical
History, 6.20]) recognizes their authenticity. CLEMENT
OF ROME, in the end of the first century, in his first Epistle
to the Corinthians [29], quotes @1Ti
2:8. IGNATIUS, in the beginning of the second century,
in Epistle to Polycarp, [6], alludes to @2Ti
2:4. POLYCARP, in the beginning of the second century
[Epistle to the Philippians, 4], alludes to @2Ti
2:4; and in the ninth chapter to @2Ti
4:10. Hegisippus, in the end of the second century, in
EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 3.32], alludes to
@1Ti
6:3,20. ATHENAGORAS, in the end of the second century,
alludes to @1Ti
6:16. JUSTIN MARTYR, in the middle of the second
century [Dialogue with Trypho, 47], alludes to @Tit
3:4. The Gnostic MARCION alone rejected these
Epistles.
The HERESIES OPPOSED in them form the transition stage
from Judaism, in its ascetic form, to Gnosticism, as
subsequently developed. The references to Judaism and
legalism are clear (@1Ti
1:7 4:3 Tit 1:10,14 @Tit
3:9). Traces of beginning Gnosticism are also
unequivocal (@1Ti
1:4). The Gnostic theory of a twofold principle from
the beginning, evil as well as good, appears in germ in @1Ti
4:3, &c. In @1Ti
6:20 the term Gnosis ("science")
itself occurs. Another Gnostic error, namely, that
"the resurrection is past," is alluded to in @2Ti
2:17,18. The Judaism herein opposed is not that of the
earlier Epistles, which upheld the law and tried to join
it with faith in Christ for justification. It first passed
into that phase of it which appears in the Epistle to the
Colossians, whereby will-worship and angel-worship were
superadded to Judaizing opinions. Then a further stage of
the same evil appears in the Epistle to the Philippians (@Php
3:2,18,19), whereby immoral practice
accompanied false doctrine as to the resurrection (compare
@2Ti
2:18, with @1Co
15:12,32,33). This descent from legality to
superstition, and from superstition to godlessness,
appears more matured in the references to it in these
Pastoral Epistles. The false teachers now know not the
true use of the law (@1Ti
1:7,8), and further, have put away good conscience
as well as the faith (@1Ti
1:19 4:2); speak lies in hypocrisy, are corrupt
in mind, and regard godliness as a means of earthly
gain (@1Ti
6:5 @Tit
1:11); overthrow the faith by heresies eating
as a canker, saying the resurrection is past (@2Ti
2:17,18), leading captive silly women, ever
learning yet never knowing the truth, reprobate as Jannes
and Jambres (@2Ti
3:6,8), defiled, unbelieving, professing to know
God, but in works denying Him, abominable, disobedient,
reprobate (@Tit
1:15,16). This description accords with that in the
Catholic Epistles of St. John and St. Peter, and, in the
Epistle to the Hebrews. This fact proves the later date of
these Pastoral Epistles as compared with Paul's earlier
Epistles. The Judaism reprobated herein is not that of an
earlier date, so scrupulous as to the law; it was now
tending to immortality of practice. On the other hand, the
Gnosticism opposed in these Epistles is not the anti-Judaic
Gnosticism of a later date, which arose as a consequence
of the overthrow of Judaism by the destruction of
Jerusalem and the temple, but it was the intermediate
phase between Judaism and Gnosticism, in which the
Oriental and Greek elements of the latter were in a kind
of amalgam with Judaism, just prior to the overthrow of
Jerusalem.
The DIRECTIONS AS TO CHURCH GOVERNORS and ministers,
"bishop-elders, and deacons," are such as were
natural for the apostle, in prospect of his own
approaching removal, to give to Timothy, the president of
the Church at Ephesus, and to Titus, holding the same
office in Crete, for securing the due administration of
the Church when he should be no more, and at a time when
heresies were rapidly springing up. Compare his similar
anxiety in his address to the Ephesian elders (@Ac
20:21-30). The Presbyterate (elders; priest is
a contraction from presbyter) and Diaconate had existed
from the earliest times in the Church (@Ac
6:3 11:30 14:23). Timothy and Titus, as
superintendents or overseers (so bishop
subsequently meant), were to exercise the same power in
ordaining elders at Ephesus which the apostle had
exercised in his general supervision of all the
Gentile churches.
The PECULIARITIES OF MODES OF THOUGHT AND EXPRESSION, are
such as the difference of subject and circumstances of
those addressed and those spoken of in these
Epistles, as compared with the other Epistles, would lead
us to expect. Some of these peculiar phrases occur also in
Galatians, in which, as in the Pastoral Epistles, he, with
his characteristic fervor, attacks the false teachers.
Compare @1Ti
2:6 @Tit
2:14, "gave Himself for us," with @Ga
1:4 1Ti 1:17 2Ti 4:18, "for ever and ever,"
with @Ga
1:5: "before God," @1Ti
5:21 6:13 @2Ti
2:14 4:1, with @Ga
1:20: "a pillar," @1Ti
3:15, with @Ga
2:9: "mediator," @1Ti
2:5, with @Ga
3:20: "in due season," @1Ti
2:6 6:15 Tit 1:3 with @Ga
6:9.
TIME AND PLACE OF WRITING.--The First Epistle to Timothy
was written not long after Paul had left Ephesus for
Macedon (@1Ti
1:3). Now, as Timothy was in Macedon with Paul (@2Co
1:1) on the occasion of Paul's having passed from
Ephesus into that country, as recorded, @Ac
19:22 @Ac
20:1, whereas the First Epistle to Timothy
contemplates a longer stay of Timothy in Ephesus, MOSHEIM
supposes that Paul was nine months of the
"three years" stay mostly at Ephesus (@Ac
20:31) in Macedonia, and elsewhere (perhaps Crete),
(the mention of only "three months" and
"two years," @Ac
19:8,10, favors this, the remaining nine months being
spent elsewhere); and that during these nine months
Timothy, in Paul's absence, superintended the Church of
Ephesus. It is not likely that Ephesus and the neighboring
churches should have been left long without church
officers and church organization, rules respecting which
are giver in this Epistle. Moreover, Timothy was still
"a youth" (@1Ti
4:12), which he could hardly be called after
Paul's first imprisonment, when he must have been at least
thirty-four years of age. Lastly, in @Ac
20:25, Paul asserts his knowledge that the
Ephesians should not all see his face again, so that @1Ti
1:3 will thus refer to his sojourn at Ephesus,
recorded in @Ac
19:10, whence he passed into Macedonia. But the
difficulty is to account for the false teachers having
sprung up almost immediately (according to this theory)
after the foundation of the Church. However, his visit
recorded in @Ac
19:1-41 was not his first visit. The beginning of the
Church at Ephesus was probably made at his visit a year
before (@Ac
18:19-21). Apollos, Aquila and Priscilla, carried on
the work (@Ac
18:24-26). Thus, as to the sudden growth of false
teachers, there was time enough for their springing up,
especially considering that the first converts at Ephesus
were under Apollos' imperfect Christian teachings at
first, imbued as he was likely to be with the tenets of
PHILO of Alexandria, Apollos' native town, combined with
John the Baptist's Old Testament teachings (@Ac
18:24-26). Besides Ephesus, from its position in Asia,
its notorious voluptuousness and sorcery (@Ac
19:18,19), and its lewd worship of Diana (answering to
the Phoenician Ashtoreth), was likely from the first to
tinge Christianity in some of its converts with Oriental
speculations and Asiatic licentiousness of practices. Thus
the phenomenon of the phase of error presented in this
Epistle, being intermediate between Judaism and later
Gnosticism (see above), would be such as might occur
at an early period in the Ephesian Church, as well
as later, when we know it had open "apostles" of
error (@Re
2:2,6), and Nicolaitans infamous in practice. As to
the close connection between this First Epistle and the
Second Epistle (which must have been written at the close
of Paul's life), on which ALFORD relies for his theory of
making the First Epistle also written at the close of
Paul's life, the similarity of circumstances, the person
addressed being one and the same, and either in Ephesus at
the time, or at least connected with Ephesus as its church
overseer, and having heretics to contend with of the same
stamp as in the First Epistle, would account for the
connection. There is not so great identity of tone as to
compel us to adopt the theory that some years could not
have elapsed between the two Epistles.
However, all these arguments against the later date may be
answered. This First Epistle may refer not to the first
organization of the Church under its bishops, or elders
and deacons, but to the moral qualifications laid
down at a later period for those officers when scandals
rendered such directions needful. Indeed, the object for
which he left Timothy at Ephesus he states (@1Ti
1:3) to be, not to organize the Church for the first
time, but to restrain the false teachers. The directions
as to the choice of fit elders and deacons refer to the
filling up of vacancies, not to their first appointment.
The fact of there existing an institution for Church
widows implies an established organization. As to
Timothy's "youth," it may be spoken of comparatively
young compared with Paul, now "the aged" (@Phm
1:9), and with some of the Ephesian elders, senior to
Timothy their overseer. As to @Ac
20:25, we know not but that "all" of the
elders of Ephesus called to Miletus "never saw Paul's
face" afterwards, as he "knew" (doubtless
by inspiration) would be the case, which obviates the need
of ALFORD'S lax view, that Paul was wrong in this his
positive inspired anticipation (for such it was, not a
mere boding surmise as to the future). Thus he probably
visited Ephesus again (@1Ti
1:3 2Ti 1:18 4:20, he would hardly have been at
Miletum, so near Ephesus, without visiting Ephesus)
after his first imprisonment in Rome, though all the
Ephesian elders whom he had addressed formerly at Miletus
did not again see him. The general similarity of subject
and style, and of the state of the Church between
the two Epistles, favors the view that they were near one
another in date. Also, against the theory of the early
date is the difficulty of defining, when, during Paul's
two or three years' stay at Ephesus, we can insert an
absence of Paul from Ephesus long enough for the
requirements of the case, which imply a lengthened stay
and superintendence of Timothy at Ephesus (see, however, @1Ti
3:14, on the other side) after having been
"left" by Paul there. Timothy did not stay there
when Paul left Ephesus (@Ac
19:22 20:1 2Co 1:1). In @1Ti
3:14, Paul says, "I write, hoping to come unto
thee shortly," but on the earlier occasion of
his passing from Ephesus to Macedon he had no such
expectation, but had planned to spend the summer in
Macedon, and the winter in Corinth, (@1Co
16:6). The expression "Till I come"
(@1Ti
4:13), implies that Timothy was not to leave his post
till Paul should arrive; this and the former objection,
however, do not hold good against MOSHEIM'S theory.
Moreover, Paul in his farewell address to the Ephesian
elders prophetically anticipates the rise of false
teachers hereafter of their own selves; therefore
this First Epistle, which speaks of their actual
presence at Ephesus, would naturally seem to be not prior,
but subsequent, to the address, that is, will belong to
the later date assigned. In the Epistle to the Ephesians
no notice is taken of the Judaeo-Gnostic errors, which
would have been noticed had they been really in existence;
however, they are alluded to in the contemporaneous sister
Epistle to Colossians (@Col
2:1-23).
Whatever doubt must always remain as to the date of the
First Epistle, there can be hardly any as to that of the
Second Epistle. In @2Ti
4:13, Paul directs Timothy to bring the books and
cloak which the apostle had left at Troas. Assuming that
the visit to Troas referred to is the one mentioned in @Ac
20:5-7, it will follow that the cloak and parchments
lay for about seven years at Troas, that being the time
that elapsed between the visit and Paul's first
imprisonment at Rome: a very unlikely supposition, that he
should have left either unused for so long. Again, when,
during his first Roman imprisonment, he wrote to the
Colossians (@Col
4:14) and Philemon (@Phm
1:24), Demas was with him; but when he was writing @2Ti
4:10, Demas had forsaken him from love of this world,
and gone to Thessalonica. Again, when he wrote to the
Ephesians, Colossians, Philippians, and Philemon, he had
good hopes of a speedy liberation; but here in @2Ti
4:6-8, he anticipates immediate death, having been at
least once already tried (@2Ti
4:16). Again, he is in this Epistle represented as in
closer confinement than he was when writing those former
Epistles in his first imprisonment (even in the
Philippians, which represent him in greater uncertainty as
to his life, he cherished the hope of soon being
delivered, @Php
2:24 2Ti 1:16-18 2:9 4:6-8,16). Again (@2Ti
4:20), he speaks of having left Trophimus sick at
Miletum. This could not have been on the occasion, @Ac
20:15. For Trophimus was with Paul at Jerusalem
shortly afterwards (@Ac
21:29). Besides, he would thus be made to speak of an
event six or seven years after its occurrence, as a recent
event: moreover, Timothy was, on that occasion of the
apostle being at Miletum, with Paul, and therefore needed
not to be informed of Trophimus' sickness there (@Ac
20:4-17). Also, the statement (@2Ti
4:20), "Erastus abode at Corinth," implies
that Paul had shortly before been at Corinth, and left
Erastus there; but Paul had not been at Corinth for
several years before his first imprisonment, and in the
interval Timothy had been with him, so that he did not
need to write subsequently about that visit. He must
therefore have been liberated after his first imprisonment
(indeed, @Heb
13:23,24, expressly proves that the writer was in Italy
and at liberty), and resumed his apostolic
journeyings, and been imprisoned at Rome again, whence
shortly before his death he wrote Second Timothy.
EUSEBIUS [Chronicles, Anno 2083] (beginning
October, A.D. 67), says, "Nero, to his other crimes,
added the persecution of Christians: under him the
apostles Peter and Paul consummated their martyrdom at
Rome." So JEROME [On Illustrious Men],
"In the fourteenth year of Nero, Paul was beheaded at
Rome for Christ's sake, on the same day as Peter, and was
buried on the Ostian Road, in the thirty-seventh year
after the death of our Lord." ALFORD reasonably
conjectures the Pastoral Epistles were written near this
date. The interval was possibly filled up (so CLEMENT OF
ROME states that Paul preached as far as "to the
extremity of the west") by a journey to Spain (@Ro
15:24,28), according to his own original intention.
MURATORI'S Fragment on the Canon of Scripture
(about A.D. 170) also alleges Paul's journey into Spain.
So EUSEBIUS, CHRYSOSTOM, and JEROME. Be that as it may, he
seems shortly before his second imprisonment to have
visited Ephesus, where a new body of elders governed the
Church (@Ac
20:25), say in the latter end of A.D. 66, or beginning
of 67. Supposing him thirty at his conversion, he would
now be upwards of sixty, and older in constitution than in
years, through continual hardship. Even four years before
he called himself "Paul the aged" (@Phm
1:9).
From Ephesus he went into Macedonia (@1Ti
1:3). He may have written the First Epistle to Timothy
from that country. But his use of "went," not
"came," in @1Ti
1:3, "When I went into Macedonia," implies
he was not there when writing. Wherever he was, he writes
uncertain how long he may be detained from coming to
Timothy (@1Ti
3:14,15). BIRKS shows the probability that he wrote
from Corinth, between which city and Ephesus the
communication was rapid and easy. His course, as on both
former occasions, was from Macedon to Corinth. He finds a
coincidence between @1Ti
2:11-14, and @1Co
14:34, as to women being silent in Church; and @1Ti
5:17,18, and @1Co
9:8-10, as to the maintenance of ministers, on the
same principle as the Mosaic law, that the ox should not
be muzzled that treadeth out the corn; and @1Ti
5:19,20, and @2Co
13:1-4, as to charges against elders. It would be
natural for the apostle in the very place where these
directions had been enforced, to reproduce them in his
letter.
The date of the Epistle to Titus must depend on that
assigned to First Timothy, with which it is connected in
subject, phraseology, and tone. There is no difficulty in
the Epistle to Titus, viewed by itself, in
assigning it to the earlier date, namely, before Paul's
first imprisonment. In @Ac
18:18,19, Paul, in journeying from Corinth to
Palestine, for some cause or other landed at Ephesus. Now
we find (@Tit
3:13) that Apollos in going from Ephesus to Corinth
was to touch at Crete (which seems to coincide with
Apollos' journey from Ephesus to Corinth, recorded in @Ac
18:24,27 19:1); therefore it is not unlikely that Paul
may have taken Crete similarly on his way between Corinth
and Ephesus; or, perhaps been driven out of his course to
it in one of his three shipwrecks spoken of in @2Co
11:25,26; this will account for his taking Ephesus on
his way from Corinth to Palestine, though out of his
regular course. At Ephesus Paul may have written the
Epistle to Titus [HUG]; there he probably met Apollos and
gave the Epistle to Titus to his charge, before his
departure for Corinth by way of Crete, and before the
apostle's departure for Jerusalem (@Ac
18:19-21,24). Moreover, on Paul's way back from
Jerusalem and Antioch, he travelled some time in Upper
Asia (@Ac
19:1); and it was then, probably, that his intention
to "winter at Nicopolis" was realized, there
being a town of that name between Antioch and Tarsus,
lying on Paul's route to Galatia (@Tit
3:12). Thus, First Timothy will, in this theory, be
placed two and a half years later (@Ac
20:1; compare @1Ti
1:3).
ALFORD'S argument for classing the Epistle to Titus with
First Timothy, as written after Paul's first Roman
imprisonment, stands or falls with his argument for
assigning First Timothy to that date. Indeed, HUG'S
unobjectionable argument for the earlier date of the
Epistle to Titus, favors the early date assigned to First
Timothy, which is so much akin to it, if other arguments
be not thought to counterbalance this. The Church of Crete
had been just founded (@Tit
1:5), and yet the same heresies are censured in it as
in Ephesus, which shows that no argument, such as ALFORD
alleges against the earlier date of First Timothy, can be
drawn from them (@Tit
1:10,11,15,16 3:9,11). But vice versa, if, as seems
likely from the arguments adduced, the First Epistle to
Timothy be assigned to the later date, the Epistle to
Titus must, from similarity of style, belong to the same
period. ALFORD traces Paul's last journey before his
second imprisonment thus: To Crete (@Tit
1:5), Miletus (@2Ti
4:20), Colosse (fulfilling his intention, @Phm
1:22), Ephesus (@1Ti
1:3 2Ti 1:18), from which neighborhood he wrote the
Epistle to Titus; Troas, Macedonia, Corinth (@2Ti
4:20), Nicopolis (@Tit
3:12) in Epirus, where he had intended to
winter; a place in which, as being a Roman colony, he
would be free from tumultuary violence, and yet would be
more open to a direct attack from foes in the metropolis,
Rome. Being known in Rome as the leader of the Christians,
he was probably [ALFORD] arrested as implicated in causing
the fire in A.D. 64, attributed by Nero to the Christians,
and was sent to Rome by the Duumvirs of Nicopolis. There
he was imprisoned as a common malefactor (@2Ti
2:9); his Asiatic friends deserted him, except
Onesiphorus (@2Ti
1:16). Demas, Crescens, and Titus, left him. Tychicus
he had sent to Ephesus. Luke alone remained with him (@2Ti
4:10-12). Under the circumstances he writes the Second
Epistle to Timothy, most likely while Timothy was at
Ephesus (@2Ti
2:17; compare @1Ti
1:20 @2Ti
4:13), begging him to come to him before winter (@2Ti
4:21), and anticipating his own execution soon (@2Ti
4:6). Tychicus was perhaps the bearer of the Second
Epistle (@2Ti
4:12). His defense was not made before the emperor,
for the latter was then in Greece (@2Ti
4:16,17). Tradition represents that he died by the
sword, which accords with the fact that his Roman
citizenship would exempt him from torture; probably late
in A.D. 67 or A.D. 68, the last year of Nero.
Timothy is first mentioned, @Ac
16:1, as dwelling in Lystra (not Derbe, compare @Ac
20:4). His mother was a Jewess named Eunice (@2Ti
1:5); his father, "a Greek" (that is, a
Gentile). As Timothy is mentioned as "a
disciple" in @Ac
16:1, he must have been converted before, and this by
Paul (@1Ti
1:2), probably at his former visit to Lystra (@Ac
14:6); at the same time, probably, that his
Scripture-loving mother, Eunice, and grandmother, Lois,
were converted to Christ from Judaism (@2Ti
3:14,15). Not only the good report given as to him by
the brethren of Lystra, but also his origin, partly
Jewish, partly Gentile, adapted him specially for being
Paul's assistant in missionary work, laboring as the
apostle did in each place, firstly among the Jews, and
then among the Gentiles. In order to obviate Jewish
prejudices, he first circumcised him. He seems to have
accompanied Paul in his tour through Macedonia; but when
the apostle went forward to Athens, Timothy and Silas
remained in Berea. Having been sent back by Paul to visit
the Thessalonian Church (@1Th
3:2), he brought his report of it to the apostle at
Corinth (@1Th
3:6). Hence we find his name joined with Paul's in the
addresses of both the Epistles to Thessalonians, which
were written at Corinth. We again find him
"ministering to" Paul during the lengthened stay
at Ephesus (@Ac
19:22). Thence he was sent before Paul into Macedonia
and to Corinth (@1Co
4:17 16:10). He was with Paul when he wrote the Second
Epistle to Corinthians (@2Co
1:1); and the following winter in Corinth, when Paul
sent from thence his Epistle to the Romans (@Ro
16:21). On Paul's return to Asia through Macedonia, he
went forward and waited for the apostle at Troas (@Ac
20:3-5). Next we find him with Paul during his
imprisonment at Rome, when the apostle wrote the Epistles
to Colossians (@Col
1:1), Philemon (@Phm
1:1), and Philippians (@Php
1:1). He was imprisoned and set at liberty about the
same time as the writer of the Hebrews (@Heb
13:23). In the Pastoral Epistles, we find him
mentioned as left by the apostle at Ephesus to superintend
the Church there (@1Ti
1:3). The last notice of him is in the request which
Paul makes to him (@2Ti
4:21) to "come before winter," that is about
A.D. 67 [ALFORD]. EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History,
3.42], reports that he was first bishop of Ephesus; and [NICOPHORUS,
Ecclesiastical History, 3.11], represents that he
died by martyrdom. If then, St. John, as tradition
represents, resided and died in that city, it must have
been at a later period. Paul himself ordained or
consecrated him with laying on of his own hands, and those
of the presbytery, in accordance with prophetic
intimations given respecting him by those possessing the
prophetic gift (@1Ti
1:18 4:14 @2Ti
1:6). His self-denying character is shown by his
leaving home at once to accompany the apostle, and
submitting to circumcision for the Gospel's sake; and also
by his abstemiousness (noted in @1Ti
5:23) notwithstanding his bodily infirmities, which
would have warranted a more generous diet. Timidity and a
want of self-confidence and boldness in dealing with the
difficulties of his position, seem to have been a defect
in his otherwise beautiful character as a Christian
minister (@1Co
16:10 1Ti 4:12 2Ti 1:7).
The DESIGN of the First Epistle was: (1) to direct Timothy
to charge the false teachers against continuing to teach
other doctrine than that of the Gospel (@1Ti
1:3-20; compare @Re
2:1-6); (2) to give him instructions as to the orderly
conducting of worship, the qualifications of bishops and
deacons, and the selection of widows who should, in return
for Church charity, do appointed service (@1Ti
2:1-6:2); (3) to warn against covetousness, a sin
prevalent at Ephesus, and to urge to good works (@1Ti
6:3-19).
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