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÷÷÷Titus
- Brief Background
- Titus is part of the collection of Paul's letters known as "the Pastoral Letters." This
is because 1 Timothy, Titus, and 2 Timothy deal with Paul's admonitions to his co-workers on
- how to deal with false teachers
- how to establish leadership in local churches
- how to encourage godliness
The apparent chronological order of these books is: 1 Timothy and/or Titus then later,
2 Timothy. Titus deals with the same subjects as 1 Timothy. Titus may have been written
first because its introduction is so lengthy and theologically involved, much like Romans.
- The geographical movements of Paul and these co-workers do not fit into the
geographical movements of Paul in Acts. Therefore, many (me included) assume
that this is evidence that Paul was released from prison and conducted a fourth
missionary journey. See full notes in Introduction to Timothy.
- The dates for this fourth missionary journey would have to be sometime between
the early A.D. 60's to A.D. 68 because Paul was
beheaded under Nero and Nero killed himself in A.D. 68.
- Titus, the Man
- Titus was one of Paul's most trusted co-workers. This is evidenced by the fact
that Paul sent him to the troubled churches of Corinth and Crete.
- He was a full Gentile (Timothy was only half-Greek), converted under Paul's
preaching. Paul refused to circumcise him (cf. Gal. 2:3).
- He is mentioned often in Paul's letters (cf. 2 Cor. 2:13; 7:6-15; 8:6-24; 12:18;
Gal. 2:1-3; 2 Tim. 4:10) and it is very surprising that Luke does not mention
him in Acts. Some commentaries theorize that
- he may have been a relative of Luke (possibly a brother) and to include
his name would have been seen as an act of cultural impropriety on Luke's part
- Titus is Luke's major source of information about Paul's life and ministry
and, therefore, like Luke, would not be named
- He accompanied Paul and Barnabas to the all important Jerusalem Council, recorded
in Acts 15, where the issue of the new Gentile believers' relationship to the Mosaic Law
was debated and settled.
- This book focuses on advice Paul gives Titus about his ministry on Crete. Titus is acting
as Paul's official apostolic surrogate/legate.
- The last data in the NT about Titus is that he was sent to minister in Dalmatia (cf. 2 Tim. 4:10).
- The False Teachers
- There is obviously a group of false teachers on Crete who opposed Paul's gospel.
- Their theological teachings led to conflict with the godly lifestyle that is expected of all believers.
- references to godly living: Titus 1:1,16; 2:7,14; 3:1,8,14
- summaries of character qualities: Titus 2:11-14; 3:4-7
- There is an obvious Jewish flavor to this false teaching (cf. Titus 1:10,14; 3:8-9). These
heresies are a combination of Jewish legalism and Greek speculative thought (Gnosticism).
They are similar to the false teachers addressed in 1 Timothy, Colossians, and Ephesians. The
focus of the Pastoral Letters is on heresy, and not exclusively church organization.
SPECIAL TOPIC: GNOSTICISM
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