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THE SECOND
EPISTLE OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO
TIMOTHY
Commentary by A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
CHAPTER 3
@2Ti
3:1-17. COMING EVIL DAYS: SIGNS OF EVIL ALREADY:
CONTRAST IN THE DOCTRINE AND LIFE OF PAUL, WHICH TIMOTHY
SHOULD FOLLOW IN ACCORDANCE WITH HIS EARLY TRAINING IN
SCRIPTURE.
1. also--Greek, "but."
last days--preceding
Christ's second coming (@2Pe
3:3 Jude 1:18). "The latter times," @1Ti
4:1, refer to a period not so remote as "the last
days," namely, the long days of papal and Greek
anti-Christianity.
perilous--literally,
"difficult times," in which it is difficult
to know what is to be done: "grievous times."
shall come--Greek,
"shall be imminent"; "shall come
unexpectedly" [BENGEL].
2. men--in the professing Church. Compare the
catalogue, @Ro
1:29, &c., where much the same sins are attributed
to heathen men; it shall be a relapse into virtual
heathendom, with all its beast-like propensities, whence the
symbol of it is "a beast" (@Re
13:1,11,12, &c. @Re
17:3,8,11).
covetous--Translate,
"money-loving," a distinct Greek word from
that for "covetous" (see on Col 3:5). The cognate Greek
substantive (@1Ti
6:10) is so translated, "the love of money
is a (Greek, not 'the') root of all evil."
boasters--empty
boasters [ALFORD]; boasting of having what they have not.
proud--overweening:
literally, showing themselves above their
fellows.
blasphemous--rather,
"evil-speakers," revilers.
disobedient to parents--The
character of the times is even to be gathered especially
from the manners of the young [BENGEL].
unthankful--The
obligation to gratitude is next to that of obedience
to parents.
unholy--irreligious
[ALFORD]; inobservant of the offices of piety.
3. truce-breakers--rather as the Greek is
translated in @Ro
1:31, "implacable."
false accusers--slanderers
(@1Ti
3:11 Tit 2:3).
incontinent, fierce--at
once both soft and hard: incontinently indulging themselves,
and inhuman to others.
despisers,
&c.--"no lovers of good" [ALFORD]; the
opposite of "a lover of good" (@Tit
1:8).
4. heady--precipitate in action and in passion.
high-minded--literally,
"puffed up" with pride, as with smoke blinding
them.
lovers of pleasure . . .
God--Love of pleasure destroys the love and sense of
God.
5. form--outward semblance.
godliness--piety.
denying--rather as Greek,
"having denied," that is, renounced.
the power--the living,
regenerating, sanctifying influence of it.
turn away--implying
that some of such characters, forerunners of the last days,
were already in the Church.
6. of this sort--Greek, "of these,"
such as were described (@2Ti
3:5).
creep into--stealthily.
laden with sins--(@Isa
1:4); applying to the "silly women" whose
consciences are burdened with sins, and so are a ready prey
to the false teachers who promise ease of conscience if they
will follow them. A bad conscience leads easily to shipwreck
of faith (@1Ti
1:19).
divers lusts--not only
animal lusts, but passion for change in doctrine and manner
of teaching; the running after fashionable men and
fashionable tenets, drawing them in the most opposite
directions [ALFORD].
7. Ever learning--some new point, for mere curiosity,
to the disparagement of what they seemed to know before.
the knowledge--Greek,
"the perfect knowledge"; the only safeguard
against further novelties. Gnosticism laid hold especially
of the female sex [ESTIUS, 1.13.3]: so Roman Jesuitism.
8. Now--Greek, "But"; it is no
wonder there should be now such opponents to the truth, for
their prototypes existed in ancient times [ALFORD].
Jannes . . .
Jambres--traditional names of the Egyptian magicians who
resisted Moses (@Ex
7:11,22), derived from "the unwritten teaching of
the Jews" [THEODORET]. In a point so immaterial as the
names, where Scripture had not recorded them, Paul takes the
names which general opinion had assigned the magicians.
EUSEBIUS [Preparation of the Gospel], quotes from
NUMENIUS, "Jannes and Jambres were sacred scribes
(a lower order of priests in Egypt) skilled in magic."
HILLER interprets "Jannes" from the Abyssinian
language a trickster, and "Jambres" a
juggler" (@Ac
13:8).
resist--"withstand,"
as before. They did so by trying to rival Moses' miracles.
So the false teachers shall exhibit lying wonders in the
last days (@Mt
24:24 2Th 2:9 Re 13:14,15).
reprobate--incapable
of testing the truth (@Ro
1:28) [BENGEL]. ALFORD takes passively, "not
abiding the test"; rejected on being tested (@Jer
6:30).
9. they shall proceed no further--Though for a
time (@2Ti
2:16) "they shall advance or proceed
(English Version, 'increase') unto more
ungodliness," yet there is a final limit beyond
which they shall not be able to "proceed further"
(@Job
38:11 Re 11:7,11). They themselves shall "wax worse
and worse" (@2Ti
3:13), but they shall at last be for ever prevented from
seducing others. "Often malice proceeds deeper down,
when it cannot extend itself" [BENGEL].
their folly--literally,
"dementation": wise though they think
themselves.
shall be manifest--Greek,
"shall be brought forth from concealment into open
day" [BENGEL], (@1Co
4:5).
as theirs . . .
was--as that of those magicians was, when not only could
they no longer try to rival Moses in sending boils, but the
boils fell upon themselves: so as to the lice (@Ex
8:18 9:11).
10. fully known--literally, "fully followed
up" and traced; namely, with a view to following me as
thy pattern, so far as I follow Christ; the same Greek
as in @Lu
1:3, "having had perfect understanding of
all things." His pious mother Eunice and grandmother
Lois would recommend him to study fully Paul's
Christian course as a pattern. He had not been yet the
companion of Paul at the time of the apostle's persecutions
in Antioch, Iconium, and Lystra (@Ac
13:50 14:5,19), but is first mentioned as such @Ac
16:1-3. However, he was "a disciple" already,
when introduced to us in @Ac
16:1-3; and as Paul calls him "my own son in the
faith," he must have been converted by the apostle
previously; perhaps in the visit to those parts three years
before. Hence arose Timothy's knowledge of Paul's
persecutions, which were the common talk of the churches in
those regions about the time of his conversion. The incidental
allusion to them here forms an undesigned coincidence
between the history and the Epistle, indicating genuineness
[PALEY, Horę Paulinę]. A forger of Epistles from
the Acts would never allude to Timothy's knowledge of
persecutions, when that knowledge is not expressly mentioned
in the history, but is only arrived at by indirect
inference; also the omission of Derbe here, in the
Epistle, is in minute accordance with the fact that in Derbe
no persecution is mentioned in the history, though Derbe
and Lystra are commonly mentioned together. The reason
why he mentions his persecutions before Timothy became his
companion, and not those subsequent, was because Timothy was
familiar with the latter as an eye-witness and Paul needed
not to remind him of them, but the former Timothy had traced
up by seeking the information from others, especially as
the date and scene of them was the date and scene of his own
conversion.
doctrine--"teaching."
manner of life--"conduct,"
"behavior."
purpose--The Greek
is elsewhere usually used of God's
"purpose." But here, as in @Ac
11:23, of Paul's determined "purpose of heart in
cleaving unto the Lord." My set aim, or resolution,
in my apostolic function. and in every action is, not my
selfish gain, but the glory of God in Christ.
long-suffering--towards
my adversaries, and the false teachers; towards brethren in
bearing their infirmities; towards the unconverted, and the
lapsed when penitent (@2Ti
4:2 2Co 6:6 Ga 5:22 Eph 4:2 Col 3:12).
charity--love
to all men.
patience--"endurance";
patient continuance in well-doing amidst adversities
(@2Ti
3:11 Ro 2:7).
11. afflictions--"sufferings."
which--Greek,
"such as."
in Antioch--of Pisidia
(@Ac
13:14,50,51).
Iconium--(@Ac
14:1-5).
Lystra--(@Ac
14:6,19).
what--How grievous.
out of . . . all
. . . Lord delivered me--(@2Ti
4:17 Ps 34:17 2Co 1:10). An encouragement to Timothy not
to fear persecutions.
12. Yea, and--an additional consideration for
Timothy: if he wishes to live godly in Christ, he
must make up his mind to encounter persecution.
that will, &c.--Greek,
"all whose will is to live," &c. So far
should persecution be from being a stumbling-block to
Timothy, he should consider it a mark of the pious. So the
same Greek is used of the same thing, @Lu
14:28,33, "intending (Greek, 'wishing')
to build a tower . . . counteth the cost."
live godly in Christ--(@Ga
2:20 Php 1:21). There is no godliness (Greek,
"piously") or piety out of Christ. The
world easily puts up with the mask of a religion which
depends on itself, but the piety which derives its vigor
directly from Christ is as odious to modern Christians as it
was to the ancient Jews [BENGEL].
shall suffer persecution--and
will not decline it (@Ga
5:11). BISHOP PEARSON proves the divine origination of
Christianity from its success being inexplicable on the
supposition of its being of human origin. The nature of its
doctrine was no way likely to command success: (1) it
condemns all other religions, some established for ages; (2)
it enjoins precepts ungrateful to flesh and blood, the
mortifying of the flesh, the love of enemies, and the
bearing of the cross; (3) it enforces these seemingly
unreasonable precepts by promises seemingly incredible; not
good things such as afford complacency to our senses, but
such as cannot be obtained till after this life, and
presuppose what then seemed impossible, the resurrection;
(4) it predicts to its followers what would seem sure to
keep most of the world from embracing it, persecutions.
13. Reason why persecutions must be expected, and
these becoming worse and worse as the end approaches. The
breach between light and darkness, so far from being healed,
shall be widened [ALFORD].
evil men--in contrast
to the "godly" (@2Ti
3:12).
seducers--literally,
"conjurers." Magical arts prevailed at Ephesus (@Ac
19:19), and had been renounced by many Ephesians on
embracing Christianity: but now when Paul was writing to
Ephesus, symptoms of a return to conjuring tricks
appeared: an undesigned coincidence [BURTON]. Probably sorcery
will characterize the final apostasy (@Re
13:15 18:23 22:15).
wax worse--literally,
"advance in the direction of worse" (see on 2Ti
3:9). Not contradictory to that verse:there the diffusion
of the evil was spoken of; here its intensity
[ALFORD].
deceiving, and being
deceived--He who has once begun to deceive others, is
the less easily able to recover himself from error, and the
more easily embraces in turn the errors of others [BENGEL].
14. But . . . thou--Whatever they may do.
Resuming the thread begun at @2Ti
3:10.
learned--from me and
thy mother and grandmother (@2Ti
1:5 2:2).
assured of--from
Scripture (@2Ti
3:15).
of whom--plural, not
singular, in the oldest manuscripts, "from what
teachers." Not only from me, but from Lois and Eunice.
15. from a child--literally, "from an
infant." The tender age of the first dawn of reason is
that wherein the most lasting impressions of faith may be
made.
holy scriptures--The
Old Testament taught by his Jewish mother. An
undesigned coincidence with @2Ti
1:5 Ac 16:1-3.
able--in themselves:
though through men's own fault they often do not in fact
make men savingly alive.
wise unto salvation--that
is, wise unto the attainment of salvation. Contrast
"folly" (@2Ti
3:9). Wise also in extending it to others.
through faith--as the instrument
of this wisdom. Each knows divine things only as far
as his own experience in himself extends. He who has
not faith, has not wisdom or salvation.
which is in--that is,
rests on Christ Jesus.
16. All scripture--Greek, "Every
Scripture," that is, Scripture in its every part.
However, English Version is sustained, though the Greek
article be wanting, by the technical use of the term
"Scripture" being so well known as not to need the
article (compare Greek, @Eph
3:15 2:21). The Greek is never used of writings
in general, but only of the sacred Scriptures. The position
of the two Greek adjectives closely united by
"and," forbids our taking the one as an epithet,
the other as predicated and translated as ALFORD and
ELLICOTT. "Every Scripture given by inspiration of God
is also profitable." Vulgate and the best
manuscripts, favor English Version. Clearly the
adjectives are so closely connected that as surely as one is
a predicate, the other must be so too. ALFORD admits his
translation to be harsh, though legitimate. It is better
with English Version to take it in a construction
legitimate, and at the same time not harsh. The Greek,
"God-inspired," is found nowhere else. Most of the
New Testament books were written when Paul wrote this his
latest Epistle: so he includes in the clause "All
Scripture is God-inspired," not only the Old
Testament, in which alone Timothy was taught when a
child (@2Ti
3:15), but the New Testament books according as they
were recognized in the churches which had men gifted with
"discerning of spirits," and so able to
distinguish really inspired utterances, persons, and so
their writings from spurious. Paul means, "All
Scripture is God-inspired and therefore useful";
because we see no utility in any words or portion of
it, it does not follow it is not God-inspired. It is useful,
because God-inspired; not God-inspired,
because useful. One reason for the article not being before
the Greek, "Scripture," may be that, if it
had, it might be supposed that it limited the sense
to the hiera grammata, "Holy Scriptures" (@2Ti
3:15) of the Old Testament, whereas here the
assertion is more general: "all Scripture"
(compare Greek, @2Pe
1:20). The translation, "all Scripture that is
God-inspired is also useful," would imply that there is
some Scripture which is not God-inspired. But this
would exclude the appropriated sense of the word
"Scripture"; and who would need to be told that
"all divine Scripture is useful
('profitable')?" @Heb
4:13 would, in ALFORD'S view, have to be rendered,
"All naked things are also open to the eyes of
Him," &c.: so also @1Ti
4:4, which would be absurd [TREGELLES, Remarks on the
Prophetic Visions of the Book of Daniel]. Knapp well
defines inspiration, "An extraordinary divine agency
upon teachers while giving instruction, whether oral or
written, by which they were taught how and what they should
speak or write" (compare @2Sa
23:1 Ac 4:25 2Pe 1:21). The inspiration gives the
divine sanction to all the words of Scripture, though
those words be the utterances of the individual writer, and
only in special cases revealed directly by God (@1Co
2:13). Inspiration is here predicated of the writings,
"all Scripture," not of the persons. The question
is not how God has done it; it is as to the word,
not the men who wrote it. What we must believe is
that He has done it, and that all the sacred writings
are every where inspired, though not all alike matter of
special revelation: and that even the very words
are stamped with divine sanction, as Jesus used them (for
example in the temptation and @Joh
10:34,35), for deciding all questions of doctrine and
practice. There are degrees of revelation in
Scripture, but not of inspiration. The sacred writers
did not even always know the full significancy of their own
God-inspired words (@1Pe
1:10,11,12). Verbal inspiration does not mean mechanical
dictation, but all "Scripture is (so) inspired by
God," that everything in it, its narratives,
prophecies, citations, the whole--ideas, phrases, and
words--are such as He saw fit to be there. The present
condition of the text is no ground for concluding
against the original text being inspired, but is a
reason why we should use all critical diligence to restore
the original inspired text. Again, inspiration may be
accompanied by revelation or not, but it is as much needed
for writing known doctrines or facts authoritatively,
as for communicating new truths [TREGELLES]. The
omission here of the substantive verb is,' I think, designed
to mark that, not only the Scripture then existing,
but what was still to be written till the canon should be
completed, is included as God-inspired. The Old
Testament law was the schoolmaster to bring us to Christ; so
it is appropriately said to be "able to make wise
unto salvation through faith in Jesus Christ": the term
wisdom being appropriated to a knowledge of the
relations between the Old and New Testaments, and opposed to
the pretended wisdom of the false teachers (@1Ti
1:7,8).
doctrine--Greek,
"teaching," that is, teaching the ignorant
dogmatic truths which they cannot otherwise know. He so
uses the Old Testament, @Ro
1:17.
reproof--"refutation,"
convicting the erring of their error. Including polemical
divinity. As an example of this use of the Old Testament,
compare @Ga
3:6,13,16. "Doctrine and reproof" comprehend
the speculative parts of divinity. Next follow the practical:
Scripture is profitable for: (1) correction (Greek,
"setting one right"; compare an example, @1Co
10:1-10) and instruction (Greek,
"disciplining," as a father does his child, see on
2Ti 2:25; @Eph
6:4 Heb 12:5,11, or "training" by instruction,
warning, example, kindnesses, promises, and chastisements;
compare an example, @1Co
5:13). Thus the whole science of theology is complete in
Scripture. Since Paul is speaking of Scripture in general
and in the notion of it, the only general reason why,
in order to perfecting the godly (@2Ti
3:17), it should extend to every department of
revealed truth, must be that it was intended to be the complete
and sufficient rule in all things touching perfection.
See Article VI, Common Prayer Book.
in--Greek,
"instruction which is in righteousness," as
contrasted with the "instruction" in worldly
rudiments (@Col
2:20,22).
17. man of God--(See on 1Ti 6:11).
perfect, throughly
furnished--Greek, "thoroughly
perfected," and so "perfect." The man of God
is perfectly accoutred out of Scripture for his work,
whether he be a minister (compare @2Ti
4:2 with @2Ti
3:16) or a spiritual layman. No oral tradition is needed
to be added.
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