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THE EPISTLE OF
PAUL TO
TITUS
Commentary by
A. R. FAUSSETT
[1]
[2]
[3]
CHAPTER 3
@Tit
3:1-15. WHAT TITUS IS TO TEACH CONCERNING CHRISTIANS'
BEHAVIOR TOWARDS THE WORLD: HOW HE IS TO TREAT HERETICS:
WHEN AND WHERE HE IS TO MEET PAUL. SALUTATION. CONCLUSION.
1. Put them in mind--as they are in danger of
forgetting their duty, though knowing it. The opposition of
Christianity to heathenism, and the natural disposition to
rebellion of the Jews under the Roman empire (of whom many
lived in Crete), might lead many to forget practically what
was a recognized Christian principle in theory, submission
to the powers that be. DIODORUS SICULUS mentions the
tendency of the Cretans to riotous insubordination.
to be subject--"willingly"
(so the Greek).
principalities . . .
powers--Greek, "magistracies . . .
authorities."
to obey--the commands
of "magistrates"; not necessarily implying spontaneous
obedience. Willing obedience is implied in
"ready to every good work." Compare @Ro
13:3, as showing that obedience to the magistracy would
tend to good works, since the magistrate's aim generally
is to favor the good and punish the bad. Contrast
"disobedient" (@Tit
3:3).
2. To speak evil of no man--especially, not of
"dignities" and magistrates.
no brawlers--"not
quarrelsome," not attacking others.
gentle--towards those
who attack us. Yielding, considerate, not urging one's
rights to the uttermost, but forbearing and kindly (see on
Php 4:5). Very different from the innate greediness
and spirit of aggression towards others which characterized
the Cretans.
showing--in acts.
all--all possible.
meekness--(See on 2Co
10:1); the opposite of passionate severity.
unto all men--The duty
of Christian conduct towards all men is the proper
consequence of the universality of God's grace to all men,
so often set forth in the pastoral Epistles.
3. For--Our own past sins should lead us to be
lenient towards those of others. "Despise none, for
such wast thou also." As the penitent thief .said to
his fellow thief, "Dost thou not fear God . . .
seeing that thou art in the same condemnation."
we--Christians.
were--Contrast @Tit
3:4, "But when," that is, now: a
favorite contrast in Paul's writing, that between our past
state by nature, and our present state of deliverance
from it by grace. As God treated us, we ought to treat our
neighbor.
sometimes--once.
foolish--wanting right
reason in our course of living. Irrational. The exact
picture of human life without grace. Grace is the sole
remedy for foolishness.
disobedient--to God.
deceived--led astray.
The same Greek, "out of the way" (@Heb
5:2).
serving--Greek,
"in bondage to," serving as slaves."
divers--The cloyed
appetite craves constant variety.
pleasures--of the
flesh.
malice--malignity.
hateful . . .
hating--correlatives. Provoking the hatred of others by
their detestable character and conduct, and in turn hating
them.
4. To show how little reason the Cretan Christians
had to be proud of themselves, and despise others not
Christians (see on Tit 3:2,3). It is to the "kindness
and love of God," not to their own merits, that they
owe salvation.
kindness--Greek,
"goodness," "benignity," which manifests
His grace.
love . . .
toward man--teaching us to have such "love
(benevolence) toward man" (Greek,
"philanthropy"), "showing all meekness unto
all men" (@Tit
3:2), even as God had "toward man" (@Tit
2:11); opposed to the "hateful and hating"
characteristics of unrenewed men, whose wretchedness moved
God's benevolent kindness.
of God our Saviour--Greek,
"of our Saviour God," namely, the Father (@Tit
1:3), who "saved us" (@Tit
3:5) "through Jesus Christ our Saviour" (@Tit
3:6).
appeared--Greek,
"was made to appear"; was manifested.
5. Not by--Greek, "Out of";
"not as a result springing from works,"
&c.
of righteousness--Greek,
"in righteousness," that is, wrought "in
a state of righteousness": as "deeds . . .
wrought in God." There was an utter absence in
us of the element ("righteousness") in which alone
righteous works could be done, and so necessarily an absence
of the works. "We neither did works of righteousness,
nor were saved in consequence of them; but His goodness did
the whole" [THEOPHYLACT].
we--emphatically
opposed to "His."
mercy--the prompting
cause of our salvation individually: "In pursuance
of His mercy." His kindness and love to
man were manifested in redemption once for all wrought
by Him for mankind generally; His mercy is the
prompting cause for our individual realization of it.
Faith is presupposed as the instrument of our being
"saved"; our being so, then, is spoken of as an accomplished
fact. Faith is not mentioned, but only God's
part. as Paul's object here is not to describe man's new
state, but the saving agency of God in bringing about
that state, independent of all merit on the man's part
(see on Tit 3:4).
by--Greek,
"through"; by means of.
the washing--rather,
"the laver," that is, the baptismal font.
of regeneration--designed
to be the visible instrument of regeneration. "The
apostles are wont to draw an argument from the sacraments to
prove the thing therein signified, because it ought to be a
recognized principle among the godly, that God does not mark
us with empty signs. but by His power inwardly makes good
what He demonstrates by the outward sign. Wherefore baptism
is congruously and truly called the laver of
regeneration. We must connect the sign and thing
signified, so as not to make the sign empty and ineffectual;
and yet not, for the sake of honoring the sign, to detract
from the Holy Spirit what is peculiarly His" [CALVIN],
(@1Pe
3:21). Adult candidates for baptism are presupposed to
have had repentance and faith (for Paul often assumes in
faith and charity that those addressed are what they profess
to be, though in fact some of them were not so, @1Co
6:11), in which case baptism would be the visible
"laver or regeneration" to them, "faith being
thereby confirmed, and grace increased, by
virtue of prayer to God" [Article XXVII, Church of
England]. Infants are charitably presumed to have
received a grace in connection with their Christian descent,
in answer to the believing prayers of their parents
or guardians presenting them for baptism, which grace is
visibly sealed and increased by baptism, "the laver of
regeneration." They are presumed to be then
regenerated, until years of developed consciousness prove
whether they have been actually so or not. "Born
of (from) water and (no 'of' in Greek) the
Spirit." The Word is the remote and anterior
instrument of the new birth; Baptism, the proximate
instrument. The Word, the instrument to the individual;
Baptism, in relation to the Society of Christians.
The laver of cleansing stood outside the door of the
tabernacle, wherein the priest had to wash before entering
the Holy Place; so we must wash in the laver of regeneration
before we can enter the Church, whose members are "a
royal priesthood." "Baptism by the Spirit"
(whereof water baptism is the designed accompanying seal)
makes the difference between Christian baptism and that of
John. As Paul presupposes the outward Church is the visible
community of the redeemed, so he speaks of baptism on the
supposition that it answers to its idea; that all that is
inward belonging to its completeness accompanied the
outward. Hence he here asserts of outward baptism whatever
is involved in the believing appropriation of the divine
facts which it symbolizes, whatever is realized when baptism
fully corresponds to its original design. So @Ga
3:27; language holding good only of those in whom the
inward living communion and outward baptism coalesce.
"Saved us" applies fully to those truly regenerate
alone; in a general sense it may include many who, though
put within reach of salvation, shall not finally be saved.
"Regeneration" occurs only once more in New
Testament, @Mt
19:28, that is, the new birth of the heaven and earth
at Christ's second coming to renew all material things, the
human body included, when the creature, now travailing in
labor-throes to the birth, shall be delivered from the
bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the
children of God. Regeneration, which now begins in the
believer's soul, shall then be extended to his body, and
thence to all creation.
and renewing--not
"the laver ('washing') of renewing," but
"and BY the renewing," &c. following
"saved us." To make "renewing of the Holy
Ghost" follow "the laver" would destroy the
balance of the clauses of the sentence, and would make
baptism the seal, not only of regeneration, but also
of the subsequent process of progressive
sanctification ("renewing of the Holy Ghost"). Regeneration
is a thing once for all done; renewing is a process
daily proceeding. As "the washing," or
"laver," is connected with "regeneration,"
so the "renewing of the Holy Ghost" is connected
with "shed on us abundantly" (@Tit
3:6).
6. Which--the Holy Ghost.
he shed--Greek,
"poured out"; not only on the Church in general at
Pentecost, but also "on us" individually. This pouring
out of the Spirit comprehends the grace received before,
in, and subsequently to, baptism.
abundantly--Greek,
"richly" (@Col
3:16).
through Jesus Christ--the
channel and Mediator of the gift of the Holy Ghost.
our Saviour--immediately;
as the Father is mediately "our Saviour." The
Father is the author of our salvation and saves us by Jesus
Christ.
7. That, &c.--the purpose which He aimed at in
having "saved us" (@Tit
3:5), namely, "That being (having been) justified (accounted
righteous through faith at our 'regeneration,' and made
righteous by the daily 'renewing of the Holy Ghost') by
His grace (as opposed to works, @Tit
3:5) we should be made heirs."
his grace--Greek,
"the grace of the former," that is, God (@Tit
3:4 Ro 5:15).
heirs--(@Ga
3:29).
according to the hope of
eternal life--@Tit
1:2, and also the position of the Greek words,
confirm English Version, that is, agreeably to
the hope of eternal life; the eternal inheritance fully
satisfying the hope. BENGEL and ELLICOTT explain it, "heirs
of eternal life, in the way of hope," that is, not
yet in actual possession. Such a blessed hope, which
once was not possessed, will lead a Christian to practice
holiness and meekness toward others, the lesson especially
needed by the Cretans.
8. Greek, "faithful is the saying."
A formula peculiar to the Pastoral Epistles. Here "the
saying" is the statement (@Tit
3:4-7) as to the gratuitousness of God's gift of
salvation. Answering to the "Amen."
these things,
&c.--Greek, "concerning these things
(the truths dwelt on, @Tit
3:4-7; not as English Version, what follow), I
will that thou affirm (insist) strongly and persistently,
in order that they who have believed God (the Greek
for 'believed in God' is different, @Joh
14:1. 'They who have learnt to credit God' in what He
saith) may be careful ('Solicitously sedulous'; diligence
is necessary) to maintain (literally, 'to set before
themselves so as to sustain') good works." No longer
applying their care to "unprofitable" and
unpractical speculations (@Tit
3:9).
These things--These
results of doctrine ("good works") are "good
and profitable unto men," whereas no such practical
results flow from "foolish questions." So GROTIUS
and WIESINGER. But ALFORD, to avoid the tautology,
"these (good works) are good unto men," explains,
"these truths" (@Tit
3:4-7).
9. avoid--stand aloof from. Same Greek, as in
@2Ti
2:16; see on 2Ti 2:16.
foolish--Greek,
"insipid"; producing no moral fruit. "Vain
talkers."
genealogies--akin to
the "fables" (see on 1Ti 1:4). Not so much direct
heresy as yet is here referred to, as profitless discussions
about genealogies of aeons, etc . . . which
ultimately led to Gnosticism. Synagogue discourses were
termed daraschoth, that is, "discussions."
Compare "disputer of this world (Greek,
'dispensation')."
strivings about the law--about
the authority of the "commandments of men," which
they sought to confirm by the law (@Tit
1:14; see on 1Ti 1:7), and about the mystical meaning of
the various parts of the law in connection with the
"genealogies."
10. heretic--Greek "heresy,"
originally meant a division resulting from individual
self-will; the individual doing and teaching what he chose,
independent of the teaching and practice of the Church. In
course of time it came to mean definitely "heresy"
in the modern sense; and in the later Epistles it has almost
assumed this meaning. The heretics of Crete, when Titus was
there, were in doctrine followers of their own self-willed
"questions" reprobated in @Tit
3:9, and immoral in practice.
reject--decline,
avoid; not formal excommunication, but, "have nothing
more to do with him," either in admonition or
intercourse.
11. is . . . subverted--"is become
perverse."
condemned of himself--He
cannot say, no one told him better: continuing the same
after frequent admonition, he is self-condemned. "He
sinneth" wilfully against knowledge.
12. When I shall send--have sent.
Artemas or Tychicus--to
supply thy place in Crete. Artemas is said to have been
subsequently bishop of Lystra. Tychicus was sent twice by
Paul from Rome to Lesser Asia in his first imprisonment
(which shows how well qualified he was to become Titus'
successor in Crete); @Eph
6:21; and in his second, @2Ti
4:12. Tradition makes him subsequently bishop of
Chalcedon, in Bithynia.
Nicopolis--"the
city of victory," called so from the battle of Actium,
in Epirus. This Epistle was probably written from Corinth in
the autumn. Paul purposed a journey through Ętolia and
Acarnania, into Epirus, and there "to winter." See
my Introduction to the Pastoral Epistles.
13. Bring . . . on their journey--Enable
them to proceed forward by supplying necessaries for their
journey.
Zenas--the contracted
form of Zenodorus.
lawyer--a Jewish
"scribe," who, when converted, still retained the
title from his former occupation. A civil lawyer.
Apollos--with Zenas,
probably the bearers of this Epistle. In @1Co
16:12, Apollos is mentioned as purposing to visit
Corinth; his now being at Corinth (on the theory of Paul
being at Corinth when he wrote) accords with this purpose.
Crete would be on his way either to Palestine or his native
place, Alexandria. Paul and Apollos thus appear in beautiful
harmony in that very city where their names had been
formerly the watchword of unchristian party work. It was to
avoid this party rivalry that Apollos formerly was unwilling
to visit Corinth though Paul desired him. HIPPOLYTUS
mentions Zenas as one of the Seventy, and afterwards bishop
of Diospolis.
14. And . . . also--Greek, "But
. . . also." Not only thou, but let
others also of "our" fellow believers (or
"whom we have gained over at Crete") with thee.
for necessary uses--to
supply the necessary wants of Christian missionaries and
brethren, according as they stand in need in their journeys
for the Lord's cause. Compare @Tit
1:8, "a lover of hospitality."
15. Greet--"Salute them that love us in
the faith." All at Crete had not this love
rooted in faith, the true bond of fellowship. A
salutation peculiar to this Epistle, such as no forger would
have used.
Grace--Greek,
"The grace," namely, of God.
with you all--not that
the Epistle is addressed to all the Cretan
Christians, but Titus would naturally impart it to his
flock.
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