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Titus Chapter
Three
Titus 3
With respect to the conduct of Christians towards the
world
grace has banished violence
and the spirit of rebellion and resistance
which agitates the heart of those who believe hot
and which has its source in
the self-will that strives to maintain its own rights relatively to others.
The Christian has his portion
his inheritance
elsewhere; he is
tranquil and submissive here and ready to do good. Even when others are violent
and unjust towards him
he bears it in remembrance that once it was no
otherwise with himself: a difficult lesson
for violence and injustice stir up
the heart; but the thought that it is sin
and that we also were formerly its
slaves
produces patience and piety. Grace alone has made the difference
and
according to that grace are we to act towards others.
The apostle gives a grievous summary of the
characteristics of man after the flesh-that which we once were. Sin was
foolishness-was disobedience; the sinner was deceived-was the slave of lusts
filled with malice and envy
hateful
and hating others. Such is man
characterized by sin. But the kindness of God
of a Saviour-God
His good-will
and charity towards men (sweet and precious character of God!) [1] has appeared. The character that He assumed
is that of Saviour
a name especially given Him in these three epistles
in
order that we should bear its stamp in our walk
that it should pervade our
spirit. Our walk in the world and our conduct towards others depend on the
principles of our relationships with God. That which has made us different from
others is not some merit in ourselves
some personal superiority: we were
sometime even as they. It is the tender love and grace of the God of mercy. He
has been kind and merciful to us: we have known what it is
and are so to
others. It si true that in cleansing and renewing us this mercy has wrought by
a principle
and in a sphere of a life
that are entirely new
so that we
cannot walk with the world as we did before; but we act towards others who are
still in the mire of this world
as God has acted towards us to bring us out of
it
that we might enjoy those things which
according to the same principle of
grace
we desire that others also should enjoy. The sense of what we once were
and of the way in which God has acted towards us
combine to govern our conduct
towards others.
Now when the kindness of a Saviour-God appeared
it was
not something vague and uncertain; He has saved us
not by works of
righteousness which we have done
but according to His mercy by washing and
renewing us. This is the double character of the work in us
the same two
points which we find in John 3 in the Lords' discourse with Nicodemus; except that
here is added that which has now its place because of the work of Christ
namely
that the Holy Ghost is also shed on us abundantly to be the strength of
that new life of which He is the source. The man is washed
cleansed. He is
washed from his former habits
thoughts
desires
in the practical sense. We
wash a thing that exists. The man was morally bad and defiled in his inward and
outward life. God has saved us by purifying us; He could not do it otherwise.
To be in relationship with Himself there must be practical purity.
But this purification was thorough. It was not the
outside of the vessel. It was purification by means of regeneration; identified
with the communication of a new life no doubt
which is the source of new
thoughts
in connection with God's new creation
and capable of enjoying His
presence and in the light of His countenance
but which in itself is a passage
from the state we were in into a wholly new one
from flesh by death into the
status of a risen Christ.
But there was a power which acted in this new life and accompanies it
in the Christian. It is not merely a subjective change
as they say. There is
an active divine Agent who imparts something new
of which He is Himself the
source-the Holy Ghost Himself. It is God acting in the creature (for it is by
the Spirit that God always acts immediately on the creature); and it is in the
character of the Holy Ghost that He acts in this work of renewal. It is a new
source of thoughts in relationship with God; not only a vital capacity
but an
energy which produces that which is new in us.
It has been a question
When does this renewal by the
Holy Ghost take place? Is it at the commencement
[2] of
which the apostle speaks? I think that the apostle speaks of it according to
the character of the work; and adds "shed on us" (that which
characterizes the grace of this present period) to shew that there is an
additional truth
namely
that the Holy Ghost
as "shed on us
"
continues in order to maintain by His power the enjoyment of the relationship
into which He has brought us. The man is cleansed in connection with the new
order of things; but the Holy Ghost is a source of an entirely new life
entirely new thoughts; not only of a new moral being
but of the communication
of all that in which this new being develops itself. We cannot separate the
nature from the objects with regard to which the nature develops itself
and
which form the sphere of its existence and characterize it.
It is the Holy Ghost who gives the thoughts
who creates
and forms the whole moral being of the new man. The thought and that which
thinks
cannot be separated
morally
when the heart is occupied with it. The
Holy Ghost is the source of all in the saved man: he is ultimately saved
because this is the case with him.
The Holy Ghost does not only give a new nature; He gives
it us in connection with an entirely new order of things ("a new
creation")
and fills us as to our thoughts with the things that are in
this new creation. This is the reason
that
although we are placed in it once
for all
this work-as to the operation of the Holy Ghost-continues; because He
ever communicates to us more and more of the things of this new world into which
He has brought us. He takes of the things of Christ and shews them to us; and
all that the Father has is Christ's. I think that the "renewing of the
Holy Ghost" embraces all this; because he says
"which shed on us
abundantly." So that it is not only that we are born of Him
but that He
works in us
communicating to us all that is ours in Christ.
The Holy Ghost is shed on us abundantly by means of Jesus
Christ our Saviour
in order that
having been justified by the grace of this
Saviour
we should be heirs according to the hope of eternal life. I think that
the antecedent of "in order that" is "the washing of
regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Ghost;" and that the sentence
"which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour
" is
an accessory parenthesis introduced to shew us that we have the fullness of the
enjoyment of these things by the power of the Holy Ghost.
Thus he has saved us by this renewing that we may be
heirs according to the hope of eternal life
It is nothing outward
earthly
or
corporeal. Grace has given us eternal life
In order to this
we have been
justified by the grace of Christ. [3] Thus
there is energy
power
hope
through the rich gift of the Holy Ghost. In order
to our participating in it we have been justified by His grace
and our
inheritance is in the incorruptible joy of eternal life.
God has saved us
not by works--[4]
anything that we are
but by His mercy. But the He has acted towards us
according to the riches of His own grace
according to the thoughts of His own
heart.
With these things the apostle desires that Titus would be
occupied-with that which brings us with thanksgiving into practical connection
with God Himself and makes us feel what our portion is
our eternal portion
before Him. This acts upon the conscience
fills us with love and good works
makes us respect all the relationships of which God Himself is the center. We
are in relationship with God according to His rights; we are before God
who
causes everything that He has Himself established to be respected by the
conscience.
Idle questions and disputes on the law Titus was to
avoid
together with everything that would destroy the simplicity of our
relationship with God according to the immediate revelation of Himself and of
His will in Jesus Christ. It is still the Gnostic Judaism setting itself up
against the simplicity of the gospel; it is the law and human righteousness
and that which
by means of intermediate beings
destroys the simplicity and
the immediate character of our relationship with the God of grace.
When a man tried to set up his own opinions
and by that
means to form parties in the assembly
after having admonished him once and a
second time
he was to be rejected; his faith was subverted. He sins
he is
judged of himself. He is not satisfied with the assembly of God
with the truth
of God: he wants to make a truth of his won. Why is he a Christian
if
Christianity
as God has given it
does no suffice him? By making a party for
his own opinions he condemns himself.
We have
at the end of the epistle
a little glimpse of
the Christian activity which the love of God produces
the pains taken that the
flock should enjoy all the help with which God supplies the assembly. Paul
wished that Titus should come to him: but the Cretans needed his services; and
the apostle makes the arrival of Artemas or Tychicus (the latter well known by
the services he had rendered to Paul) the condition of the departure of Titus
from the field in which he was laboring. We find too that Zena
a lawyer
and
Apollos
who had also displayed his active zeal at Ephesus and Corinth
were disposed
to occupy themselves in Crete with the work of the Lord.
Observe also that we have the two kinds of labourers:
those who were in personal connection with the apostle as fellow-laborers
who
accompanied him
and whom he sent elsewhere to continue the work he had begun
when he could no longer carry it on himself; and those who labored freely and
independently of him. But there was no jealousy of this double activity. He did
not neglect the flock that were dear to him. He was glad that any who were sound
in the faith should water the plants which he had planted. He encourages Titus
to show them all affection
and to provide whatever they needed in their
journey. thought suggest to him the counsel that follows; namely
that it would
be well for Christians to learn how to do useful work in order to supply the
wants of others as well as their own.
The apostle ends his epistle with the salutations that
christian love always produces; but
as we saw at the beginning
there is not
here the same expansion of heart that we find in Paul's communications to
Timothy. Grace is the same everywhere; but there are special affections and
relationships in the assembly of God.
[1] In
Greek it is the word 'philanthropy'
which in scripture is only used in
speaking of God; and which moreover has much greater force than the English
word
because 'phil' is an especial affection for anything
a friendship.
[2]
"palinggenisia" the word here used
is not being born again
("anagennao"). It is used
besides this passage
only in the end of
Matthew 19 for the millennium. The renewing of the Holy Ghost is a distinct
thing from the regeneration. This last is a change of one state of things to
another.
[3] It
is because "Christ" is in the parenthesis
and not in the principal
sentence
that we read "ekeinos".
[4]
Here
as everywhere
the responsibility of man and God's saving grace
by which
purpose also is accomplished
are clearly distinguished.
── John Darby《Synopsis of Titus》
Titus 3
Chapter Contents
Obedience to magistrates
and becoming behaviour towards
all
are enforced from what believers were before conversion
and what they are
made
through Christ. (1-7) Good works to be done
and useless disputes
avoided. (8-11) Directions and exhortations. (12-15)
Commentary on Titus 3:1-7
(Read Titus 3:1-7)
Spiritual privileges do not make void or weaken
but
confirm civil duties. Mere good words and good meanings are not enough without
good works. They were not to be quarrelsome
but to show meekness on all
occasions
not toward friends only
but to all men
though with wisdom
James 3:13. And let this text teach us how wrong
it is for a Christian to be churlish to the worst
weakest
and most abject.
The servants of sin have many masters
their lusts hurry them different ways;
pride commands one thing
covetousness another. Thus they are hateful
deserving to be hated. It is the misery of sinners
that they hate one another;
and it is the duty and happiness of saints to love one another. And we are
delivered out of our miserable condition
only by the mercy and free grace of
God
the merit and sufferings of Christ
and the working of his Spirit. God the
Father is God our Saviour. He is the fountain from which the Holy Spirit flows
to teach
regenerate
and save his fallen creatures; and this blessing comes to
mankind through Christ. The spring and rise of it
is the kindness and love of
God to man. Love and grace have
through the Spirit
great power to change and
turn the heart to God. Works must be in the saved
but are not among the causes
of their salvation. A new principle of grace and holiness is wrought
which
sways
and governs
and makes the man a new creature. Most pretend they would
have heaven at last
yet they care not for holiness now; they would have the
end without the beginning. Here is the outward sign and seal thereof in
baptism
called therefore the washing of regeneration. The work is inward and
spiritual; this is outwardly signified and sealed in this ordinance. Slight not
this outward sign and seal; yet rest not in the outward washing
but look to
the answer of a good conscience
without which the outward washing will avail
nothing. The worker therein is the Spirit of God; it is the renewing of the
Holy Ghost. Through him we mortify sin
perform duty
walk in God's ways; all
the working of the Divine life in us
and the fruits of righteousness without
are through this blessed and holy Spirit. The Spirit and his saving gifts and
graces
come through Christ
as a Saviour
whose undertaking and work are to
bring to grace and glory. Justification
in the gospel sense
is the free
forgiveness of a sinner; accepting him as righteous through the righteousness
of Christ received by faith. God
in justifying a sinner in the way of the
gospel
is gracious to him
yet just to himself and his law. As forgiveness is
through a perfect righteousness
and satisfaction is made to justice by Christ
it cannot be merited by the sinner himself. Eternal life is set before us in
the promise; the Spirit works faith in us
and hope of that life; faith and
hope bring it near
and fill with joy in expectation of it.
Commentary on Titus 3:8-11
(Read Titus 3:8-11)
When the grace of God towards mankind has been declared
the necessity of good works is pressed. Those who believe in God
must make it
their care to maintain good works
to seek opportunities for doing them
being
influenced by love and gratitude. Trifling
foolish questions must be avoided
and subtle distinctions and vain inquiries; nor should people be eager after
novelties
but love sound doctrine which tends most to edifying. Though we may
now think some sins light and little
if the Lord awaken the conscience
we
shall feel even the smallest sin heavy upon our souls.
Commentary on Titus 3:12-15
(Read Titus 3:12-15)
Christianity is not a fruitless profession; and its
professors must be filled with the fruits of righteousness
which are by Jesus
Christ
to the glory and praise of God. They must be doing good
as well as
keeping away from evil. Let "ours" follow some honest labour and
employment
to provide for themselves and their families. Christianity obliges
all to seek some honest work and calling
and therein to abide with God. The
apostle concludes with expressions of kind regard and fervent prayer. Grace be
with you all; the love and favour of God
with the fruits and effects thereof
according to need; and the increase and feeling of them more and more in your
souls. This is the apostle's wish and prayer
showing his affection to them
and desire for their good
and would be a means of obtaining for them
and
bringing down on them
the thing requested. Grace is the chief thing to be
wished and prayed for
with respect to ourselves or others; it is "all
good."
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Titus》
Titus 3
Verse 1
[1] Put them in mind to be subject to principalities and
powers
to obey magistrates
to be ready to every good work
Remind them — All the Cretan Christians.
To be subject — Passively
not resisting.
To principalities — Supreme.
And powers — Subordinate governors. And to
obey - Them actively
so far as conscience permits.
Verse 2
[2] To speak evil of no man
to be no brawlers
but gentle
shewing all meekness unto all men.
To speak evil — Neither of them nor any man.
Not to be quarrelsome — To assault none.
To be gentle — When assaulted.
Toward all men — Even those who are such as we
were.
Verse 3
[3] For we ourselves also were sometimes foolish
disobedient
deceived
serving divers lusts and pleasures
living in malice and
envy
hateful
and hating one another.
For we — And as God hath dealt with us
so ought we to deal
with our neighbour.
Were without understanding — Wholly ignorant of
God.
And disobedient — When he was declared to us.
Verse 4
[4] But after that the kindness and love of God our Saviour
toward man appeared
When the love of God appeared — By the light of his
Spirit to our inmost soul.
Verse 5
[5] Not by works of righteousness which we have done
but
according to his mercy he saved us
by the washing of regeneration
and
renewing of the Holy Ghost;
Not by works — In this important passage the
apostle presents us with a delightful view of our redemption. Herein we have
1. The cause of it; not our works or righteousness
but "the kindness and
love of God our Saviour." 2. The effects; which are
(1.) Justification;
"being justified
" pardoned and accepted through the alone merits of
Christ
not from any desert in us
but according to his own mercy
"by his
grace
" his free
unmerited goodness. (2.) Sanctification
expressed by
the laver of regeneration
(that is
baptism
the thing signified
as well as
the outward sign
) and the renewal of the Holy Ghost; which purifies the soul
as water cleanses the body
and renews it in the whole image of God. 3. The
consummation of all; - that we might become heirs of eternal life
and live now
in the joyful hope of it.
Verse 8
[8] This is a faithful saying
and these things I will that
thou affirm constantly
that they which have believed in God might be careful
to maintain good works. These things are good and profitable unto men.
Be careful to excel in good works — Though the apostle
does not lay these for the foundation
yet he brings them in at their proper
place
and then mentions them
not slightly
but as affairs of great
importance. He desires that all believers should be careful - Have their
thoughts upon them: use their best contrivance
their utmost endeavours
not
barely to practise
but to excel
to be eminent and distinguished in them:
because
though they are not the ground of our reconciliation with God
yet
they are amiable and honourable to the Christian profession.
And profitable to men — Means of increasing
the everlasting happiness both of ourselves and others.
Verse 10
[10] A man that is an heretick after the first and second
admonition reject;
An heretic (after a first and second admonition) reject — Avoid
leave to
himself. This is the only place
in the whole scripture
where this word
heretic occurs; and here it evidently means
a man that obstinately persists in
contending about "foolish questions
" and thereby occasions strife
and animosities
schisms and parties in the church. This
and this alone
is an
heretic in the scripture sense; and his punishment likewise is here fixed.
Shun
avoid him
leave him to himself. As for the Popish sense
"A man
that errs in fundamentals
" although it crept
with many other things
early into the church
yet it has no shadow of foundation either in the Old or
New Testament.
Verse 11
[11] Knowing that he that is such is subverted
and sinneth
being condemned of himself.
Such an one is perverted — In his heart
at
least.
And sinneth
being self-condemned — Being convinced in
his own conscience that he acts wrong.
Verse 12
[12] When I shall send Artemas unto thee
or Tychicus
be
diligent to come unto me to Nicopolis: for I have determined there to winter.
When I shall send Artemas or Tychicus — To succeed thee in
thy office. Titus was properly an evangelist
who
according to the nature of
that office
had no fixed residence; but presided over other elders
wherever
he travelled from place to place
assisting each of the apostles according to
the measure of his abilities.
Come to me to Nicopolis — Very probably not the
Nicopolis in Macedonia
as the vulgar subscription asserts: (indeed
none of
those subscriptions at the end of St. Paul's epistles are of any authority:)
rather it was a town of the same name which lay upon the sea-coast of Epirus.
For I have determined to winter there — Hence it appears
he
was not there yet; if so
he would have said
to winter here. Consequently
this letter was not written from thence.
Verse 13
[13] Bring Zenas the lawyer and Apollos on their journey
diligently
that nothing be wanting unto them.
Send forward Zenas the lawyer — Either a Roman lawyer
or an expounder of the Jewish law.
Verse 14
[14] And let ours also learn to maintain good works for
necessary uses
that they be not unfruitful.
And let ours — All our brethren at Crete.
Learn — Both by thy admonition and example. Perhaps they had
not before assisted Zenas and Apollos as they ought to have done.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Titus》
Chapter 3. The Authority of Elders
Knowing What Is
Wrong
Commit Intentionally
I. The Way to
Conduct Oneself and to Treat People
II. The
Practice of Spiritual Life
III. Command on
Individuals
── Chih-Hsin
Chang《An Outline of
The New Testament》
Chapter Three General Review
OBJECTIVES IN STUDYING THIS CHAPTER
1) To review responsibilities Christians have toward those in authority
and others in general
2) To consider how one is saved by God's mercy
through the washing of
regeneration and renewal of the Holy Spirit
3) To notice the emphasis on being careful to maintain good works
while avoiding things that are unprofitable and useless (including
some individuals)
SUMMARY
In this final chapter Paul instructs Titus to remind the brethren
concerning their duties toward those in authority and men in general
(1-2). Exhortations to gentleness and humility toward all men is made
with a reminder that we too were once like those in the world (3). We
have been saved
not by our own works of righteousness
but by the
mercy of God who saved us through the washing of regeneration and
renewing of the Holy Spirit (4-5). The Spirit has been poured out
abundantly on us
so that we who are justified might become heirs
according to the hope of eternal life (6-7). Paul also wants Titus to
affirm constantly that those who have believed in God should be
diligent in their good works (8). At the same time
foolish disputes
and divisive men are to be avoided
for such are unprofitable and
useless (9-11).
The epistle closes with personal remarks and greetings. Titus is
encouraged to come to Nicopolis as soon as Artemas or Tychicus have
arrived
for Paul has chosen to winter there (12). In the meantime
Titus is to send Zenas and Apollos on their journey with haste (13).
Yet another exhortation is given to have the brethren learn to maintain
good works
meeting urgent needs
so they may not be unfruitful. Paul
then passes along greetings to Titus from those with him
and sends
similar greetings to those who love the brethren (13-14). A final
benediction regarding grace ends the letter (15).
OUTLINE
I. INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE BRETHREN IN GENERAL (1-11)
A. CONCERNING PROPER CONDUCT (1-2)
1. Toward those in authority (1)
a. Be subject to and obey rulers and authorities
b. Be ready for every good work
2. Toward all men (2)
a. Speak evil of no one
b. Be peaceable
gentle
showing humility to all
B. REASONS TO HEED SUCH EXHORTATIONS (3-11)
1. In view of our past conduct (3)
a. We were once foolish
disobedient and deceived
b. We served various lust and pleasures
c. We lived in malice and envy
hateful and hating one another
2. In view of our salvation (4-7)
a. We were saved according to God's kindness
love and mercy
not by works of righteousness which we have done (4-5)
b. We were saved through the washing of regeneration and
renewing of the Holy Spirit (5-7)
1) Whom God poured out abundantly through Jesus our Savior
2) That being justified by grace we should become heirs
according to the hope of eternal life
3. In view of what is good and profitable (8)
a. Those who have believed in God should be careful to
maintain good works
b. This is a faithful saying
and should be affirmed
constantly
4. In view of what is unprofitable and useless (9-11)
a. Foolish disputes
genealogies
contentions
and strivings
about the law are to be avoided (9)
b. A divisive man is to be rejected after two admonitions
(10-11)
1) For such is warped and sinning
2) And is self-condemned
II. CONCLUDING REMARKS (12-15)
A. FINAL INSTRUCTIONS (12-14)
1. To meet him at Nicopolis
after the arrival of Artemas or
Tychicus (12)
2. To send Zenas and Apollos on their journey with haste
lacking
nothing (13)
3. To aid others in learning to maintain good works
meeting
urgent needs
so as not to be unfruitful (14)
B. FINAL GREETINGS
AND A PRAYER (15)
1. Greetings from those with Paul
2. Greetings to those who love the brethren in the faith
3. Grace be with you all. Amen.
REVIEW QUESTIONS FOR THE CHAPTER
1) What are the main points of this chapter?
- Instructions for the brethren in general (1-11)
- Concluding remarks (12-15)
2) What are the responsibilities of Christians toward rulers and
authorities? (1)
- To be subject to them
to obey
to be ready for every good work
3) How should Christians conduct themselves toward men in general? (2)
- To speak evil of none
to be peaceable
gentle
and humble toward
all
4) What should help us to be gentle and humble toward others? (3)
- We ourselves were once foolish
disobedient
deceived
- We had served various lusts and pleasures
- We had been hateful and hating one another
5) What else should remind us to be humble? (4-5)
- We were saved
not by works of righteousness which we have done
but according to the kindness
love and mercy of God
6) How has God in mercy saved us? (5)
- Through the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy
Spirit
7) Why has God poured out the Holy Spirit abundantly on us? (6-7)
- That having been justified by His grace
we should become heirs
according to the hope of eternal life (cf. Ga 4:6-7; Ro 8:15-17)
8) What faithful saying did Paul want Titus to affirm constantly? (8)
- Those who have believed in God should be careful to maintain good
works
9) What was Titus to avoid? Why? (9)
- Foolish disputes
genealogies
contentions
and strivings about
the law
- They are unprofitable and useless
10) Who was Titus to reject after two admonitions? Why? (10-11)
- A divisive man
- Such a person is warped and sinning
being self-condemned
11) Where did Paul want Titus to join him? (12)
- Nicopolis
12) Who was Titus to send along on their journey with haste
lacking
nothing? (13)
- Zenas the lawyer and Apollos
13) What did Paul want Christians to learn? (14)
- To maintain good works
to meet urgent needs
14) Who sent greetings to Titus? Who did Paul send greetings to? (15)
- All who with him
- Those who love the brethren in the faith
15) What prayer did Paul offer as he closed this letter? (15)
- Grace be with you all. Amen.
--《Executable
Outlines》
The
authority of elders
Knowing what is wrong
Commit intentionally
I.
The way to conduct oneself and to treat people
1.
Toward government
2.
Toward people
3.
Self=examination
II.The practice of spiritual life
1.
The kindness and love of God
2.
The salvation of Jesus
3.
The rebirth of the Holy Spirit
III.
Command on individuals
1.
Transfer workers
2.
Devote to what is good
3.
Live productive life
-- Chih-Hsin
Chang《An Outline of The New Testament》