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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871)
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THE PASTORAL EPISTLES OF PAUL THE APOSTLE TO
TIMOTHY AND TITUS
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. IRENÆUS
[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; 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; 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 Phœnician
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 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 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 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 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),
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).
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 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 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 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.
CHAPTER 2
1Ti 2:1-15.
PUBLIC
WORSHIP.
DIRECTION AS TO
INTERCESSIONS FOR
ALL
MEN, SINCE
CHRIST
IS A
RANSOM FOR
ALL.
THE
DUTIES OF
MEN AND
WOMEN
RESPECTIVELY IN
RESPECT TO
PUBLIC
PRAYER.
WOMAN'S
SUBJECTION;
HER
SPHERE OF
DUTY.
1. therefore--taking up again the general subject of the Epistle in
continuation
(2Ti 2:1).
"What I have therefore to say to thee by way of a charge
(1Ti 1:3, 18),
is," &c.
that, first of all . . . be made--ALFORD takes it, "I exhort first of all to make."
"First of all," doubtless, is to be connected with "I exhort"; what I
begin with (for special reasons), is . . . As the
destruction of Jerusalem drew near, the Jews (including those at
Ephesus) were seized with the dream of freedom from every yoke; and so
virtually "'blasphemed" (compare
1Ti 1:20)
God's name by "speaking evil of dignities"
(1Ti 6:1;
2Pe 2:10;
Jude 8).
Hence Paul, in opposition, gives prominence to the injunction that
prayer be made for all men, especially for magistrates
and kings
(Tit 3:1-3)
[OLSHAUSEN]. Some professing Christians looked
down on all not Christians, as doomed to perdition; but Paul says
all men are to be prayed for, as Christ died for all
(1Ti 2:4-6).
supplications--a term implying the suppliant's sense of need, and of his own insufficiency.
prayers--implying devotion.
intercessions--properly the coming near to God with childlike
confidence, generally in behalf of another. The accumulation of
terms implies prayer in its every form and aspect, according to all the
relations implied in it.
2. For kings--an effectual confutation of the adversaries who accused
the Christians of disaffection to the ruling powers
(Ac 17:7;
Ro 13:1-7).
all . . . in authority--literally, "in eminence"; in stations of
eminence. The "quiet" of Christians was often more dependent on
subordinate rulers, than on the supreme king; hence, "all . . . in
authority" are to be prayed for.
that we may lead--that we may be blessed with such good government
as to lead . . . ; or rather, as Greek, "to pass" or "spend."
The prayers of Christians for the government bring down from heaven
peace and order in a state.
quiet--not troubled from without.
peaceable--"tranquil"; not troubled from within
[OLSHAUSEN]. "He is peaceable (Greek) who makes no
disturbance; he is quiet (Greek) who is himself free from
disturbance" [TITTMANN].
in all godliness--"in all (possible . . . requisite)
piety" [ALFORD]. A distinct Greek word,
1Ti 2:10,
expresses "godliness."
honesty--Greek, "gravity"
(Tit 2:2, 7),
"decorum," or propriety of conduct. As "piety" is in relation to
God, "gravity" is propriety of behavior among men. In the Old
Testament the Jews were commanded to pray for their heathen rulers
(Ezr 6:10;
Jer 29:7).
The Jews, by Augustus' order, offered a lamb daily for the Roman
emperor, till near the destruction of Jerusalem. The Jewish Zealots,
instigated by Eleazar, caused this custom to cease
[JOSEPHUS, Wars of the Jews, 2.17], whence
the war originated, according to JOSEPHUS.
3. this--praying for all men.
in the sight of God--not merely before men, as if it were their
favor that we sought
(2Co 8:21).
our Saviour--a title appropriate to the matter in hand. He who is
"our Saviour" is willing that all should be saved
(1Ti 2:4;
Ro 5:18);
therefore we should meet the will of God in behalf of others, by
praying for the salvation of all men. More would be converted if we
would pray more. He has actually saved us who believe, being
"our Saviour." He is willing that all should be saved, even
those who do not as yet believe, if they will believe (compare
1Ti 4:10;
Tit 2:11).
4. "Imitate God." Since He wishes that all should be saved, do you
also wish it; and if you wish it, pray for it. For prayer is the
instrument of effecting such things
[CHRYSOSTOM]. Paul does not say, "He
wishes to save all"; for then he would have saved all in matter
of fact; but "will have all men to be saved," implies the possibility of
man's accepting it (through God's prevenient grace) or rejecting it
(through man's own perversity). Our prayers ought to include all, as God's grace included all.
to come--They are not forced.
unto the knowledge--Greek, "the full knowledge" or
"recognition" (See on
1Co 13:12;
Php 1:9).
the truth--the saving truth as it is in, and by, Jesus
(Joh 17:3, 17).
5. For there is one God--God's unity in essence and
purpose is a proof of His comprehending all His human children alike
(created in His image) in His offer of grace (compare the same argument
from His unity,
Ro 3:30;
Ga 3:20);
therefore all are to be prayed for.
1Ti 2:4
is proved from
1Ti 2:5;
1Ti 2:1,
from 1Ti 2:4.
The one God is common to all
(Isa 45:22;
Ac 17:26).
The one Mediator is mediator between God and all men potentially
(Ro 3:29;
Eph 4:5, 6;
Heb 8:6; 9:15; 12:24).
They who have not this one God by one Mediator, have none: literally, a
"go-between." The Greek order is not "and one mediator,"
but "one mediator also between . . . While God will
have all men to be saved by knowing God and the Mediator, there is a
legitimate, holy order in the exercise of that will wherewith men ought
to receive it. All mankind constitute, as it were, ONE
MAN before God [BENGEL].
the man--rather "man," absolutely and genetically: not a mere
individual man: the Second Head of humanity, representing and
embodying in Himself the whole human race and nature. There is no
"the" in the Greek. This epithet is thus the strongest corroboration
of his argument, namely, that Christ's mediation affects the whole race,
since there is but the one Mediator, designed as the Representative Man
for all men alike (compare
Ro 5:15;
1Co 8:6;
2Co 5:19;
Col 2:14).
His being "man" was necessary to His being a Mediator, sympathizing
with us through experimental knowledge of our nature
(Isa 50:4;
Heb 2:14; 4:15).
Even in nature, almost all blessings are conveyed to us from God, not
immediately, but through the mediation of various agents. The effectual
intercession of Moses for Israel
(Nu 14:13-19,
and De 9:1-29);
of Abraham for Abimelech
(Ge 20:7);
of Job for his friends
(Job 42:10),
the mediation being PRESCRIBED by God while
declaring His purposes of forgiveness: all prefigure the grand
mediation for all by the one Mediator. On the other hand,
1Ti 3:16
asserts that He was also God.
6. gave himself--
(Tit 2:14).
Not only the Father gave Him for us
(Joh 3:16);
but the Son gave Himself
(Php 2:5-8).
ransom--properly of a captive slave. Man was the captive slave
of Satan, sold under sin. He was unable to ransom himself, because
absolute obedience is due to God, and therefore no act of ours can
satisfy for the least offense.
Le 25:48
allowed one sold captive to be redeemed by one of his brethren. The Son
of God, therefore, became man in order that, being made like unto us in
all things, sin only excepted, as our elder brother He should redeem us
(Mt 20:28;
Eph 1:7;
1Pe 1:18, 19).
The Greek implies not merely ransom, but a
substituted or equivalent ransom: the Greek
preposition, "anti," implying reciprocity and vicarious
substitution.
for all--Greek, "in behalf of all": not merely for a
privileged few; compare
1Ti 2:1:
the argument for praying in behalf of all is given here.
to be testified--Greek, "the testimony (that which was to be
testified of,
1Jo 5:8-11)
in its own due times," or seasons, that is, in the times
appointed by God for its being testified of
(1Ti 6:15;
Tit 1:3).
The oneness of the Mediator, involving the universality of redemption
(which faith, however, alone appropriates), was the great subject of
Christian testimony [ALFORD]
(1Co 1:6; 2:1;
2Th 1:10).
7. Whereunto--For the giving of which testimony.
I am ordained--literally, "I was set": the same Greek, as
"putting me," &c.
(1Ti 1:12).
preacher--literally, "herald"
(1Co 1:21; 9:27; 15:11;
2Ti 1:11;
Tit 1:3).
He recurs to himself, as in
1Ti 1:16,
in himself a living pattern or announcement of the
Gospel, so here "a herald and teacher of (it to) the Gentiles"
(Ga 2:9;
Eph 3:1-12;
Col 1:23).
The universality of his commission is an appropriate assertion here,
where he is arguing to prove that prayers are to be made "for
all men"
(1Ti 2:1).
I speak the truth . . . and lie not--a strong asseveration of his
universal commission, characteristic of the ardor of the apostle,
exposed to frequent conflict
(Ro 11:1;
2Co 11:13).
in faith and verity--rather, "in the faith and the
truth." The sphere in which his ministry was appointed to be exercised
was the faith and the truth
(1Ti 2:4):
the Gospel truth, the subject matter of the faith
[WIESINGER].
8. I will--The active wish, or desire, is meant.
that men--rather as Greek, "that the men," as
distinguished from "the women," to whom he has something different to
say from what he said to the men
(1Ti 2:9-12;
1Co 11:14, 15; 14:34, 35).
The emphasis, however, is not on this, but on the precept of
praying, resumed from
1Ti 2:1.
everywhere--Greek, "in every place," namely, of public
prayer. Fulfilling
Mal 1:11,
"In every place . . . from the rising of the sun even
unto the going down of the same . . . incense shall be
offered unto My name"; and Jesus' words,
Mt 18:20;
Joh 4:21, 23.
lifting up holy hands--The early Christians turned up their palms
towards heaven, as those craving help do. So also Solomon
(1Ki 8:22;
Ps 141:2).
The Jews washed their hands before prayer
(Ps 26:6).
Paul figuratively (compare
Job 17:9;
Jas 4:8)
uses language alluding to this custom here: so
Isa 1:15, 16.
The Greek for "holy" means hands which have committed no
impiety, and observed every sacred duty. This (or at least
the contrite desire to be so) is a needful qualification for effectual
prayer
(Ps 24:3, 4).
without wrath--putting it away
(Mt 5:23, 24; 6:15).
doubting--rather, "disputing," as the Greek is translated in
Php 2:14.
Such things hinder prayer
(Lu 9:46;
Ro 14:1;
1Pe 3:7).
BENGEL supports English Version (compare an
instance,
2Ki 7:2;
Mt 14:31;
Mr 11:22-24;
Jas 1:6).
9, 10. The context requires that we understand these directions as
to women, in relation to their deportment in public worship, though
the rules will hold good on other occasions also.
in modest apparel--"in seemly guise"
[ELLICOTT]. The adjective means properly.
orderly, decorous, becoming; the noun in secular writings means
conduct, bearing. But here "apparel." Women are apt to love fine
dress; and at Ephesus the riches of some
(1Ti 6:17)
would lead them to dress luxuriously. The Greek in
Tit 2:3
is a more general term meaning "deportment."
shamefacedness--TRENCH spells this word
according to its true derivation, "shamefastness" (that which is made
fast by an honorable shame); as "steadfastness" (compare
1Ti 2:11, 12).
sobriety--"self-restraint"
[ALFORD]. Habitual inner self-government
[TRENCH]. I prefer
ELLICOTT'S translation, "sober-mindedness": the
well-balanced state of mind arising from habitual self-restraint.
with--Greek, "in."
braided hair--literally, "plaits," that is, plaited hair: probably
with the "gold and pearls" intertwined
(1Pe 3:3).
Such gaud is characteristic of the spiritual harlot
(Re 17:4).
10. professing--Greek, "promising": engaging to follow.
with good works--The Greek preposition is not the same as in
1Ti 2:9;
"by means of," or "through good works." Their adorning is to be
effected by means of good works: not that they are to be clothed
in, or with, them
(Eph 2:10).
Works, not words in public, is their province
(1Ti 2:8, 11, 12;
1Pe 3:1).
Works are often mentioned in the Pastoral Epistles in order to
oppose the loose living, combined with the loose doctrine, of the false
teachers. The discharge of everyday duties is honored with the
designation, "good works."
11. learn--not "teach"
(1Ti 2:12;
1Co 14:34).
She should not even put questions in the public assembly
(1Co 14:35).
with all subjection--not "usurping authority"
(1Ti 2:12).
She might teach, but not in public
(Ac 18:26).
Paul probably wrote this Epistle from Corinth, where the precept
(1Co 14:34)
was in force.
12. usurp authority--"to lord it over the man"
[ALFORD], literally, "to be an autocrat."
13. For--reason of the precept; the original order of creation.
Adam . . . first--before Eve, who was created
for him
(1Co 11:8, 9).
14. Adam was not deceived--as Eve was deceived by the
serpent; but was persuaded by his wife.
Ge 3:17,
"hearkened unto . . . voice of . . . wife." But in
Ge 3:13,
Eve says, "The serpent beguiled me." Being more easily deceived,
she more easily deceives [BENGEL],
(2Co 11:3).
Last in being, she was first in sin--indeed, she alone was
deceived. The subtle serpent knew that she was "the weaker
vessel"
(1Pe 3:7).
He therefore tempted her, not Adam. She yielded to the temptations of
sense and the deceits of Satan; he, to conjugal love.
Hence, in the order of God's judicial sentence, the serpent, the prime
offender, stands first; the woman, who was deceived, next; and the man,
persuaded by his wife, last
(Ge 3:14-19). In
Ro 5:12,
Adam is represented as the first transgressor; but there no reference
is made to Eve, and Adam is regarded as the head of the sinning race.
Hence, as here,
1Ti 2:11,
in
Ge 3:16,
woman's "subjection" is represented as the consequence of her being
deceived.
being deceived--The oldest manuscripts read the compound
Greek verb for the simple, "Having been seduced by
deceit": implying how completely Satan succeeded in
deceiving her.
was in the transgression--Greek, "came to be in the
transgression": became involved in the existing state of transgression,
literally, "the going beyond a command"; breach of a positive precept
(Ro 4:15).
15. be saved in childbearing--Greek, "in (literally,
'through') (her, literally, 'the') child-bearing."
Through, or by, is often so used to express not the
means of her salvation, but the circumstances
AMIDST which it has place. Thus
1Co 3:15,
"He . . . shall be saved: yet so as by (literally,
'through,' that is, amidst) fire": in spite of the fiery ordeal
which he has necessarily to pass through, he shall be saved. So
here, "In spite of the trial of childbearing which she passes
through (as her portion of the curse,
Ge 3:16,
'in sorrow shalt thou bring forth children'), she shall be
saved." Moreover, I think it is implied indirectly that the very
curse will be turned into a condition favorable to her salvation, by
her faithfully performing her part in doing and suffering what God has
assigned to her, namely, child-bearing and home duties,
her sphere, as distinguished from public teaching, which is not
hers, but man's
(1Ti 2:11, 12).
In this home sphere, not ordinarily in one of active duty for advancing
the kingdom of God, which contradicts the position assigned to her by
God, she will be saved on the same terms as all others, namely, by
living faith. Some think that there is a reference to the Incarnation
"through THE child-bearing" (Greek), the
bearing of the child Jesus. Doubtless this is the ground of women's
child-bearing in general becoming to them a blessing, instead of
a curse; just as in the original prophecy
(Ge 3:15, 16)
the promise of "the Seed of the woman" (the Saviour) stands in closest
connection with the woman's being doomed to "sorrow" in "bringing forth
children," her very child-bearing, though in sorrow,
being the function assigned to her by God whereby the Saviour was born.
This may be an ulterior reference of the Holy Spirit in this verse; but
the primary reference required by the context is the one above given.
"She shall be saved ([though] with childbearing)," that is, though
suffering her part of the primeval curse in childbearing; just as a man
shall be saved, though having to bear his part, namely, the sweat of
the brow.
if they, &c.--"if the women (plural, taken out of 'the woman,'
1Ti 2:14,
which is put for the whole sex) continue," or more literally,
"shall (be found at the judgment to) have continued."
faith and charity--the essential way to salvation
(1Ti 1:5).
Faith is in relation to God. Charity, to our fellow man.
Sobriety, to one's self.
sobriety--"sober-mindedness" (see on
1Ti 2:9,
as contrasted with the unseemly forwardness reproved in
1Ti 2:11).
Mental receptivity and activity in family life were recognized in
Christianity as the destiny of woman. One reason alleged here by Paul,
is the greater danger of self-deception in the weaker sex, and the
spread of errors arising from it, especially in a class of addresses in
which sober reflectiveness is least in exercise
[NEANDER]. The case
(Ac 21:9)
was doubtless in private, not in public.
CHAPTER 3
1Ti 3:1-16.
RULES AS TO
BISHOPS
(OVERSEERS) AND
DEACONS.
THE
CHURCH, AND THE
GOSPEL
MYSTERY
NOW
REVEALED TO
IT,
ARE THE
END OF
ALL
SUCH
RULES.
1. Translate as Greek, "Faithful is the saying." A needful
preface to what follows: for the office of a bishop or overseer in
Paul's day, attended as it was with hardship and often persecution,
would not seem to the world generally a desirable and "good work."
desire--literally, "stretch one's self forward to grasp"; "aim at":
a distinct Greek verb from that for "desireth." What one does
voluntarily is more esteemed than what he does when asked
(1Co 16:15).
This is utterly distinct from ambitious desires after office in the
Church.
(Jas 3:1).
bishop--overseer: as yet identical with "presbyter"
(Ac 20:17, 28;
Tit 1:5-7).
good work--literally, "honorable work." Not the honor associated
with it, but the work, is the prominent thought
(Ac 15:38;
Php 2:30;
compare
2Ti 4:5).
He who aims at the office must remember the high qualifications needed
for the due discharge of its functions.
2. The existence of Church organization and presbyters at Ephesus is
presupposed
(1Ti 5:17, 19).
The institution of Church widows
(1Ti 5:3-25)
accords with this. The directions here to Timothy, the president or
apostolic delegate, are as to filling up vacancies among the
bishops and deacons, or adding to their number. New churches in
the neighborhood also would require presbyters and deacons. Episcopacy
was adopted in apostolic times as the most expedient form of
government, being most nearly in accordance with Jewish institutions,
and so offering the less obstruction through Jewish prejudices to the
progress of Christianity. The synagogue was governed by presbyters,
"elders"
(Ac 4:8; 24:1),
called also bishops or overseers. Three among them
presided as "rulers of the synagogue," answering to "bishops" in the
modern sense [LIGHTFOOT, Hebrew and Talmudic
Exercitations], and one among them took the lead. AMBROSE (in The Duties of the Clergy [2.13], as
also BINGHAM [Ecclesiastical Antiquities,
2.11]) says, "They who are now called bishops were originally called
apostles. But those who ruled the Church after the death of the
apostles had not the testimony of miracles, and were in many respects
inferior. Therefore they thought it not decent to assume to themselves
the name of apostles; but dividing the names, they left to presbyters
the name of the presbytery, and they themselves were called
bishops." "Presbyter" refers to the rank;
"bishop," to the office or function. Timothy (though not having
the name) exercised the power at Ephesus then, which bishops in the
modern sense more recently exercised.
blameless--"unexceptionable"; giving no just handle for blame.
husband of one wife--confuting the celibacy of Rome's
priesthood. Though the Jews practiced polygamy, yet as he is writing
as to a Gentile Church, and as polygamy was never allowed among even
laymen in the Church, the ancient interpretation that the prohibition
here is against polygamy in a candidate bishop is not correct. It must,
therefore, mean that, though laymen might lawfully marry again,
candidates for the episcopate or presbytery were better to have been
married only once. As in
1Ti 5:9,
"wife of one man," implies a woman married but once; so "husband of one
wife" here must mean the same. The feeling which prevailed among the
Gentiles, as well as the Jews (compare as to Anna,
Lu 2:36, 37),
against a second marriage would, on the ground of expediency and
conciliation in matters indifferent and not involving compromise of
principle, account for Paul's prohibition here in the case of one in so
prominent a sphere as a bishop or a deacon. Hence the stress that is
laid in the context on the repute in which the candidate for
orders is held among those over whom he is to preside
(Tit 1:16).
The Council of Laodicea and the apostolic canons discountenanced second
marriages, especially in the case of candidates for ordination. Of
course second marriage being lawful, the undesirableness of it
holds good only under special circumstances. It is implied here also,
that he who has a wife and virtuous family, is to be preferred to a
bachelor; for he who is himself bound to discharge the domestic duties
mentioned here, is likely to be more attractive to those who have
similar ties, for he teaches them not only by precept, but also by
example
(1Ti 3:4, 5).
The Jews teach, a priest should be neither unmarried nor childless,
lest he be unmerciful [BENGEL]. So in the
synagogue, "no one shall offer up prayer in public, unless he be
married" [in Colbo, ch. 65; VITRINGA,
Synagogue and Temple].
vigilant--literally, "sober"; ever on the watch, as sober men alone
can be; keenly alive, so as to foresee what ought to be done
(1Th 5:6-8).
sober--sober-minded.
of good behaviour--Greek, "orderly." "Sober" refers to the
inward mind; "orderly," to the outward behavior, tone, look,
gait, dress. The new man bears somewhat of a sacred festival character,
incompatible with all confusion, disorder, excess, violence, laxity,
assumption, harshness, and meanness
(Php 4:8)
[BENGEL].
apt to teach--
(2Ti 2:24).
3. Not given to wine--The Greek includes besides
this, not indulging in the brawling, violent conduct towards
others, which proceeds from being given to wine. The opposite of
"patient" or (Greek) "forbearing," reasonable to others (see on
Php 4:5).
no striker--with either hand or tongue: not as some teachers
pretending a holy zeal
(2Co 11:20),
answering to "not a brawler" or fighter (compare
1Ki 22:24;
Ne 13:25;
Isa 58:4;
Ac 23:2;
2Ti 2:24, 25).
not covetous--Greek, "not a lover of money," whether he have
much or little
(Tit 1:7).
4. ruleth--Greek, "presiding over."
his own house--children and servants, as contrasted with "the church"
(house) of God
(1Ti 3:5, 15)
which he may be called on to preside over.
having his children--rather as Greek, "having children (who are)
in subjection"
(Tit 1:6).
gravity--propriety: reverent modesty on the part of the
children [ALFORD]. The fact that he has
children who are in subjection to him in all gravity, is the
recommendation in his favor as one likely to rule well the Church.
5. For--Greek, "But."
the church--rather, "a church" or congregation. How shall he who
cannot perform the lesser function, perform the greater and more
difficult?
6. not a novice--one just converted. This proves the Church of
Ephesus was established now for some time. The absence of this rule in
the Epistle to Titus, accords with the recent planting of the Church at
Crete. Greek, "neophyte," literally, "a young plant";
luxuriantly verdant
(Ro 6:5; 11:17;
1Co 3:6).
The young convert has not yet been disciplined and matured by
afflictions and temptations. Contrast
Ac 21:16,
"an old disciple."
lifted up with pride--Greek, literally, "wrapt in smoke," so that,
inflated with self-conceit and exaggerated ideas of his own importance,
he cannot see himself or others in the true light
(1Ti 6:4;
2Ti 3:4).
condemnation of the devil--into the same condemnation as Satan fell
into
(1Ti 3:7;
2Ti 2:26).
Pride was the cause of Satan's condemnation
(Job 38:15;
Isa 14:12-15;
Joh 12:31; 16:11;
2Pe 2:4;
Jude 6).
It cannot mean condemnation or accusation on the part of the
devil. The devil may bring a reproach on men
(1Ti 3:7),
but he cannot bring them into condemnation, for he does not
judge, but is judged [BENGEL].
7. a good report--Greek, "testimony." So Paul was
influenced by the good report given of Timothy to choose him as his
companion
(Ac 16:2).
of them which are without--from the as yet unconverted Gentiles around
(1Co 5:12;
Col 4:5;
1Th 4:12),
that they may be the more readily won to the Gospel
(1Pe 2:12),
and that the name of Christ may be glorified. Not even the former life
of a bishop should be open to reproach [BENGEL].
reproach and the snare of the devil--reproach of men
(1Ti 5:14)
proving the occasion of his falling into the snare of the devil
(1Ti 6:9;
Mt 22:15;
2Ti 2:26).
The reproach continually surrounding him for former sins might
lead him into the snare of becoming as bad as his reputation.
Despair of recovering reputation might, in a weak moment, lead
some into recklessness of living
(Jer 18:12).
The reason why only moral qualities of a general kind are specified is,
he presupposes in candidates for a bishopric the special gifts of the
Spirit
(1Ti 4:14)
and true faith, which he desires to be evidenced outwardly; also he
requires qualifications in a bishop not so indispensable in
others.
8. The deacons were chosen by the voice of the people.
CYPRIAN
[Epistle, 2.5] says that good bishops never departed from the old
custom of consulting the people. The deacons answer to the chazzan of
the synagogue: the attendant ministers, or subordinate coadjutors of
the presbyter (as Timothy himself was to Paul,
1Ti 4:6;
Phm 13;
and John Mark,
Ac 13:5).
Their duty was to read the Scriptures in the Church, to instruct the
catechumens in Christian truths, to assist the presbyters at the
sacraments, to receive oblations, and to preach and instruct. As the
"chazzan" covered and uncovered the ark in the synagogue, containing
the law, so the deacon in the ancient Church put the covering on the
communion table. (See CHRYSOSTOM [19],
Homily on Acts; THEOPHYLACT on Luke 19; and
BALSAMAN on Canon 22, Council of
Laodicea). The appointing of "the seven" in
Ac 6:1-7
is perhaps not meant to describe the first appointment of the
deacons of the Church. At least the chazzan previously suggested
the similar order of deacons.
double-tongued--literally, "of double speech"; saying one thing
to this person, and another to that person
[THEODORET]. The extensive personal intercourse
that deacons would have with the members of the Church might prove a
temptation to such a fault. Others explain it, "Saying one thing,
thinking another"
(Pr 20:19;
Ga 2:13).
I prefer the former.
not greedy of filthy lucre--All gain is filthy (literally,
"base") which is set before a man as a by-end in his work for God
[ALFORD]
(1Pe 5:2).
The deacon's office of collecting and distributing alms would render
this a necessary qualification.
9. the mystery of the faith--holding the faith, which to the
natural man remains a mystery, but which has been revealed by the
Spirit to them
(Ro 16:25;
1Co 2:7-10),
in a pure conscience
(1Ti 1:5, 19).
("Pure," that is, in which nothing base or foreign is intermixed
[TITTMANN]). Though deacons were not ordinarily
called on to preach (Stephen and Philip are not exceptions to this,
since it was as evangelists, rather than as deacons, they
preached), yet as being office-bearers in the Church, and having much
intercourse with all the members, they especially needed to have this
characteristic, which every Christian ought to have.
10. "And moreover," &c. [ALFORD].
be proved--not by a period of probation, but by a searching inquiry,
conducted by Timothy, the ordaining president
(1Ti 5:22),
whether they be "blameless"; then when found so, "let them act as
deacons."
blameless--Greek, "unexceptionable"; as the result of public
investigation unaccused [TITTMANN].
11. their wives--rather, "the women," that is, the deaconesses. For there is no reason that special rules should be laid down as to the
wives of the deacons, and not also as to the wives of the bishops or
overseers. Moreover, if the wives of the deacons were meant, there seems
no reason for the omission of "their" (not in the Greek). Also the
Greek for "even so" (the same as for "likewise,"
1Ti 3:8,
and "in like manner,"
1Ti 2:9),
denotes a transition to another class of persons. Further, there were
doubtless deaconesses at Ephesus, such as Phœbe was at Cenchrea
(Ro 16:1,
"servant," Greek, "deaconess"), yet no mention is made of them
in this Epistle if not here; whereas, supposing them to be meant here,
the third chapter embraces in due proportion all the persons in the
service of the Church. Naturally after specifying the qualifications of
the deacon, Paul passes to those of the kindred office, the deaconess.
"Grave" occurs in the case of both. "Not slanderers" here, answers to
"not double-tongued" in the deacons; so "not false accusers"
(Tit 2:3).
"Sober" here answers to "not given to much wine," in the case of the
deacons
(1Ti 3:8).
Thus it appears he requires the same qualifications in female deacons
as in deacons, only with such modifications as the difference of sex
suggested. PLINY, in his celebrated letter to
Trajan, calls them "female ministers."
faithful in all things--of life as well as faith. Trustworthy in
respect to the alms committed to them and their other functions,
answering to "not greedy of filthy lucre,"
1Ti 3:8,
in the case of the deacons.
12. husbands of one wife--(See on
1Ti 3:2).
ruling their children--There is no article in the Greek,
"ruling children"; implying that he regarded the having children to
rule as a qualification
(1Ti 3:4;
Tit 1:6).
their own houses--as distinguished from "the Church of God"
(see on
1Ti 3:5).
In the case of the deacons, as in that of the bishops, he mentions the
first condition of receiving office, rather than the special
qualifications for its discharge. The practical side of Christianity is
the one most dwelt on in the Pastoral Epistles, in opposition to the
heretical teachers; moreover, as the miraculous gifts began to be
withdrawn, the safest criterion of efficiency would be the previous
moral character of the candidate, the disposition and talent for the
office being presupposed. So in
Ac 6:3,
a similar criterion was applied, "Look ye out among you seven men of
honest report." Less stress is laid on personal dignity in the case
of the deacon than in that of the bishop (compare Notes, see on
1Ti 3:2,3).
13. purchase to themselves a good degree--literally, "are
acquiring . . . a . . . step."
Understood by many as "a higher step," that is, promotion to the higher
office of presbyter. But ambition of rising seems hardly the motive to
faithfulness which the apostle would urge; besides, it would require
the comparative, "a better degree." Then the past aorist
participle, "they that used the office of deacon well," implies that
the present verb, "are acquiring to themselves boldness,"
is the result of the completed action of using the diaconate well.
Also, Paul would not probably hold out to every deacon the prospect of
promotion to the presbytery in reward of his service. The idea of
moving upwards in Church offices was as yet unknown (compare
Ro 12:7,
&c.; 1Co 12:4-11).
Moreover, there seems little connection between reference to a higher
Church rank and the words "great boldness." Therefore, what those who
have faithfully discharged the diaconate acquire for themselves is "a
good standing-place" [ALFORD] (a well-grounded
hope of salvation) against the day of judgment,
1Ti 6:19;
1Co 3:13, 14
(the figurative meaning of "degree" or "step," being the degree of
worth which one has obtained in the eye of God
[WIESINGER]); and boldness (resting on that
standing-place"), as well for preaching and admonishing others
now
(Eph 6:19;
a firm standing forth for the truth against error), as also especially
in relation to God their coming Judge, before whom they may be boldly
confident
(Ac 24:16;
1Jo 2:28; 3:21; 4:17;
Heb 4:16).
in the faith--rather as Greek, "in faith," that is, boldness
resting on their own faith.
which is in Christ Jesus--resting in Christ Jesus.
14. write I . . . hoping--that is, "though I hope to
come unto thee shortly"
(1Ti 4:13).
As his hope was not very confident
(1Ti 3:15),
he provides for Timothy's lengthened superintendence by giving him the
preceding rules to guide him. He now proceeds to give more general
instructions to him as an evangelist, having a "gift" committed to him
(1Ti 4:14).
shortly--Greek, "sooner," namely, than is presupposed in the
preceding directions given to him.
See my
Introduction
on this verse. This verse best suits the theory that this First Epistle
was not written after Paul's visit and departure from Ephesus
(Ac 19:1-20:38)
when he had resolved to winter at Corinth after passing the summer in
Macedonia
(1Co 16:6),
but after his first imprisonment at Rome
(Ac 28:17-31);
probably at Corinth, where he might have some thoughts of going on to
Epirus before returning to Ephesus [BIRKS].
15. But if I tarry long--before coming to thee.
that--that is, I write
(1Ti 3:14)
"that thou mayest know," &c.
behave thyself--in directing the Church at Ephesus
(1Ti 4:11).
the house of God--the Church
(Heb 3:2, 5, 6; 10:21;
1Pe 4:17;
1Co 3:16,
"the temple of God";
Eph 2:22).
which is--that is, inasmuch as it is.
the church--"the congregation." The fact that the sphere of thy
functions is "the congregation of the living God" (who is the ever
living Master of the house,
2Ti 2:19, 20, 21),
is the strongest motive to faithfulness in this behavior as
president of a department of the house." The living God
forms a striking contrast to the lifeless idol, Diana of Ephesus
(1Th 1:9).
He is the fountain of "truth," and the foundation of our "trust"
(1Ti 4:10).
Labor directed to a particular Church is service to the one great house
of God, of which each particular Church is a part, and each Christian a
lively stone
(1Pe 2:5).
the pillar and ground of the truth--evidently predicated of
the Church, not of "the mystery of godliness" (an interpretation
not started till the sixteenth century; so
BENGEL); for after two weighty predicates, "pillar
and ground," and these substantives, the third, a much weaker one, and
that an adjective, "confessedly," or "without controversy great," would
not come. "Pillar" is so used metaphorically of the three apostles on
whom principally the Jewish Christian Church depended
(Ga 2:9;
compare
Re 3:12).
The Church is "the pillar of the truth," as the continued existence
(historically) of the truth rests on it; for it supports and preserves
the word of truth. He who is of the truth belongs by the very fact to
the Church. Christ is the alone ground of the truth in the highest
sense
(1Co 3:11).
The apostles are foundations in a secondary sense
(Eph 2:20;
Re 21:14).
The Church rests on the truth as it is in Christ; not the truth on the
Church. But the truth as it is in itself is to be distinguished
from the truth as it is acknowledged in the world. In the former
sense it needs no pillar, but supports itself; in the latter
sense, it needs the Church as its pillar, that is, its supporter and
preserver [BAUMGARTEN]. The importance of
Timothy's commission is set forth by reminding him of the excellence of
"the house" in which he serves; and this in opposition to the coming
heresies which Paul presciently forewarns him of immediately after
(1Ti 4:1).
The Church is to be the stay of the truth and its conserver for the
world, and God's instrument for securing its continuance on earth, in
opposition to those heresies
(Mt 16:18; 28:20).
The apostle does not recognize a Church which has not the truth, or has
it only in part. Rome falsely claims the promise for herself. But it is
not historical descent that constitutes a Church, but this only, to
those heresies
(Mt 16:18; 28:20).
The apostle does not recognize a Church which has not the intermediate;
the "ground," or "basement" (similar to "foundation,"
2Ti 2:19),
the final support of the building [ALFORD]. It is
no objection that, having called the Church before "the house of God,"
he now calls it the "pillar"; for the literal word "Church" immediately
precedes the new metaphors: so the Church, or congregation of
believers, which before was regarded as the habitation of God,
is now, from a different point of view, regarded as the pillar
upholding the truth.
16. And--following up
1Ti 3:15:
The pillar of the truth is the Church in which thou art required to
minister; "AND (that thou mayest know how grand is
that truth which the Church so upholds) confessedly (so the
Greek for 'without controversy') great is the mystery of
godliness: (namely), HE WHO (so the oldest
manuscripts and versions read for 'God') was manifested in (the) flesh
(He who) was justified in the Spirit," &c. There is set before us the
whole dignity of Christ's person. If He were not essentially superhuman
(Tit 2:13),
how could the apostle emphatically declare that He was manifested
in (the) flesh? [TREGELLES, Printed
Text of the Greek New Testament].
(Joh 1:14;
Php 2:7;
1Jo 1:2; 4:2).
Christ, in all His aspects, is Himself "the mystery of godliness." He
who before was hidden "with God" was made manifest
(Joh 1:1, 14;
Ro 16:25, 26;
Col 1:26;
2Ti 1:10;
Tit 2:11; 3:4;
1Jo 3:5, 8).
"Confessedly," that is, by the universal confession of the members of
"the Church," which is in this respect the "pillar" or upholder "of
the truth."
the mystery--the divine scheme embodied in CHRIST
(Col 1:27),
once hidden from, but now revealed to, us who believe.
of godliness--rather, "piety"; a different Greek,
expresses godliness
(1Ti 2:10).
In opposition to the ungodliness or impiety inseparable
from error (departure from the faith: "doctrines of devils,"
"profane fables,"
1Ti 4:1, 7;
compare
1Ti 6:3).
To the victims of such error, the "mystery of piety" (that is, Christ
Himself) remains a mystery unrevealed
(1Ti 4:2).
It is accessible only to "piety"
(1Ti 3:9):
in relation to the pious it is termed a "mystery," though
revealed
(1Co 2:7-14),
to imply the excellence of Him who is the surpassing essential subject
of it, and who is Himself "wonderful"
(Isa 9:6),
surpassing knowledge
(Eph 3:18, 19);
compare
Eph 5:32.
The apostle now proceeds to unfold this confessedly great mystery in
its details. It is not unlikely that some formula of confession or hymn
existed in the Church and was generally accepted, to which Paul alludes
in the words "confessedly great is the mystery," &c. (to wit),
"He who was manifested," &c. Such hymns were then used (compare
Eph 5:19;
Col 3:16).
PLINY [1.10, Epistle, 97], "They are wont
on a fixed day before dawn to meet and sing a hymn in alternate
responses to Christ, as being God"; and
EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 5.28].
The short unconnected sentences with the words similarly arranged, and
the number of syllables almost equal, and the ideas antithetically
related, are characteristics of a Christian hymn. The clauses stand in
parallelism; each two are connected as a pair, and form an antithesis
turning on the opposition of heaven to earth; the order of this
antithesis is reversed in each new pair of clauses: flesh and
spirit, angels and Gentiles, world and glory; and
there is a correspondence between the first and the last clause:
"manifested in the flesh, received up into glory" [WIESINGER].
justified--that is, approved to be righteous
[ALFORD]. Christ, while
"in the flesh," seemed to be just such a one as men in the flesh, and in
fact bore their sins; but by having died to sin, and having risen
again, He gained for Himself and His people justifying righteousness
(Isa 50:8;
Joh 16:10;
Ac 22:14;
Ro 4:25; 6:7, 10;
Heb 9:28;
1Pe 3:18; 4:1
1Jo 2:1)
[BENGEL]; or rather, as the antithesis to "was
manifest in the flesh" requires, He was justified in the Spirit at
the same time that He was manifest in the flesh, that is, He was
vindicated as divine "in His Spirit," that is, in His higher
nature; in contrast to "in the flesh," His visible human
nature. This contrasted opposition requires "in the Spirit" to be
thus explained: not "by the Spirit," as ALFORD
explains it. So
Ro 1:3, 4,
"Made of the seed of David according to the flesh, and declared to
be the Son of God with power, according to the Spirit of holiness,
by the resurrection from the dead." So "justified" is used to mean
vindicated in one's true character
(Mt 11:19;
Lu 7:35;
Ro 3:4).
His manifestation "in the flesh" exposed him to misapprehension,
as though he were nothing more
(Joh 6:41; 7:27).
His justification, or vindication, in respect to His
Spirit or higher being, was effected by ALL
that manifested that higher being, His words
(Mt 7:29;
Joh 7:46),
His works
(Joh 2:11; 3:2),
by His Father's testimony at His baptism
(Mt 3:17),
and at the transfiguration
(Mt 17:5),
and especially by His resurrection
(Ac 13:33;
Ro 1:4),
though not by this exclusively, as BENGEL
limits it.
seen of angels--answering to "preached unto the Gentiles" (or
rather "among the nations"; including the Jews), on the other
hand
(Mt 28:19;
Ro 16:25, 26).
"Angels saw the Son of God with us, not having seen Him before"
[CHRYSOSTOM].' "not even they had seen His divine
nature, which is not visible to any creature, but they saw Him
incarnate" [THEODORET]
(Eph 3:8, 10;
1Pe 1:12;
compare
Col 1:16, 20).
What angels came to know by seeing, the nations learned by
preaching. He is a new message to the one class as well as to
the other; in the wondrous union in His person of things most opposite,
namely, heaven and earth, lies "the mystery"
[WIESINGER]. If the English Version,
"Gentiles," be retained, the antithesis will be between the
angels who are so near the Son of God, the Lord of
"angels," and the Gentiles who were so utterly "afar off"
(Eph 2:17).
believed on in the world--which lieth in wickedness
(1Jo 2:15; 5:19).
Opposed to "glory"
(Joh 3:16, 17).
This followed upon His being "preached"
(Ro 10:14).
received up into glory--Greek, "in glory." However,
English Version may be retained thus, "Received up
(so as now to be) in glory," that is, into glory
(Mr 16:19;
Lu 24:51;
Ac 1:11).
His reception in heaven answers to His reception on earth by being
"believed on."
CHAPTER 4
1Ti 4:1-16.
PREDICTION OF A
COMING
DEPARTURE FROM THE
FAITH:
TIMOTHY'S
DUTY AS TO
IT:
GENERAL
DIRECTIONS TO
HIM.
The "mystery of iniquity" here alluded to, and already working
(2Th 2:7),
stands opposed to the "mystery of godliness" just mentioned
(1Ti 3:16).
1. Now--Greek, "But." In contrast to the "mystery of godliness."
the Spirit--speaking by the prophets in the Church (whose prophecies
rested on those of the Old Testament,
Da 7:25; 8:23,
&c.; 11:30,
as also on those of Jesus in the New Testament,
Mt 24:11-24),
and also by Paul himself,
2Th 2:3
(with whom accord
2Pe 3:3;
1Jo 2:18;
Jude 18).
expressly--"in plain words." This shows that he refers to prophecies
of the Spirit then lying before him.
in the latter times--in the times following upon the times in
which he is now writing. Not some remote future, but times
immediately subsequent, the beginnings of the apostasy being
already discernible
(Ac 20:29):
these are the forerunners of "the last days"
(2Ti 3:1).
depart from the faith--The apostasy was to be within the Church, the
faithful one becoming the harlot. In
2Th 2:3
(written earlier), the apostasy of the Jews from God (joining the
heathen against Christianity) is the groundwork on which the prophecy
rises; whereas here, in the Pastoral Epistles, the prophecy is
connected with Gnostic errors, the seeds of which had already been sown
in the Church [AUBERLEN]
(2Ti 2:18).
Apollonius Tyanæus, a heretic, came to Ephesus in the lifetime of
Timothy.
giving heed--
(1Ti 1:4;
Tit 1:14).
seducing spirits--working in the heretical teachers.
1Jo 4:2, 3, 6,
"the spirit of error," opposed to "the spirit of truth," "the Spirit"
which "speaketh" in the true prophets against them.
doctrines of devils--literally "teachings of (that is suggested by)
demons."
Jas 3:15,
"wisdom . . . devilish";
2Co 11:15,
"Satan's ministers."
2. Rather translate, "Through (literally, 'in'; the element
in which the apostasy has place) the hypocrisy of lying speakers";
this expresses the means through which "some shall (be led to)
depart from the faith," namely, the reigned sanctity of the seducers
(compare "deceivers,"
Tit 1:10).
having their conscience seared--Greek, "having their
own conscience," &c., that is, not only "speaking lies" to
others, but also having their own conscience seared.
Professing to lead others to holiness, their own conscience is
all the while defiled. Bad consciences always have recourse to
hypocrisy. As faith and a good conscience are joined
(1Ti 1:5);
so hypocrisy (that is, unbelief,
Mt 24:5, 51;
compare
Lu 12:46)
and a bad conscience here. THEODORET
explains like English Version, "seared," as implying their
extreme insensibility; the effect of cauterizing being to deaden
sensation. The Greek, however, primarily means "branded" with
the consciousness of crimes committed against their better knowledge
and conscience, like so many scars burnt in by a branding iron: Compare
Tit 1:15; 3:11,
"condemned of himself." They are conscious of the brand within, and yet
with a hypocritical show of sanctity, they strive to seduce others. As
"a seal" is used in a good sense
(2Ti 2:19),
so "a brand" in a bad sense. The image is taken from the branding of
criminals.
3. Sensuality leads to false spiritualism. Their own inward
impurity is reflected in their eyes in the world without them, and
hence their asceticism
(Tit 1:14, 15)
[WIESINGER]. By a spurious spiritualism
(2Ti 2:18),
which made moral perfection consist in abstinence from outward things,
they pretended to attain to a higher perfection.
Mt 19:10-12
(compare
1Co 7:8, 26, 38)
gave a seeming handle to their "forbidding marriage" (contrast
1Ti 5:14);
and the Old Testament distinction as to clean and unclean, gave a
pretext for teaching to "abstain from meats" (compare
Col 2:16, 17, 20-23).
As these Judaizing Gnostics combined the harlot or apostate Old
Testament Church with the beast
(Re 17:3),
or Gnostic spiritualizing anti-Christianity, so Rome's Judaizing
elements
(1Ti 4:3)
shall ultimately be combined with the open worldly-wise
anti-Christianity of the false prophet or beast
(1Ti 6:20, 21;
Col 2:8;
1Jo 4:1-3;
Re 13:12-15).
Austerity gained for them a show of sanctity while preaching false
doctrine
(Col 2:23).
EUSEBIUS [Ecclesiastical History, 4.29]
quotes from IRENÆUS [1.28] a statement that
Saturninus, Marcion, and the Encratites preached abstinence from
marriage and animal meats. Paul prophetically warns against such
notions, the seeds of which already were being sown
(1Ti 6:20;
2Ti 2:17, 18).
to be received--Greek, "to be partaken of."
of them--literally, (created and designed) "for them," Though
all (even the unbelieving,
Ps 104:14;
Mt 5:45)
are partakers in these foods created by God, "they which believe" alone
fulfil God's design in creation by partaking of them with
thanksgiving; as opposed to those who abstain from them, or
in partaking of them, do not do so with thanksgiving. The
unbelieving have not the designed use of such foods by reason of their
"conscience being defiled"
(Tit 1:15).
The children of God alone "inherit the earth"; for obedience is the
necessary qualification (as it was in the original grant of the earth
to Adam), which they alone possess.
and know the truth--explanatory and defining who are "they which
believe." Translate as Greek, "and have full knowledge of
the truth" (see on
Php 1:9).
Thus he contradicts the assumption of superior knowledge and
higher moral perfection, put forward by the heretics, on the ground of
their abstinence from marriage and meats. "The truth" stands in
opposition to their "lies"
(1Ti 4:2).
4, 5. Translate as Greek, "Because" (expressing a reason resting
on an objective fact; or, as here, a Scripture quotation)--"For"
(a reason resting on something subjective in the writer's mind).
every creature . . . good--
(Ge 1:31;
Ro 14:14, 20).
A refutation by anticipation of the Gnostic opposition to creation: the
seeds of which were now lurking latently in the Church. Judaism
(Ac 10:11-16;
1Co 10:25, 26)
was the starting-point of the error as to meats: Oriental Gnosis added
new elements. The old Gnostic heresy is now almost extinct; but its
remains in the celibacy of Rome's priesthood, and in its fasts from
animal meats, enjoined under the penalty of mortal sin, remain.
if . . . with thanksgiving--Meats, though pure in
themselves, become impure by being received with an unthankful mind
(Ro 14:6;
Tit 1:15).
5. sanctified--"hallowed"; set apart as holy for the use of believing
men: separated from "the creature," which is under
the bondage of vanity and corruption
(Ro 8:19,
&c.). Just as in the Lord's Supper, the thanksgiving prayer sanctifies
the elements, separating them from their naturally alien position in
relation to the spiritual world, and transferring them to their true
relation to the new life. So in every use of the creature,
thanksgiving prayer has the same effect, and ought always to be used
(1Co 10:30, 31).
by the word of God and prayer--that is, "by means of
intercessory prayer" (so the Greek)--that is,
consecratory prayer in behalf
of "the creature" or food--that prayer mainly consisting of "the word of
God." The Apostolic Constitutions [7.49], give this ancient grace,
almost wholly consisting of Scripture, "Blessed art thou, O Lord, who
feedest me from my youth, who givest food to all flesh: Fill our hearts
with joy and gladness, that we, having all sufficiency, may abound unto
every good work in Christ Jesus our Lord, through whom glory, honour,
and might, be to thee for ever. Amen." In the case of inspired men, "the
word of God" would refer to their inspired prayers
(1Ki 17:1);
but as Paul speaks in general, including uninspired men's thanksgiving
for meals, the "word of God" more probably refers to the
Scripture words used in thanksgiving prayers.
6. If thou put . . . in remembrance--rather as Greek, "If thou
suggest to (bring under the notice of) the brethren," &c.
these things--namely, the truths stated in
1Ti 4:4, 5,
in opposition to the errors foretold,
1Ti 4:1-3.
minister--"servant."
nourished up--The Greek is present, not
past: "continually being nourished in"
(2Ti 1:5; 3:14, 15).
the words of faith--rather, "the words of the faith" (compare
1Ti 4:12).
good doctrine--"the good teaching." Explanatory of "the
faith," in opposition to the "teachings of demons" (English
Version, "doctrines of devils,"
1Ti 4:1)
which Timothy was to counteract. Compare "sound doctrine"
(1Ti 1:10; 6:3;
Tit 1:9; 2:1).
whereunto thou hast attained--"the course of which thou hast
followed"; hast followed along by tracing its course and
accompanying it [ALFORD]. Thou hast begun to follow up
[BENGEL]. The
same Greek occurs, "thou hast fully known"
(2Ti 3:10),
"having had perfect understanding"
(Lu 1:3).
It is an undesigned coincidence that the Greek verb is used only
by Paul and Paul's companion, Luke.
7. refuse--reject, avoid, have nothing to do with
(2Ti 2:23;
Tit 3:10).
old wives' fables--anile myths
(1Ti 1:4, 9;
Tit 1:14).
They are "profane," because leading away from "godliness" or "piety"
(1Ti 1:4-7; 6:20;
2Ti 2:16;
Tit 1:1, 2).
exercise thyself--literally, "exercise thyself" as one undergoing
training in a gymnasium. Let thy self-discipline be not in ascetical
exercises as the false teachers
(1Ti 4:3, 8;
compare
2Ti 2:22, 23;
Heb 5:14; 12:11),
but with a view to godliness or "piety"
(1Ti 6:11, 12).
8. profiteth little--Greek, "profiteth to (but) a small extent."
Paul does not deny that fasting and abstinence from conjugal intercourse
for a time, with a view to reaching the inward man through the outward,
do profit somewhat,
Ac 13:3;
1Co 7:5, 7; 9:26, 27
(though in its degenerate form, asceticism, dwelling solely on what is
outward,
1Ti 4:3,
is not only not profitable but injurious). Timothy seems to have had a
leaning to such outward self-discipline (compare
1Ti 5:23).
Paul, therefore, while not disapproving of this in its due proportion
and place, shows the vast superiority of godliness or
piety, as being profitable not merely "to a small
extent," but unto all things; for, having its seat within, it
extends thence to the whole outward life of a man. Not unto one portion
only of his being, but to every portion of it, bodily and spiritual,
temporal and eternal [ALFORD]. "He who has
piety (which is 'profitable unto all things') wants
nothing needed to his well-being, even though he be without those helps
which, 'to a small extent,' bodily exercise furnishes" [CALVIN]. "Piety," which is the end for
which thou art to "exercise thyself"
(1Ti 4:7),
is the essential thing: the means are secondary.
having promise, &c.--Translate as Greek, "Having promise
of life, that which now is, and that which is to come." "Life" in its
truest and best sense now and hereafter
(2Ti 1:1).
Length of life now so far as it is really good for the believer; life
in its truest enjoyments and employments now, and life blessed and
eternal hereafter
(Mt 6:33;
Mr 10:29, 30).
"Now in this time"
(Ps 84:11; 112:1-10;
Ro 8:28;
1Co 3:21, 22,
"all things are yours . . . the world, life
. . . things present, things to come"). Christianity, which
seems to aim only at our happiness hereafter, effectually promotes it
here
(1Ti 6:6;
2Pe 1:3).
Compare Solomon's prayer and the answer
(1Ki 3:7-13).
9.
(1Ti 1:15).
This verse (Greek), "faithful is the saying, " &c. confirms the
assertion as to the "promise" attached to "godliness,"
1Ti 4:8,
and forms a prefatory introduction to
1Ti 4:10,
which is joined to
1Ti 4:9
by "For." So
2Ti 2:11.
Godly men seem to suffer loss as to this life: Paul hereby refutes the
notion [BENGEL]. "God is the Saviour
specially of those that believe"
(1Ti 4:10),
both as to "the life that now is," and also as to "the life which is to
come"
(1Ti 4:8).
10. therefore--Greek, "with a view to this." The
reason why "we both ('both' is omitted in the oldest manuscripts)
labor (endure hardship) and suffer reproach (some oldest manuscripts
read 'strive') is because we have rested, and do rest our hope,
on the living (and therefore, life-giving,
1Ti 4:8)
God."
Saviour--even in this life
(1Ti 4:8).
specially of those that believe--Their "labor and reproach" are
not inconsistent with their having from the living God, their Saviour,
even the present life
(Mr 10:30,
"a hundred fold now in this time . . . with persecutions"),
much more the life to come. If God is in a sense "Saviour" of
unbelievers
(1Ti 2:4,
that is, is willing to be so everlastingly, and is
temporally here their Preserver and Benefactor), much
more of believers. He is the Saviour of all men potentially
(1Ti 1:15);
of believers alone effectually.
11. These truths, to the exclusion of those useless and even
injurious teachings
(1Ti 4:1-8),
while weighing well thyself, charge also upon others.
12. Let no man despise thy youth--Act so as to be respected in spite
of thy youth
(1Co 16:11;
Tit 2:15);
compare "youthful" as to Timothy
(2Ti 2:22).
He was but a mere youth when he joined Paul
(Ac 16:1-3).
Eleven years had elapsed since then to the time subsequent to Paul's
first imprisonment. He was, therefore, still young; especially in
comparison with Paul, whose place he was filling; also in relation to
elderly presbyters whom he should "entreat as a father"
(1Ti 5:1),
and generally in respect to his duties in rebuking, exhorting, and
ordaining
(1Ti 3:1),
which ordinarily accord best with an elderly person
(1Ti 5:19).
be thou an example--Greek, "become a pattern"
(Tit 2:7);
the true way of making men not to despise (slight, or disregard) thy
youth.
in word--in all that thou sayest in public and private.
conversation--that is, "behavior" the Old English sense of the
word.
in charity . . . faith--the two cardinal principles of
the Christian
(Ga 5:6).
The oldest manuscripts omit, "in spirit."
in purity--simplicity of holy motive followed out in consistency of
holy action [ALFORD]
(1Ti 5:22;
2Co 6:6;
Jas 3:17; 4:8;
1Pe 1:22).
13. Till I come--when Timothy's commission would be superseded for
the time by the presence of the apostle himself
(1Ti 1:3; 3:14).
reading--especially in the public congregation. The practice of
reading Scripture was transferred from the Jewish synagogue to the
Christian Church
(Lu 4:16-20;
Ac 13:15; 15:21;
2Co 3:14).
The New Testament Gospel and Epistles being recognized as inspired by
those who had the gift of discerning spirits, were from the
first, according as they were written, read along with the Old
Testament in the Church
(1Th 5:21, 27;
Col 4:16),
[JUSTIN MARTYR,
Apology, 1.67]. I think that while public reading is the
prominent thought, the Spirit intended also to teach that Scripture
reading in private should be "the fountain of all wisdom from which
pastors ought to draw whatever they bring before their flock" [ALFORD].
exhortation--addressed to the feelings and will with a view to the
regulation of the conduct.
doctrine--Greek (ministerial), "teaching" or
instruction. Addressed to the understanding, so as to impart
knowledge
(1Ti 6:2;
Ro 12:7, 8).
Whether in public or private, exhortation and instruction
should be based on Scripture reading.
14. Neglect not the gift--by letting it lie unused. In
2Ti 1:6
the gift is represented as a spark of the Spirit lying within
him, and sure to smoulder by neglect, the stirring up or keeping
in lively exercise of which depends on the will of him on whom it is
bestowed
(Mt 25:18, 25, 27, 28).
The charism or spiritual gift, is that of the Spirit which
qualified him for "the work of an evangelist"
(Eph 4:11;
2Ti 4:5),
or perhaps the gift of discerning spirits, specially needed in
his function of ordaining, as overseer [BISHOP
HINDS].
given thee--by God
(1Co 12:4, 6).
by prophecy--that is, by the Holy Spirit, at his general ordination,
or else consecration, to the special see of Ephesus, speaking through
the prophets God's will to give him the graces needed to qualify him for
his work
(1Ti 1:18;
Ac 13:1-3).
with . . . laying on of . . . hands--So in Joshua's case
(Nu 27:18-20;
De 34:9).
The gift was connected with the symbolical act of laying on hands. But
the Greek "with" implies that the presbyter's laying on
hands was the mere accompaniment of the conferring of the gift.
"By"
(2Ti 1:6)
implies that Paul's laying on his hands was the actual
instrument of its being conferred.
of the presbytery--In
2Ti 1:6
the apostle mentions only his own laying on of hands. But there
his aim is to remind Timothy specially of the part he himself took in
imparting to him the gift. Here he mentions the fact, quite consistent
with the other, that the neighboring presbyters took part in the
ordination or consecration, he, however, taking the foremost part.
Paul, though having the general oversight of the elders everywhere, was
an elder himself
(1Pe 5:1;
2Jo 1).
The Jewish council was composed of the elders of the Church (the
presbytery,
Lu 22:66;
Ac 22:5),
and a presiding rabbi; so the Christian Church was composed of
apostles, elders, and a president
(Ac 15:16).
As the president of the synagogue was of the same order as his
presbyters, so the bishop was of the same order as his presbyters. At
the ordination of the president of the synagogue there were always
three presbyters present to lay on hands, so the early Church canons
required three bishops to be present at the consecration of a bishop.
As the president of the synagogue, so the bishop of the Church alone
could ordain, he acting as the representative, and in the name of the
whole presbytery [VITRINGA]. So, in the Anglican
Church, the bishop ordains, the presbyters or priests present joining
with him in laying on hands.
15. Meditate--Greek, "Meditate
CAREFULLY upon"
(Ps 1:2; 119:15;
compare "Isaac,"
Ge 24:63).
these things--
(1Ti 4:12-14).
As food would not nourish without digestion, which assimilates the food
to the substance of the body, so spiritual food, in order to benefit
us, needs to be appropriated by prayerful meditation.
give thyself wholly to--literally,
"BE in these things"; let them
engross thee wholly; be wholly absorbed in them.
Entire self-dedication, as in other pursuits, so especially in
religion, is the secret of proficiency. There are changes as to all
other studies, fashionable to-day, out of fashion to-morrow; this study
alone is never obsolete, and when made the all-engrossing aim sanctifies
all other studies. The exercise of the ministry threatens the spirit of
the ministry, unless it be sustained within. The minister must be first
his own scholar before he can be another's teacher.
profiting--Greek, "progress" towards perfection in the
Christian life, and especially towards the fullest realization of the
ideal of a Christian minister
(1Ti 4:12).
may appear to all--not for thy glory, but for the winning of souls
(Mt 5:16).
16. Take heed--Give heed
(Ac 3:5).
thyself, and . . . doctrine--"and unto thy teaching."
The two requisites of a good pastor: His teaching will be of no avail
unless his own life accord with it; and his own purity of life is not
enough unless he be diligent in teaching [CALVIN].
This verse is a summary of
1Ti 4:12.
continue in them--
(2Ti 3:14).
in doing this--not "by doing this," as though he could save
himself by works.
thou shalt . . . save thyself, and them that hear thee--
(Eze 33:9;
Jas 5:20).
In performing faithfully his duty to others, the minister is promoting
his own salvation. Indeed he cannot "give heed unto the teaching" of
others, unless he be at the same time "giving heed unto himself."
CHAPTER 5
1Ti 5:1-25.
GENERAL
DIRECTIONS AS TO
HOW
TIMOTHY
SHOULD
DEAL WITH
DIFFERENT
CLASSES IN THE
CHURCH.
1. an elder--in age; probably not an elder in the
ministry; these latter are not mentioned till
1Ti 5:17,
"the elders that rule." Compare
Ac 2:17,
"your old men," literally, "elders." Contrasted with "the younger men."
As Timothy was admonished so to conduct himself as to give no man
reason to despise his youth
(1Ti 4:12);
so here he is told to bear in mind his youth, and to behave with the
modesty which becomes a young man in relation to his elders.
Rebuke not--literally, "Strike not hard upon"; Rebuke not
sharply: a different word from "rebuke" in
2Ti 4:2.
entreat--exhort.
as brethren--and therefore equals; not lording it over them
(1Pe 5:1-3).
2. with all purity--respectful treatment of the other sex will
promote "purity."
3. Honour--by setting on the church roll, as fit objects of charitable
sustenance
(1Ti 5:9, 17, 18;
Ac 6:1).
So "honor" is used for support with necessaries
(Mt 15:4, 6;
Ac 28:10).
widows indeed--
(1Ti 5:16).
Those really desolate; not like those
(1Ti 5:4)
having children or relations answerable for their support, nor like
those (in
1Ti 5:6)
"who live in pleasure"; but such as, from their earthly desolation as
to friends, are most likely to trust wholly in God, persevere in
continual prayers, and carry out the religious duties assigned to
Church widows
(1Ti 5:5).
Care for widows was transferred from the Jewish economy to the
Christian
(De 14:29; 16:11; 24:17, 19).
4. if any widow have children--not "a widow indeed," as having
children who ought to support her.
nephews--rather, as Greek, "descendants," or "grandchildren"
[HESYCHIUS]. "Nephews" in old English meant "grandchildren"
[HOOKER,
Ecclesiastical Polity, 5.20].
let them--the children and descendants.
learn first--ere it falls to the Church to support them.
to show piety at home--filial piety towards their widowed mother or
grandmother, by giving her sustenance. Literally, "to show piety towards
their own house." "Piety is applied to the reverential discharge of
filial duties; as the parental relation is the earthly representation of
God our heavenly Father's relation to us. "Their own" stands in
opposition to the Church, in relation to which the widow is
comparatively a stranger. She has a claim on her own children, prior
to her claim on the Church; let them fulfil this prior claim which she
has on them, by sustaining her and not burdening the Church.
parents--Greek, (living) "progenitors," that is, their mother or
grandmother, as the case may be. "Let them learn," implies that abuses
of this kind had crept into the Church, widows claiming Church support
though they had children or grandchildren able to support them.
good and--The oldest manuscripts omit. The words are probably
inserted by a transcriber from
1Ti 2:3.
5. widow indeed, and desolate--contrasted with her who has children
or grandchildren to support her
(1Ti 5:4).
trusteth in God--perfect tense in Greek, "hath rested, and doth
rest her hope in God."
1Ti 5:5
adds another qualification in a widow for Church maintenance,
besides her being" desolate" or destitute of children to support her.
She must be not one "that liveth in pleasure"
(1Ti 5:6),
but one making God her main hope (the accusative in Greek
expresses that God is the ultimate aim whereto her hope is
directed; whereas,
1Ti 4:10,
dative expresses hope resting on God as her present stay
[WIESINGER]), and continuing constantly in
prayers. Her destitution of children and of all ties to earth would
leave her more unencumbered for devoting the rest of her days to God
and the Church
(1Co 7:33, 34).
Compare also "Anna a widow," who remained unmarried after her husband's
death and "departed not from the temple, but served God with fastings
and prayers day and night"
(Lu 2:36, 37).
Such a one, Paul implies, would be the fittest object for the Church's
help
(1Ti 5:3);
for such a one is promoting the cause of Christ's Church by her prayers
for it. "Ardor in prayers flows from hoping confidence in God" [LEO].
in supplications and prayers--Greek, "in her
supplications and prayers"; the former signifies asking under a
sense of need, the latter, prayer (see on
1Ti 2:1;
Php 4:6).
night and day--another coincidence with Luke
(Lu 18:7,
"cry day and night"); contrast Satan's accusations "day and night"
(Re 12:10).
6. she that liveth in pleasure--the opposite of such a widow as is
described in
1Ti 5:5,
and therefore one utterly undeserving of Church charity. The
Greek expresses wanton prodigality and excess
[TITTMANN]. The root expresses weaving at a
fast rate, and so lavish excess (see on
Jas 5:5).
dead while she liveth--dead in the Spirit while alive in the flesh
(Mt 8:22;
Eph 5:14).
7. these things--just now spoken
(1Ti 5:5, 6).
that they may be blameless--namely, the widows supported by the
Church.
8. But--reverting to
1Ti 5:4,
"If any (a general proposition; therefore including in its application
the widow's children or grandchildren) provide not for his own
(relations in general), and especially for those of his own house (in
particular), he hath (practically) denied the faith." Faith without
love and its works is dead; "for the subject matter of faith is not
mere opinion, but the grace and truth of God, to which he that believes
gives up his spirit, as he that loves gives up his heart" [MACK]. If in any case a duty of love is plain, it is in
relation to one's own relatives; to fail in so plain an obligation is a
plain proof of want of love, and therefore of want of faith. "Faith
does not set aside natural duties, but strengthens them" [BENGEL].
worse than an infidel--because even an infidel (or unbeliever) is
taught by nature to provide for his own relatives, and generally
recognizes the duty; the Christian who does not so, is worse
(Mt 5:46, 47).
He has less excuse with his greater light than the infidel who may
break the laws of nature.
9. Translate, "As a widow (that is, of the ecclesiastical order
of widowhood; a kind of female presbytery), let none be
enrolled (in the catalogue) who is less than sixty years old." These
were not deaconesses, who were chosen at a younger age (forty
was the age fixed at the Council of Chalcedon), and who had virgins (in
a later age called widows) as well as widows among them, but a
band of widows set apart, though not yet formally and finally, to the
service of God and the Church. Traces of such a class appear in
Ac 9:41.
Dorcas herself was such a one. As it was expedient (see on
1Ti 3:2;
Tit 1:6)
that the presbyter or bishop should have been but once married, so also
in her case. There is a transition here to a new subject. The reference
here cannot be, as in
1Ti 5:3,
to providing Church sustenance for them. For the restriction to
widows above sixty would then be needless and harsh, since many widows
might be in need of help at a much earlier age; as also the rule that
the widow must not have been twice married, especially
since he himself, below
(1Ti 5:14)
enjoins the younger widows to marry again; as also that she must have
brought up children. Moreover,
1Ti 5:10
presupposes some competence, at least in past times, and so poor widows
would be excluded, the very class requiring charity. Also,
1Ti 5:11
would then be senseless, for then their remarrying would be a benefit,
not an injury, to the Church, as relieving it of the burden of their
sustenance. TERTULLIAN [On the Veiling of
Virgins, 9], HERMAS [Shepherd, 1.2],
and CHRYSOSTOM [Homily, 31], mention such
an order of ecclesiastical widowhood, each one not less than sixty
years old, and resembling the presbyters in the respect paid to them,
and in some of their duties; they ministered with sympathizing counsel
to other widows and to orphans, a ministry to which their own
experimental knowledge of the feelings and sufferings of the bereaved
adapted them, and had a general supervision of their sex. Age
was doubtless a requisite in presbyters, as it is here stated to
have been in presbyteresses, with a view to their influence on
the younger persons of their sex They were supported by the Church, but
not the only widows so supported
(1Ti 5:3, 4).
wife of one man--in order not to throw a stumbling-block in the
way of Jews and heathen, who regarded with disfavor second marriages
(see on
1Ti 3:2;
Tit 1:6).
This is the force of "blameless," giving no offense, even in matters
indifferent.
10. for good works--Greek, "IN
honourable (excellent) works"; the sphere or element in
which the good report of her had place
(Tit 2:7).
This answers to
1Ti 3:7,
as to the bishop or presbyter, "He must have a good report of them
which are without."
if--if, in addition to being "well reported of."
she . . . brought up children--either her own
(1Ti 3:4, 12),
or those of others, which is one of the "good works"; a qualification
adapting her for ministry to orphan children, and to mothers of
families.
lodged strangers--
1Ti 3:2,
"given to hospitality"
(Tit 1:8);
in the case of presbyters.
washed . . . saints' feet--after the example of the Lord
(Joh 13:14);
a specimen of the universal spirit of humbly "by love serving one
another," which actuated the early Christians.
relieved the afflicted--whether by pecuniary or other relief.
followed . . . good--
(1Th 5:15;
compare instances in
Mt 25:35, 36).
11. younger--than sixty years old
(1Ti 5:9).
refuse--to take on the roll of presbyteress widows.
wax wanton--literally, "over-strong"
(2Ch 26:16).
against Christ--rebelling against Christ, their proper Bridegroom
[JEROME].
they will--Greek, "they wish"; their desire is to
marry again.
12. Having--Bringing on themselves, and so having to bear
as a burden
(Ga 5:10)
judgment from God (compare
1Ti 3:6),
weighing like a load on them.
cast off their first faith--namely, pledged to Christ and the
service of the Church. There could be no hardship at the age of sixty
or upwards in not marrying again (end of
1Ti 5:9),
for the sake of serving better the cause of Christ as presbyteresses;
though, to ordinary widows, no barrier existed against remarriage
(1Co 7:39).
This is altogether distinct from Rome's unnatural vows of celibacy in
the case of young marriageable women. The widow-presbyteresses,
moreover, engaged to remain single, not as though single life were
holier than married life (according to Rome's teaching), but because
the interests of Christ's cause made it desirable (see on
1Ti 3:2).
They had pledged "their first faith" to Christ as presbyteress widows;
they now wish to transfer their faith to a husband (compare
1Co 7:32, 34).
13. withal--"at the same time, moreover."
learn--usually in a good sense. But these women's "learning" is
idleness, trifling, and busybodies' tattle.
wandering--Greek, "going about."
from house to house--of the members of the Church
(2Ti 3:6).
"They carry the affairs of this house to that, and of that to this;
they tell the affairs of all to all"
[THEOPHYLACT].
tattlers--literally "trifling talkers." In
3Jo 10,
translated "prating."
busybodies--mischievously busy; inconsiderately curious
(2Th 3:11).
Ac 19:19,
"curious," the same Greek. Curiosity usually springs from
idleness, which is itself the mother of garrulity
[CALVIN].
speaking--not merely "saying." The subject-matter,
as well as the form, is involved in the Greek word
[ALFORD].
which they ought not--
(Tit 1:11).
14. younger women--rather, as ellipsis ought to be supplied,
"the younger widows," namely younger widows in general, as
distinguished from the older widows taken on the roll of
presbyteresses
(1Ti 5:9).
The "therefore" means seeing that young widows are exposed to such
temptations, "I will," or "desire," &c.
(1Ti 5:11-13).
The precept here that they should marry again is not inconsistent with
1Co 7:40;
for the circumstances of the two cases were distinct (compare
1Co 7:26).
Here remarriage is recommended as an antidote to sexual passion,
idleness, and the other evils noted in
1Ti 5:11-13.
Of course, where there was no tendency to these evils, marriage again
would not be so requisite; Paul speaks of what is generally desirable,
and supposing there should be danger of such evils, as was likely. "He
does not impose a law, but points out a remedy, to
younger widows" [CHRYSOSTOM].
bear children--
(1Ti 2:15);
thus gaining one of the qualifications
(1Ti 5:10)
for being afterwards a presbyteress widow, should Providence so ordain
it.
guide--Greek, "rule the house" in the woman's due
place; not usurping authority over the man
(1Ti 2:12).
give none occasion--literally, "starting-point": handle of reproach
through the loose conduct of nominal Christians.
the adversary--of Christianity, Jew or Gentile.
Php 1:28;
Tit 2:8,
"He that is of the contrary part." Not Satan, who is introduced
in a different relation
(1Ti 5:15).
to speak reproachfully--literally, "for the sake of reproach"
(1Ti 3:7; 6:1;
Tit 2:5, 10).
If the handle were given, the adversary would use it
for the sake of reproach. The adversary is eager to exaggerate
the faults of a few, and to lay the blame on the whole Church and its
doctrines [BENGEL].
15. For--For in the case of some this result has already
ensued; "Some (widows) are already turned aside after Satan," the
seducer (not by falling away from the faith in general, but) by such
errors as are stigmatized in
1Ti 5:11-13,
sexual passion, idleness, &c., and so have given occasion of
reproach
(1Ti 5:14).
"Satan finds some mischief still for the idle hands to do."
16. If any . . . have widows--of his family, however
related to him. Most of the oldest manuscripts and versions omit "man
or," and read, "If any woman that believeth." But the Received text
seems preferable. If, however, the weightiest
authorities are to prevail, the sense will be: He was speaking
of younger widows; He now says, If any believing young widow
have widows related to her needing support, let her relieve them,
thereby casing the Church of the burden,
1Ti 5:3, 4
(there it was the children and grandchildren; here
it is the young widow, who, in order to avoid the evils of
idleness and wantonness, the result of idleness,
1Ti 5:11, 13;
Eze 16:49,
is to be diligent in good works, such as "relieving the afflicted,"
1Ti 5:10,
thus qualifying herself for being afterwards a
widow-presbyteress).
let them--rather as Greek, "let him," or "her"; "let such a one"
(1Ti 5:10).
be charged--literally, "be burdened" with their support.
widows indeed--really helpless and friendless
(1Ti 5:3, 4).
17. The transition from the widow presbyteresses
(1Ti 5:9)
to the presbyters here, is natural.
rule well--literally, "preside well," with wisdom, ability, and
loving faithfulness, over the flock assigned to them.
be counted worthy of double honour--that is, the honor which is
expressed by gifts
(1Ti 5:3, 18)
and otherwise. If a presbyter as such, in virtue of his office, is
already worthy of honor, he who rules well is doubly so
[WIESINGER]
(1Co 9:14;
Ga 6:6;
1Th 5:12).
Not literally that a presbyter who rules well should get double the
salary of one who does not rule well [ALFORD],
or of a presbyteress widow, or of the deacons
[CHRYSOSTOM]. "Double" is used for large in
general
(Re 18:6).
specially they who labour in the word and
doctrine--Greek, "teaching"; preaching of the word, and
instruction, catechetical or otherwise. This implies that of the
ruling presbyters there were two kinds, those who labored in
the word and teaching, and those who did not. Lay presbyters, so
called merely because of their age, have no place here; for both
classes mentioned here alike are ruling presbyters. A college of
presbyters is implied as existing in each large congregation. As in
1Ti 3:1-16
their qualifications are spoken of, so here the acknowledgments due to
them for their services.
18. the scripture--
(De 25:4;
quoted before in
1Co 9:9).
the ox that treadeth out--Greek, An ox while treading.
The labourer is worthy of his reward--or "hire"; quoted from
Lu 10:7,
whereas
Mt 10:10
has "his meat," or "food." If Paul extends the phrase, "Scripture
saith," to this second clause, as well as to the first, he will be
hereby recognizing the Gospel of Luke, his own helper (whence appears
the undesigned appositeness of the quotation), as inspired
Scripture. This I think the correct view. The Gospel according
to Luke was probably in circulation then about eight or nine years.
However, it is possible "Scripture saith" applies only to the passage
quoted from
De 25:4;
and then his quotation will be that of a common proverb, quoted also by
the Lord, which commends itself to the approval of all, and is approved
by the Lord and His apostle.
19. Against an elder--a presbyter of the Church.
receive not--"entertain not" [ALFORD].
but before two or three witnesses--A judicial conviction was not
permitted in
De 17:6; 19:15,
except on the testimony of at least two or three witnesses (compare
Mt 18:16;
Joh 8:17;
2Co 13:1;
1Jo 5:6, 7).
But Timothy's entertaining an accusation against anyone is a
different case, where the object was not judicially to punish, but to
admonish: here he might ordinarily entertain it without the
need of two or three witnesses; but not in the case of an elder,
since the more earnest an elder was to convince gainsayers
(Tit 1:9),
the more exposed would he be to vexatious and false accusations. How
important then was it that Timothy should not, without strong
testimony, entertain a charge against presbyters, who should, in order
to be efficient, be "blameless"
(1Ti 3:2;
Tit 1:6).
1Ti 5:21, 24
imply that Timothy had the power of judging in the Church. Doubtless he
would not condemn any save on the testimony of two or three
witnesses, but in ordinary cases he would cite them, as the law of
Moses also allowed, though there were only one witness. But in the case
of elders, he would require two or three witnesses before even citing
them; for their character for innocence stands higher, and they are
exposed to envy and calumny more than others "Receive" does not, as
ALFORD thinks, include both citation and
conviction, but means only the former.
20. Them that sin--whether presbyters or laymen.
rebuke before all--publicly before the Church
(Mt 18:15-17;
1Co 5:9-13;
Eph 5:11).
Not until this "rebuke" was disregarded was the offender to be
excommunicated.
others . . . fear--that other members of the Church may have a
wholesome fear of offending
(De 13:11;
Ac 5:11).
21. I charge thee--rather as Greek, "I adjure thee"; so it
ought to be translated
(2Ti 4:1).
before--"in the presence of God."
Lord--omitted in the oldest manuscripts
God the Father, and Christ the Son, will testify against thee, if
thou disregardest my injunction. He vividly sets before Timothy
the last judgment, in which God shall be revealed, and Christ seen
face to face with His angels
elect angels--an epithet of reverence. The objects of divine electing
love
(1Pe 2:6).
Not only "elect" (according to the everlasting purpose of God)
in contradistinction to the reprobate angels
(2Pe 2:4),
but also to mark the excellence of the angels in general (as God's
chosen ministers, "holy angels," "angels of light"), and so to give
more solemnity to their testimony [CALVIN] as
witnesses to Paul's adjuration. Angels take part by action and sympathy
in the affairs of the earth
(Lu 15:10;
1Co 4:9).
these things--the injunctions,
1Ti 5:19, 20.
without preferring one before another--rather as Greek,
"prejudice"; "judging before" hearing all the facts of a case.
There ought to be judgment, but not prejudging. Compare "suddenly,"
1Ti 5:22,
also
1Ti 5:24.
partiality--in favor of a man, as "prejudice" is bias against a man. Some of the oldest manuscripts read, "in the way of summoning
(brethren) before a (heathen) judge." But Vulgate and other
good authorities favor the more probable reading in English Version.
22. Lay hands--that is, ordain
(1Ti 4:14;
2Ti 1:6;
Tit 1:5).
The connection is with
1Ti 5:19.
The way to guard against scandals occurring in the case of presbyters
is, be cautious as to the character of the candidate before ordaining
him; this will apply to other Church officers so ordained, as well as
to presbyters. Thus, this clause refers to
1Ti 5:19,
as next clause, "neither be partaker of other men's sins," refers to
1Ti 5:20.
ELLICOTT and WIESINGER
understand it of receiving back into Church fellowship or
absolution, by laying hands on those who had been
"rebuked"
(1Ti 5:20)
and then excommunicated
(Mt 18:17);
1Ti 5:20
favors this. But as in
1Ti 4:14,
and Ac 6:6; 13:3;
2Ti 1:6,
the laying on of hands is used of ordination (compare however as
to confirmation,
Ac 8:17),
it seems better to take it so here.
suddenly--hastily:
1Ti 5:24, 25
show that waiting for a time is salutary.
neither be partaker of other men's sins--by negligence in ordaining
ungodly candidates, and so becoming in some degree responsible for their
sins. Or, there is the same transition from the elders to
all in general who may sin, as in
1Ti 5:19, 20.
Be not a partaker in other men's sins by not "rebuking them that sin
before all," as well as those that are candidates for the presbytery,
as also all "that sin."
keep thyself pure--"thyself' is emphatic. "Keep
THYSELF" clear of participation in
OTHER men's sin by not failing to
rebuke them that sin
(1Ti 5:20).
Thus the transition is easy
to
1Ti 5:23,
which is concerning Timothy personally; compare also
1Ti 5:24.
23. no longer--as a habit. This injunction to drink wine
occasionally is a modification of the preceding "keep thyself pure."
The presbyter and deacon were enjoined to be "not given to wine"
(1Ti 3:3, 8).
Timothy seems to have had a tendency to undue ascetical strictness on
this point (compare Note, see on
1Ti 4:8;
compare the Nazarene vow,
Nu 6:1-4;
John the Baptist,
Lu 1:15;
Ro 14).
Paul therefore modifies the preceding words, "keep thyself pure,"
virtually saying, "Not that I mean to enjoin that kind of purity which
consists in asceticism, nay, be no longer a water-drinker," that
is, no longer drink only water, but use a little wine, as
much as is needed for thy health. So ELLICOTT and
WIESINGER. ALFORD thus:
Timothy was of a feeble frame (see on
1Co 16:10, 11),
and prone to timidity in his duties as overseer where vigorous action
was needed; hence Paul exhorts him to take all proper means to raise
his bodily condition above these infirmities. God hereby commands
believers to use all due means for preserving health, and condemns by
anticipation the human traditions which among various sects have denied
the use of wine to the faithful.
24. Two kinds of sins are specified: those palpably
manifest (so the Greek for "open beforehand" ought to
be translated; so in
Heb 7:14,
it is translated "evident"; literally, "before" the eyes,
that is, notorious), further explained as "going before to judgment";
and those which follow after the men ("some men they, that is, their
sins, follow after"), namely, not going beforehand, loudly accusing,
but hidden till they come to the judgment: so
1Ti 5:25,
the good works are of two classes: those palpably
manifest (translate so, instead of "manifest beforehand") and
"those that are otherwise," that is, not palpably manifest. Both
alike "cannot be hid"; the former class in the case of bad and good are
manifest already; the latter class in the case of both are not
manifest now, but shall be so at the final judgment.
going before to judgment--as heralds; crying sins which accuse
their perpetrator. The connection seems to me this: He had enjoined
Timothy,
1Ti 5:20,
"Rebuke them that sin before all": and in
1Ti 5:22,
"Neither be partaker of other men's sins," by ordaining ungodly men;
having then by a digression at the clause, "keep thyself pure," guarded
against an ascetical error of Timothy in fancying purity consisted in
asceticism, and having exhorted him to use wine for strengthening him
in his work, he returns to the subject of his being vigorous as an
overseer in rebuking sin, whether in presbyters or people, and
in avoiding participation in men's sins by ordaining ungodly
candidates. He says, therefore, there are two classes of sins,
as there are two classes of good works: those palpably
manifest, and those not so; the former are those on which thou
shouldest act decidedly at once when called on, whether to rebuke in
general, or to ordain ministers in particular; as to the latter, the
final judgment alone can decide; however hidden now they "cannot
be hid" then. This could only be said of the final judgment
(1Co 4:5;
therefore, ALFORD'S reference of this verse to
Timothy's judgment in choosing elders must be wrong); all
judgments before then are fallible. Thus he implies that Timothy can
only be responsible if he connive at manifest, or evident sins;
not that those that are otherwise shall escape judgment at last:
just as in the case of good works, he can only be responsible
for taking into account in his judgments those which are patent to all,
not those secret good works which nevertheless will not remain hidden
at the final judgment.
CHAPTER 6
1Ti 6:1-21.
EXHORTATIONS AS TO
DISTINCTIONS OF
CIVIL
RANK; THE
DUTY OF
SLAVES, IN
OPPOSITION TO THE
FALSE
TEACHINGS OF
GAIN-SEEKERS;
TIMOTHY'S
PURSUIT
IS TO
BE
GODLINESS,
WHICH
IS AN
EVERLASTING
POSSESSION:
SOLEMN
ADJURATION TO
DO
SO AGAINST
CHRIST'S
COMING;
CHARGE TO
BE
GIVEN TO THE
RICH.
CONCLUDING
EXHORTATION.
1. servants--to be taken as predicated thus, "Let as many as are
under the yoke (as) slaves"
(Tit 2:9).
The exhortation is natural as there was a danger of Christian slaves
inwardly feeling above their heathen masters.
their own masters--The phrase "their own," is an argument for
submissiveness; it is not strangers, but their own masters whom
they are required to respect.
all honour--all possible and fitting honor; not
merely outward subjection, but that inward honor from which will
flow spontaneously right outward conduct (see on
Eph 5:22).
that the name of God--by which Christians are called.
blasphemed--Heathen masters would say, What kind of a God must be
the God of the Christians, when such are the fruits of His worship
(Ro 2:24;
Tit 2:5, 10)?
2. And--rather, "But." The opposition is between those Christian
slaves under the yoke of heathen, and
those that have believing masters (he does not use the phrase
"under the yoke" in the latter case, for service under believers is not
a yoke). Connect the following words thus, "Let them
(the slaves) not, because they
(the masters) are brethren
(and so equals, masters and slaves alike being Christians),
despise them (the masters)."
but rather, &c.--"but all the more (so much the more: with the
greater good will) do them service because they (the masters) are
faithful (that is, believers) and beloved who receive (in the mutual
interchange of relative duties between master and servant; so
the Greek) the benefit" (English Version violates
Greek grammar). This latter clause is parallel to, "because
they are brethren"; which proves that "they" refers to the
masters, not the servants, as TITTMANN takes it, explaining the verb in the common
sense
(Lu 1:54;
Ac 20:35),
"who sedulously labor for their (masters') benefit." The very
term "benefit" delicately implies service done with the right
motive, Christian "good will"
(Eph 6:7).
If the common sense of the Greek verb be urged, the sense must
be, "Because they (the masters) are faithful and beloved who are
sedulously intent on the benefiting" of their servants. But PORPHYRY [On Abstinence, 1.46] justifies the sense
of the Greek verb given above, which also better accords with
the context; for otherwise, the article "the," will have nothing
in the preceding words to explain it, whereas in my explanation above
"the benefit" will be that of the slaves' service.
These things teach--
(1Ti 4:11;
Tit 2:15).
3. teach otherwise--than I desire thee to "teach"
(1Ti 6:2).
The Greek indicative implies, he puts not a merely supposed
case, but one actually existing,
1Ti 1:3,
"Every one who teaches otherwise," that is, who teaches
heterodoxy.
consent not--Greek, "accede not to."
wholesome--"sound"
(1Ti 1:10):
opposed to the false teachers' words, unsound through profitless
science and immorality.
words of our Lord Jesus Christ--Paul's inspired words are not merely
his own, but are also Christ's words.
4. He is proud--literally, "wrapt in smoke"; filled with the fumes
of self-conceit
(1Ti 3:6)
while "knowing nothing," namely, of the doctrine which is according to
godliness
(1Ti 6:3),
though arrogating pre-eminent knowledge
(1Ti 1:7).
doting about--literally, "sick about"; the opposite of
"wholesome"
(1Ti 6:3).
Truth is not the center about which his investigations
move, but mere word-strifes.
questions--of controversy.
strifes of words--rather than about realities
(2Ti 2:14).
These stand with them instead of "godliness" and "wholesome words"
(1Ti 6:3;
1Ti 1:4;
Tit 3:9).
evil surmisings--as to those who are of a different party from
themselves.
5. Perverse disputings--useless disputings. The oldest manuscripts
read, "lasting contests" [WIESINGER]; "incessant collisions"
[ALFORD].
"Strifes of words" had already been mentioned so that he would not be
likely to repeat the same idea (as in the English Version reading)
again.
corrupt minds--Greek, "of men corrupted (depraved) in mind." The
inmost source of the evil is in the perverted mind
(1Ti 6:4;
2Ti 3:8;
Tit 1:15).
destitute of the truth--
(Tit 1:14).
They had had the truth, but through want of moral integrity and of love
of the truth, they were misled by a pretended deeper gnosis (knowledge)
and higher ascetical holiness, of which they made a trade [WIESINGER].
supposing, &c.--The Greek requires, "supposing (regarding the
matter in this point of view) that piety
(so translated for 'godliness')
is a means of gain (that is, a way of advancing one's worldly interests:
a different Greek form, poriswa, expresses
the thing gained, gain)"; not "that gain is godliness," as
English Version.
from such withdraw thyself--omitted in the oldest manuscripts.
The connection with
1Ti 6:6
favors the omission of these words, which interrupt the connection.
6. But--Though they err in this, there is a sense in which
"piety is" not merely gain, but "great means of gain": not the
gaining which they pursue, and which makes men to be
discontented with their present possessions, and to use religion
as "a cloak of covetousness"
(1Th 2:5)
and means of earthly gain, but the present and eternal
gain which piety, whose accompaniment is contentment,
secures to the soul. WIESINGER remarks that Paul
observed in Timothy a tendency to indolence and shrinking from the
conflict, whence he felt
(1Ti 6:11)
that Timothy needed cautioning against such temptation; compare also
the second Epistle. Not merely contentment is great gain (a
sentiment of the heathen CICERO [Paradox
6], "the greatest and surest riches"), but "piety with contentment";
for piety not only feels no need of what it has not, but also has that
which exalts it above what it has not [WIESINGER].
The Greek for contentment is translated "sufficiency"
(2Co 9:8).
But the adjective
(Php 4:11)
"content"; literally, "having a sufficiency in one's self"
independent of others. "The Lord always supplies His people with what
is necessary for them. True happiness lies in piety, but this
sufficiency [supplied by God, with which moreover His people are
content] is thrown into the scale as a kind of overweight"
[CALVIN]
(1Ki 17:1-16;
Ps 37:19;
Isa 33:6, 16;
Jer 37:21).
7. For--confirming the reasonableness of "contentment."
and it is certain--Vulgate and other old versions support this
reading. The oldest manuscripts, however, omit "and it is certain"; then
the translation will be, "We brought nothing into the world (to teach us
to remember) that neither can we carry anything out"
(Job 1:21;
Ec 5:15).
Therefore, we should have no gain-seeking anxiety, the breeder of
discontent
(Mt 6:25).
8. And--Greek, "But." In contrast to the greedy gain-seekers
(1Ti 6:5).
having--so long as we have food. (The Greek expresses
"food sufficient in each case for our continually recurring wants"
[ALFORD]). It is implied that we, as believers,
shall have this
(Isa 23:16).
raiment--Greek, "covering"; according to some including a
roof to cover us, that is, a dwelling, as well as clothing.
let us be therewith content--literally, "we shall be sufficiently
provided"; "we shall be sufficed" [ALFORD].
9. will be rich--have more than "food and raiment."
Greek, "wish to be rich"; not merely are willing,
but are resolved, and earnestly desire to have riches at any
cost
(Pr 28:20, 22).
This wishing (not the riches themselves) is fatal to
"contentment"
(1Ti 6:6).
Rich men are not told to cast away their riches, but not to "trust" in
them, and to "do good" with them
(1Ti 6:17, 18;
Ps 62:10).
fall into temptation--not merely "are exposed to temptation," but
actually "fall into" it. The falling into it is what we are to
pray against, "Lead us not into temptation"
(Jas 1:14);
such a one is already in a sinful state, even before any overt act of
sin. The Greek for "temptation" and "gain" contains a play on
sounds--porasmus, peirasmus.
snare--a further step downwards
(1Ti 3:7).
He falls into "the snare of the devil."
foolish--irrational.
hurtful--to those who fall into the snare. Compare
Eph 4:22,
"deceitful lusts" which deceive to one's deadly hurt.
lusts--With the one evil lust ("wish to be rich") many others
join themselves: the one is the "root of all evils"
(1Ti 6:10).
which--Greek, "whatever (lusts)."
drown--an awful descending climax from "fall into"; this is the last
step in the terrible descent
(Jas 1:15);
translated "sink,"
Lu 5:7.
destruction . . . perdition--destruction in general (temporal or
eternal), and perdition in particular, namely, that of body and soul
in hell.
10. the love of money--not the money itself, but the love of
it--the wishing to be rich
(1Ti 6:9)
--"is a root (ELLICOTT and MIDDLETON: not as English Version, 'the
root') of all evils." (So the Greek plural). The
wealthiest may be rich not in a bad sense; the poorest may covet to be
so
(Ps 62:10).
Love of money is not the sole root of evils, but it is a leading
"root of bitterness"
(Heb 12:15),
for "it destroys faith, the root of all that is good"
[BENGEL]; its offshoots are "temptation, a snare,
lusts, destruction, perdition."
coveted after--lusted after.
erred from--literally, "have been made to err from the faith"
(1Ti 1:19; 4:1).
pierced--
(Lu 2:35).
with . . . sorrows--"pains": "thorns" of the parable
(Mt 13:22)
which choke the word of "faith." "The prosperity of fools destroys
them"
(Pr 1:32).
BENGEL and WIESINGER make
them the gnawings of conscience, producing remorse for wealth badly
acquired; the harbingers of the future "perdition"
(1Ti 6:9).
11. But thou--in contrast to the "some"
(1Ti 6:10).
man of God--who hast God as thy true riches
(Ge 15:1;
Ps 16:5;
La 3:24).
Applying primarily to Timothy as a minister (compare
2Pe 1:21),
just as the term was used of Moses
(De 33:1),
Samuel
(1Sa 9:6),
Elijah, and Elisha; but, as the exhortation is as to duties
incumbent also on all Christians, the term applies secondarily
to him (so
2Ti 3:17)
as a Christian man born of God
(Jas 1:18;
1Jo 5:1),
no longer a man of the world raised above earthly things;
therefore, God's property, not his own, bought with a price, and so
having parted with all right in himself: Christ's work is to be
his great work: he is to be Christ's living representative.
flee these things--namely, "the love of money" with its evil results
(1Ti 6:9, 10).
follow after righteousness--
(2Ti 2:22).
godliness--"piety." Righteousness is more in relation to
our fellow man; piety ("godliness") to God"; faith is the
root of both (see on
Tit 2:12).
love--by which "faith worketh."
patience--enduring perseverance amidst trials.
meekness--The oldest manuscripts read, "meek-spiritedness," namely,
towards the opponents of the Gospel.
12. Fight the good fight--BIRKS thinks this
Epistle was written from Corinth, where contests in the national games
recurred at stated seasons, which will account for the allusion here as
in
1Co 9:24-26.
Contrast "strifes of words"
(1Ti 6:4).
Compare
1Ti 1:18;
2Ti 4:7.
The "good profession" is connected with the good fight
(Ps 60:4).
lay hold on eternal life--the crown, or garland, the prize of
victory, laid hold of by the winner in the "good fight"
(2Ti 4:7, 8;
Php 3:12-14).
"Fight (literally, 'strive') with such striving earnestness as
to lay hold on the prize, eternal life."
also--not in the oldest manuscripts.
professed a good profession--Greek, "didst confess
THE good confession," namely, the
Christian confession (as the Greek word is the same in this
verse as that for "confession" in
1Ti 6:13,
probably the profession here is the confession that Christ's
kingdom is the kingdom of the truth,
Joh 18:36, 37),
at thy being set apart to thy ministerial function (whether in general,
or as overseer at Ephesus): the same occasion as is referred to in
1Ti 1:18; 4:14;
2Ti 1:4.
before many witnesses--who would testify against thee if thou shouldest
fall away [BENGEL].
13. quickeneth all things--that is, "maketh alive." But the oldest
manuscripts read, "preserveth alive"; as the same Greek means in
Ac 7:19;
compare
Ne 9:6.
He urges Timothy to faithfulness here by the present manifestation of
God's power in preserving all things, as in
1Ti 6:14,
by the future manifestation of God's power at the appearing of Christ.
The assurance that "eternal life,"
1Ti 6:12,
will be the result of "fighting the good fight," rests on the fulness
and power of Him who is the God of all life, present and to come.
witnessed--It was the Lord's part to witness, Timothy's
part to confess (or "profess,"
1Ti 6:12)
"the good confession" [BENGEL]. The
confession was His testimony that He was King, and His kingdom that of
the truth (see on
1Ti 6:12;
1Ti 6:15;
Mt 27:11).
Christ, in attesting, or bearing witness to this truth, attested the
truth of the whole of Christianity. Timothy's profession, or
confession, included therefore the whole of the Christian
truth.
14. keep this commandment--Greek, "the commandment," that is, the
Gospel rule of life
(1Ti 1:5;
Joh 13:34;
2Pe 2:21; 3:2).
without spot, unrebukeable--agreeing with "thou." Keep the commandment
and so be without spot," &c. "Pure"
(1Ti 5:22;
Eph 5:27;
Jas 1:27;
2Pe 3:14).
until the appearing of . . . Christ--His coming in
person
(2Th 2:8;
Tit 2:13).
Believers then used in their practice to set before themselves the day
of Christ as near at hand; we, the hour of death
[BENGEL]. The fact has in all ages of the Church
been certain, the time as uncertain to Paul, as it is to us; hence,
1Ti 6:15,
he says, "in HIS times": the Church's true
attitude is that of continual expectation of her Lord's return
(1Co 1:8;
Php 1:6, 10).
15. in his times--Greek, "His own [fitting] times"
(Ac 1:7).
The plural implies successive stages in the manifestation of the
kingdom of God, each having its own appropriate time, the regulating
principle and knowledge of which rests with the Father
(1Ti 2:6;
2Ti 1:9;
Tit 1:3;
Heb 1:1).
he shall show--"display": an expression appropriate in reference
to His "APPEARING," which is stronger than His
"coming," and implies its visibility; "manifest": make
visible (compare
Ac 3:20):
"He" is the Father
(1Ti 6:16).
blessed--in Himself: so about to be the source of blessing to
His people at Christ appearing, whence flows their "blessed hope"
(1Ti 1:11;
Tit 2:13).
only--
(Joh 17:3;
Ro 16:27;
Re 15:4).
King of kings--elsewhere applied also to Jesus
(Re 1:5; 17:14; 19:16).
16. Who only hath immortality--in His own essence, not merely at
the will of another, as all other immortal beings
[JUSTIN MARTYR,
Quæst. ad Orthod., 61]. As He hath immortality, so
will He give it to us who believe; to be out of Him is death. It is
mere heathen philosophy that attributes to the soul indestructibility
in itself, which is to be attributed solely to God's gift. As He hath
life in Himself, so hath He given to the Son to have life in
Himself
(Joh 5:26).
The term used in the New Testament for "immortal," which does not
occur, is "incorruptible." "Immortality" is found in
1Co 15:53, 54.
dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto--After
life comes mention of light, as in
Joh 1:4.
That light is unapproachable to creatures, except in so
far as they are admitted by Him, and as He goes forth to them
[BENGEL]. It is unapproachable on account
of its exceeding brightness [THEOPHYLACT]. If one
cannot gaze steadfastly at the sun, which is but a small part of
creation, by reason of its exceeding heat and power, how much less can
mortal man gaze at the inexpressible glory of God [THEOPHYLACT, To Autolycus]
(Ps 104:2;
1Jo 1:5).
no man hath seen--
(Ex 23:20;
Joh 1:18;
Col 1:15;
Heb 11:27;
1Jo 4:12).
Perhaps even in the perfect state no creature shall fully see God.
Still the saints shall, in some sense, have the blessedness of
seeing Him, which is denied to mere man
(Mt 5:8;
1Co 13:12;
1Jo 3:2;
Re 22:4).
17. Resuming the subject from above,
1Ti 6:5, 10.
The immortality of God, alone rich in glory, and of His people through
Him, is opposed to the lust of money (compare
1Ti 6:14-16).
From speaking of the desire to be rich, he here passes to those
who are rich: (1) What ought to be their disposition; (2) What
use they ought to make of their riches, and, (3) The consequences of
their so using them.
rich in this world--contrasted with the riches of the future kingdom
to be the portion of believers at Christ's "appearing,"
1Ti 6:14.
high-minded--often the character of the rich (see
Ro 12:16).
trust--Greek, "to have their trust resting."
in . . . in--rather, "upon . . . upon," as the oldest manuscripts.
uncertain riches--rather as Greek, "the
uncertainty of riches." They who rest their trust on riches,
rest trust on uncertainty itself
(Pr 23:5).
Now they belong to one person, now to another, and that which has many
masters is possessed by none [THEODORET].
living God--The best manuscripts and versions omit "living." He who
trusts in riches transfers to them the duty he owes to God [CALVIN].
who giveth--Greek, "affordeth."
all things richly--temporal and eternal, for the body and for the soul.
In order to be truly rich, seek to be blessed of, and in, God
(Pr 10:22;
2Pe 1:3).
to enjoy--Greek, "for enjoyment." Not that the heart may
cleave to them as its idol and trust
(1Ti 4:3).
Enjoyment consists in giving, not in holding fast.
Non-employment should be far removed, as from man, so from his
resources
(Jas 5:2, 3)
[BENGEL].
18. do good--like God Himself
(Ps 119:68;
Ac 14:17)
and Christ
(Ac 10:38).
TITTMANN translates, "to do," or "act well"; as
the Greek for "to be beneficent" is a distinct word,
agathopoiein.
rich in good works--so "rich in faith," which produces good works
(Jas 2:5).
Contrasted with "rich in this world,"
1Ti 6:17.
Literally, it is "rich in honorable (right) works." Greek,
"kalois," "ergois," are works good or right in
themselves: "agathois," good to another.
ready to distribute--free givers [ALFORD]; the heart not cleaving to
possessions, but ready to impart to others.
willing to communicate--ready contributors
[ALFORD]: liberal in
admitting others to share our goods in common with ourselves
(Ga 6:6;
Heb 13:16).
19. Laying up in store--"therefrom (that is, by this means
[ALFORD]; but BENGEL makes
the Greek "apo" mean laying apart against a future
time), laying up for themselves as a treasure"
[ALFORD]
(Mt 6:19, 20).
This is a treasure which we act wisely in laying up in store,
whereas the wisest thing we can do with earthly treasures is "to
distribute" them and give others a share of them
(1Ti 6:18).
good foundation--(See on
1Ti 3:13;
Lu 6:48;
1Co 3:11).
The sure reversion of the future heavenly inheritance: earthly riches
scattered in faith lay up in store a sure increase of
heavenly riches. We gather by scattering
(Pr 11:24; 13:7;
Lu 16:9).
that . . . eternal life--The oldest manuscripts and
versions read, "that which is really life," its joys being solid
and enduring
(Ps 16:11).
The life that now is cannot be called so, its goods being
unsubstantial, and itself a vapor
(Jas 4:14).
"In order that ('with their feet so to speak on this foundation'
[DE WETTE]) they may lay hold
on that which is life indeed."
20, 21. Recapitulatory conclusion: the main aim of the whole Epistle
being here summarily stated.
O Timothy--a personal appeal, marking at once his affection for
Timothy, and his prescience of the coming heresies.
keep--from spiritual thieves, and from enemies who will, while men
sleep, sow tares amidst the good seed sown by the Son of man.
that which is committed to thy trust--Greek, "the deposit"
(1Ti 1:18;
2Ti 1:12, 14; 2:2).
"The true" or "sound doctrine" to be taught, as opposed
to "the science falsely so called," which leads to
"error concerning the faith"
(1Ti 6:21).
"It is not thine: it is another's property with which thou hast been
entrusted: Diminish it not at all" [CHRYSOSTOM].
"That which was entrusted to thee, not found by thee; which thou hast
received, not invented; a matter not of genius, but of teaching; not of
private usurpation, but of public tradition; a matter brought to thee,
not put forth by thee, in which thou oughtest to be not an enlarger,
but a guardian; not an originator, but a disciple; not leading, but
following. 'Keep,' saith he, 'the deposit,'; preserve intact and
inviolate the talent of the catholic faith. What has been entrusted to
thee, let that same remain with thee; let that same be handed down by
thee. Gold thou hast received, gold return. I should be sorry thou
shouldest substitute aught else. I should be sorry that for gold thou
shouldest substitute lead impudently, or brass fraudulently. I do not
want the mere appearance of gold, but its actual reality. Not that
there is to be no progress in religion in Christ's Church. Let there be
so by all means, and the greatest progress; but then let it be real
progress, not a change of the faith. Let the intelligence of the whole
Church and its individual members increase exceedingly, provided it be
only in its own kind, the doctrine being still the same. Let the
religion of the soul resemble the growth of the body,which, though it
develops its several parts in the progress of years, yet remains the
same as it was essentially" [VINCENTIUS LIRINENSIS, A.D. 434].
avoiding--"turning away from" (compare
2Ti 3:4).
Even as they have "turned away from the truth"
(1Ti 1:6; 5:15;
2Ti 4:4).
profane--
(1Ti 4:7;
2Ti 2:16).
vain--Greek, "empty": mere "strifes of words,"
1Ti 6:4,
producing no moral fruit.
oppositions--dialectic antithesis of the false teachers
[ALFORD]. WIESINGER, not so
probably, "oppositions to the sound doctrine." I think it likely germs
existed already of the heresy of dualistic oppositions, namely, between
the good and evil principle, afterwards fully developed in Gnosticism.
Contrast Paul's just antithesis
(1Ti 3:16; 6:5, 6;
2Ti 2:15-23).
science falsely so called--where there is not faith, there is not
knowledge [CHRYSOSTOM]. There was true "knowledge," a special gift of
the Spirit, which was abused by some
(1Co 8:1; 12:8; 14:6).
This gift was soon counterfeited by false teachers arrogating to
themselves pre-eminently the gift
(Col 2:8, 18, 23).
Hence arose the creeds of the Church, called symbols, that is,
in Greek, "watchwords," or a test whereby the orthodox might
distinguish one another in opposition to the heretical. Perhaps here,
1Ti 6:20,
and 2Ti 1:13, 14,
imply the existence of some such brief formula of doctrine then
existing in the Church; if so, we see a good reason for its not being
written in Scripture, which is designed not to give dogmatic
formularies, but to be the fountain whence all such formularies are to
be drawn according to the exigencies of the several churches and ages.
Probably thus a portion of the so-called apostle's creed may have had
their sanction, and been preserved solely by tradition on this account.
"The creed, handed down from the apostles, is not written on paper and
with ink, but on fleshy tables of the heart"
JEROME [Against John of Jerusalem, 9].
Thus, in the creed, contrary to the "oppositions" (the germs of which
probably existed in the Church in Paul's latter days) whereby the aeons
were set off in pairs, God is stated to be "the Father
Almighty," or all-governing "maker of heaven and earth" [BISHOP HINDS].
21. Which some professing--namely, professing these
oppositions of science falsely so called.
erred--(See on
1Ti 1:6;
1Ti 2:11)
--literally, "missed the mark"
(2Ti 3:7, 8).
True sagacity is inseparable from faith.
Grace--Greek, "the grace," namely, of God, for which we
Christians look, and in which we stand [ALFORD].
be with thee--He restricts the salutation to Timothy, as the
Epistle was not to be read in public [BENGEL]. But
the oldest manuscripts read, "be with you"; and the "thee" may be a
transcriber's alteration to harmonize with
2Ti 4:22;
Tit 3:15.
Amen--omitted in the oldest manuscripts.
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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871)
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