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THE SECOND
EPISTLE OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO
TIMOTHY
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
CHAPTER 1
1. This Epistle is the last testament and swan-like
death song of Paul [BENGEL].
according to the promise
of life . . . in Christ--Paul's apostleship
is in order to carry into effect this promise.
Compare "according to the faith . . . in hope
of eternal life . . . promise," &c. (@Tit
1:1,2). This "promise of life in Christ"
(compare @2Ti
1:10 2Ti 2:8) was needed to nerve Timothy to fortitude
amidst trials, and to boldness in undertaking the journey to
Rome, which would be attended with much risk (@2Ti
1:8).
2. my dearly beloved son--In @1Ti
1:2, and @Tit
1:4, written at an earlier period than this Epistle, the
expression used is in the Greek, "my genuine
son." ALFORD sees in the change of expression an
intimation of an altered tone as to Timothy, more of mere
love, and less of confidence, as though Paul saw m him a
want of firmness, whence arose the need of his stirring
up afresh the faith and grace in Him (@2Ti
1:6). But this seems to me not justified by the Greek
word agapetos, which implies the attachment of reasoning
and choice, on the ground of merit in the one
"beloved," not of merely instinctive love.
See TRENCH [Greek Synonyms of the New Testament].
3. I thank--Greek, "I feel gratitude
to God."
whom I serve from my
forefathers--whom I serve (@Ro
1:9) as did my forefathers. He does not mean to
put on the same footing the Jewish and Christian service of
God; but simply to assert his own conscientious service of
God as he had received it from his progenitors (not
Abraham, Isaac, &c., whom he calls "the
fathers," not "progenitors" as the Greek
is here; @Ro
9:5). The memory of those who had gone before to whom he
is about to be gathered, is now, on the eve of death,
pleasant to him; hence also, he calls to mind the faith of
the mother and grandmother of Timothy; as he walks in the
faith of his forefathers (@Ac
23:1 24:14 26:6,7 28:20), so Timothy should persevere
firmly in the faith of his parent and grandparent. Not only
Paul, but the Jews who reject Christ, forsake the faith of
their forefathers, who looked for Christ; when they accept
Him, the hearts of the children shall only be returning to
the faith of their forefathers (@Mal
4:6 Lu 1:17 Ro 11:23,24,28). Probably Paul had, in his
recent defense, dwelt on this topic, namely, that he was, in
being a Christian, only following his hereditary faith.
that . . . I
have remembrance of thee--"how unceasing I make
my mention concerning thee" (compare @Phm
1:4). The cause of Paul's feeling thankful is, not that
he remembers Timothy unceasingly in his prayers, but for
what Timothy is in faith (@2Ti
1:5) and graces; compare @Ro
1:8,9, from which supply the elliptical sentence thus,
"I thank God (for thee, for God is my witness) whom I
serve . . . that (or how) without ceasing I
have remembrance (or make mention) of thee,"
&c.
night and day--(See on
1Ti 5:5).
4. desiring--Greek, "with yearning
as for one much missed."
mindful of thy tears--not
only at our parting (@Ac
20:37), but also often when under pious feelings.
that I may be filled with
joy--to be joined with "desiring to see thee"
(@Ro
1:11,12 15:32).
5. When I call to remembrance--This increased his
"desire to see" Timothy. The oldest manuscripts
read, "When I called to remembrance";
implying that some recent incident (perhaps the contrasted
cowardice of the hypocrite Demas, who forsook him) had
reminded him of the sincerity of Timothy's faith.
faith that is in thee--ALFORD
translates, "that was in thee." He
remembers Timothy's faith in the past as a fact; its present
existence in him is only matter of his confident persuasion
or hope.
which--Greek,
"such as."
dwelt--"made its
dwelling" or abode (@Joh
14:23). The past tense implies they were now dead.
first--before it dwelt
in thee. She was the furthest back of the progenitors of
Timothy whom Paul knew.
mother Eunice--a
believing Jewess; but his father was a Greek, that is, a
heathen (@Ac
16:1). The faith of the one parent sanctified the child
(@2Ti
3:15 1Co 7:14). She was probably converted at Paul's
first visit to Lystra (@Ac
14:6). It is an undesigned coincidence, and so a mark of
truth, that in @Ac
16:1 the belief of the mother alone is mentioned,
just as here praise is bestowed on the faith of the mother,
while no notice is taken of the father [PALEY, Horę
Paulinę].
and--Greek,
"but," that is, notwithstanding appearances
[ALFORD].
persuaded that--it
dwells, or it shall dwell "in thee
also." The mention of the faith of his mother and
grandmother is designed as an incentive to stir up his
faith.
6. Wherefore--Greek, "For which
cause," namely, because thou hast inherited, didst once
possess, and I trust ("am persuaded") still dost
possess, such unfeigned faith [ALFORD].
stir up--literally,
"rekindle," "revive the spark of"; the
opposite of "quench" or "extinguish" (@1Th
5:19). Paul does not doubt the existence of real faith
in Timothy, but he desires it to be put into active
exercise. Timothy seems to have become somewhat remiss from
being so long without Paul (@2Ti
2:22).
gift of God--the
spiritual grace received for his ministerial office, either
at his original ordination, or at his consecration to the
particular office of superintending the Ephesian Church (see
on 1Ti 4:14), imparting fearlessness, power, love, and a
sound mind (@2Ti
1:7).
by the putting on of my
hands--In @1Ti
4:14, it is "with [not by] the laying on of
the hands of the presbytery." The apostle was
chief in the ordination, and to him "BY" is
applied. The presbytery were his assistants; so
"with," implying merely accompaniment, is
said of them. Paul was the instrument in Timothy's
ordination and reception of the grace then conferred; the
presbyters were the concurrent participants in the act of
ordination; so the Greek, "dia" and
"meta." So in ordinations by a bishop in
our days, he does the principal act; they join in
laying on hands with him.
7. For, &c.--implying that Timothy needed the
exhortation "to stir up the gift of God in him,"
being constitutionally "timid": "For God did
not give us (so the Greek, namely, at our
ordination or consecration) the spirit of fear."
The spirit which He gave us, was not the spirit of timidity
(literally, "cowardice," which is weakness), but
of "power" (exhibited in a fearless
"testimony" for Christ, @2Ti
1:8). "Power is the invariable accompaniment of the
gift of the Holy Ghost. @Lu
24:49 Ac 1:8; compare @Ac
6:6, "full of faith and of the Holy Ghost,"
with @2Ti
1:8, "full of faith and power." Fear is
the result of "the spirit of bondage" (@Ro
8:15). Fear within exaggerates the causes of fear
without. "The spirit of power" is the
spirit of man dwelt in by the Spirit of God imparting power;
this power "casteth out fear" from ourselves, and
stimulates us to try to cast it out of others (@1Jo
4:18).
love--which moves the
believer while "speaking the truth" with power,
when giving his testimony for Christ (@2Ti
1:8), at the same time to do so "in love" (@Eph
4:15).
a sound mind--The Greek,
is rather, "the bringing of men to a sound mind"
[WAHL]. BENGEL supports English Version, "a
sound mind," or "sober-mindedness"; a duty to
which a young man like Timothy especially needed to be
exhorted (@2Ti
2:22 1Ti 4:12 Tit 2:4,6). So Paul urges him, in @2Ti
2:4, to give up worldly entanglements, which as thorns
(@Lu
8:14) choke the word. These three gifts are preferable
to any miraculous powers whatever.
8. therefore--seeing that God hath given us such a
spirit, not that of fear.
Be not thou . . .
ashamed--I agree with ELLICOTT, in opposition to ALFORD,
that the Greek subjunctive here, with the negative,
implies action completed at one time, not continued
action, which the present imperative would express; thus
implying that Timothy had not decidedly yet
evinced such feeling of shame; though I think, Paul,
amidst the desertion of others who once promised fair, and
from being aware of Timothy's constitutional timidity
(see on 2Ti
1:7), felt it necessary to stir him up and guard him
against the possibility of unchristian dereliction of duty
as to bold confession of Christ. Shame (@2Ti
1:8) is the companion of fear (@2Ti
1:7); if fear be overcome, false shame flees [BENGEL].
Paul himself (@2Ti
1:12), and Onesiphorus (@2Ti
1:16), were instances of fearless profession removing
false shame. He presents in contrast sad instances of fear
and shame (@2Ti
1:15).
of the testimony of our
Lord--of the testimony which thou art bound to
give in the cause of our Lord; he says
"our," to connect Timothy and himself together in
the testimony which both should give for their common Lord. The
testimony which Christ gave before Pilate (@1Ti
6:12,13), is an incentive to the believer that he
should, after His Lord's example, witness a good
testimony or confession.
nor of me his prisoner--The
cause of God's servants is the cause of God Himself (@Eph
4:1). Timothy might easily be tempted to be ashamed of
one in prison, especially as not only worldly shame, but
great risk, attended any recognition of Paul the prisoner.
be thou partaker--with
me.
of the gospel--rather,
as Greek, "for the Gospel," that is,
suffered for the Gospel (@2Ti
2:3-5 Phm 1:13).
according to the power of
God--exhibited in having saved and called
us (@2Ti
1:9). God who has done the greater act of power (that
is, saved us), will surely do the less (carry us safe
through afflictions borne for the Gospel).
"Think not that thou hast to bear these afflictions by
thine own power; nay, it is by the power of God. It was a
greater exercise of power than His making the heaven, His
persuading the world to embrace salvation" [CHRYSOSTOM].
9. Who . . . called us--namely, God the
Father (@Ga
1:6). The having "saved us" in His eternal
purpose of "grace, given us in Christ before the world
began," precedes his actual "calling" of us
in due time with a call made effective to us by the Holy
Spirit; therefore, "saved us" comes before
"called us" (@Ro
8:28-30).
holy calling--the
actual call to a life of holiness. @Heb
3:1, "heavenly calling" [TITTMANN, Greek
Synonyms of the New Testament]; whereas we were sinners
and enemies (@Eph
1:18 4:1). The call comes wholly from God and
claims us wholly for God. "Holy" implies
the separation of believers from the rest of the
world unto God.
not according to--not
having regard to our works in His election and calling of
grace (@Ro
9:11 Eph 2:8,9).
his own purpose--The
origination of salvation was of His own purpose,
flowing from His own goodness, not for works of ours coming
first, but wholly because of His own gratuitous, electing
love [THEODORET and CALVIN].
grace . . .
given us--in His everlasting purpose, regarded as the
same as when actually accomplished in due time.
in Christ--believers
being regarded by God as IN HIM, with whom the Father makes
the covenant of salvation (@Eph
1:4 3:11).
before the world began--Greek,
"before the times (periods) of ages"; the enduring
ages of which no end is contemplated (@1Co
2:7 Eph 3:11).
10. But . . . now . . . manifest--in
contrast to its concealment heretofore in the eternal
purpose of God "before the world began" (@2Ti
1:9 Col 1:16 Tit 1:2,3).
appearing--the visible
manifestation in the flesh.
abolished death--Greek,
"taken away the power from death" [TITTMANN].
The Greek article before "death" implies
that Christ abolished death, not only in some particular
instance, but in its very essence, being, and idea, as well
as in all its aspects and consequences (@Joh
11:26 Ro 8:2,38 1Co 15:26,55 Heb 2:14). The carrying out
of the abolition of death into full effect is to be at the
resurrection (@Re
20:14). The death of the body meanwhile is but
temporary, and is made no account of by Christ and the
apostles.
brought . . . to
light--making visible by the Gospel what was before
hidden in God's purpose.
life--of the Spirit,
acting first on the soul here, about to act on the body also
at the resurrection.
immortality--Greek,
"incorruptibility" of the new life, not merely of
the risen body [ALFORD], (@Ro
8:11).
through--by means
of the Gospel, which brings to light the life and
immortality purposed by God from eternity, but
manifested now first to man by Christ, who in His own
resurrection has given the pledge of His people's final
triumph over death through Him. Before the Gospel revelation
from God, man, by the light of nature, under the most
favorable circumstances, had but a glimmering idea of the
possibility of a future being of the soul, but not
the faintest idea of the resurrection of the body (@Ac
17:18,32). If Christ were not "the life," the
dead could never live; if He were not the resurrection, they
could never rise; had He not the keys of hell and death (@Re
1:18), we could never break through the bars of death or
gates of hell [BISHOP PEARSON].
11. Whereunto--For the publication of which Gospel.
I am appointed--Greek,
"I was appointed."
preacher--Greek,
"herald."
teacher of the Gentiles--(@1Ti
2:7). He brings forward his own example in this verse
and @2Ti
1:12, as a pattern for Timothy, as a public
"preacher," an "apostle," or missionary
from place to place, and a "teacher" in private
instructing His flock with patient perseverance.
12. For the which cause--For the Gospel cause of
which I was appointed a preacher (@2Ti
1:10,11).
I also suffer--besides
my active work as a missionary. ELLICOTT translates,
"I suffer even these things"; the sufferings
attendant on my being a prisoner (@2Ti
1:8,15).
I am not ashamed--neither
be thou (@2Ti
1:8).
for--Confidence as to
the future drives away shame [BENGEL].
I know--though the
world knows Him not (@Joh
10:14 17:25).
whom--I know what a faithful,
promise-keeping God He is (@2Ti
2:13). It is not, I know how I have believed,
but, I know WHOM I have believed; a feeble faith may clasp a
strong Saviour.
believed--rather,
"trusted"; carrying out the metaphor of a
depositor depositing his pledge with one whom he trusts.
am persuaded--(@Ro
8:38).
he is able--in spite
of so many foes around me.
that which I have
committed unto him--Greek, "my
deposit"; the body, soul, and spirit, which I have
deposited in God's safe keeping (@1Th
5:23 1Pe 4:19). So Christ Himself in dying (@Lu
23:46). "God deposits with us His word; we deposit
with God our spirit" [GROTIUS]. There is one deposit
(His revelation) committed by God to us, which we ought to
keep (@2Ti
1:13,14) and transmit to others (@2Ti
2:2); there is another committed by God to us, which we
should commit to His keeping, namely, ourselves and our
heavenly portion.
that day--the day of
His appearing (@2Ti
1:18 2Ti 4:8).
13. Hold fast the form--rather as Greek,
"Have (that is, keep) a pattern of sound
(Greek, 'healthy') words which thou hast heard from
me, in faith and love." "Keep" suits the
reference to a deposit in the context. The secondary
position of the verb in the Greek forbids our taking
it so strongly as English Version, "Hold
fast." The Greek for "form" is
translated "pattern" in @1Ti
1:16, the only other passage where it occurs. Have such
a pattern drawn from my sound words, in
opposition to the unsound doctrines so current at
Ephesus, vividly impressed (WAHL translates it
"delineation"; the verb implies "to make a
lively and lasting impress") on thy mind.
in faith and love--the
element IN which my sound words had place, and in which thou
art to have the vivid impression of them as thy inwardly
delineated pattern, moulding conformably thy outward
profession. So nearly BENGEL explains, @1Ti
3:9.
14. Translate as Greek, "That goodly
deposit keep through the Holy Ghost," namely, "the
sound words which I have committed to thee" (@2Ti
1:13 2Ti 2:2).
in us--in all
believers, not merely in you and me. The indwelling Spirit
enables us to keep from the robbers of the soul the deposit
of His word committed to us by God.
15. all they which are in Asia--Proconsular Asia;
"all who are there now, when they were in Rome
(not 'be' or 'are,' but) turned from me"
then; were "ashamed of my chain," in contrast to
ONESIPHORUS; did not stand with me but forsook me (@2Ti
4:16). It is possible that the occasion of their turning
from him was at his apprehension in Nicopolis, whither they
had escorted him on his way to Rome, but from which they
turned back to Asia. A hint to Timothy, now in Asia, not to
be like them, but to imitate rather ONESIPHORUS, and to come
to him (@2Ti
4:21).
Phygellus and Hermogenes--specified
perhaps, as being persons from whom such pusillanimous
conduct could least be expected; or, as being well known to
Timothy, and spoken of before in conversations between him
and Paul, when the latter was in Asia Minor.
16. The Lord give mercy--even as ONESIPHORUS had
abounded in works of mercy.
the house of Onesiphorus--He
himself was then absent from Ephesus, which accounts for the
form of expression (@2Ti
4:19). His household would hardly retain his name
after the master was dead, as BENGEL supposes him to have
been. Nowhere has Paul prayers for the dead, which is fatal
to the theory, favored by ALFORD also, that he was dead. God
blesses not only the righteous man himself, but all his
household.
my chain--Paul in the
second, as in his first imprisonment, was bound by a chain
to the soldier who guarded him.
17. found me--in the crowded metropolis. So in turn
"may he find mercy of the Lord in that day"
when the whole universe shall be assembled.
18. grant unto him--as well as "unto his
house" (@2Ti
1:16).
the Lord--who rewards
a kindness done to His disciples as if done to Himself (@Mt
25:45).
of--from the
Lord; "the Lord" is emphatically put instead of
"from Himself," for solemnity and emphasis (@2Th
3:5).
in how many things--"how
many acts of ministry he rendered."
unto me--omitted in
the oldest manuscripts, so that the "ministered"
may include services rendered to others as well as to
Paul.
very well--rather as Greek,
"Thou knowest better" (than I can tell thee,
seeing that thou art more of a regular resident at Ephesus).
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