Surat Titus
Surat Titus
Surat Titus
Titus
Completed by JEREMIAH SMITH.
THIS Epistle of Paul to Titus is much of the same nature with those to Timothy; both
were converts of Paul, and his companions in labours and sufferings; both were in the
office of evangelists, whose work was to water the churches planted by the apostles, and
to set in order the things that were wanting in them: they were vice-apostles, as it were,
working the work of the Lord, as they did, and mostly under their direction, though not
despotic and arbitrary, but with the concurring exercise of their own prudence and
judgment, 1 Cor. xvi. 10, 12. We read much of this Titus, his titles, character, and active
usefulness, in many places--he was a Greek, Gal. ii. 3. Paul called him his son (Tit. i. 4),
his brother (2 Cor. ii. 13), his partner and fellow-helper (2 Cor. viii. 23), one that walked
in the same spirit and in the same steps with himself. He went up with the apostles to the
church at Jerusalem (Gal. ii. 1), was much conversant at Corinth, for which church he had
an earnest care, 2 Cor. viii. 16. Paul's second epistle to them, and probably his first also,
was sent by his hand, 2 Cor. viii. 16-18, 23; ix. 2-4; xii. 18. He was with the apostle at
Rome, and thence went into Dalmatia (2 Tim. iv. 10), after which no more occurs of him
in the scriptures. So that by them he appears not to have been a fixed bishop; if such he
were, and in those times, the church of Corinth, where he most laboured, had the best title
to him. In Crete (now called Candia, formerly Hecatompolis, from the hundred cities that
were in it), a large island at the mouth of the Ægean Sea, the gospel had got some
footing; and here were Paul and Titus in one of their travels, cultivating this plantation;
but the apostle of the Gentiles, having on him the care of all the churches, could not
himself tarry long at this place. He therefore left Titus some time there, to carry on the
work which had been begun, wherein, probably, meeting with more difficulty than
ordinary, Paul wrote this epistle to him; and yet perhaps not so much for his own sake as
for the people's, that the endeavours of Titus, strengthened with apostolic advice and
authority, might be more significant and effectual among them. He was to see all the
cities furnished with good pastors, to reject and keep out the unmeet and unworthy, to
teach sound doctrine, and instruct all sorts in their duties, to set forth the free grace of
God in man's salvation by Christ, and withal to show the necessity of maintaining good
works by those who have believed in God and hope for eternal life from him.
T I T U S.
CHAP. I.
In this chapter we have, I. The preface or introduction to the epistle, showing from and to whom it was
written, with the apostle's salutation and prayer for Titus, wishing all blessings to him, ver. 1-4. II. Entrance
into the matter, by signifying the end of Titus's being left at Crete, ver. 5. III. And how the same should be
pursued in reference both to good and bad ministers, ver. 6, to the end.
I. The writer. Paul, a Gentile name taken by the apostle of the Gentiles, Acts xiii. 9,
46, 47. Ministers will accommodate even smaller matters, so that they may be any
furthering of acceptance in their work. When the Jews rejected the gospel, and the
Gentiles received it, we read no more of this apostle by his Jewish name Saul, but by his
Roman one, Paul. A servant of God, and an apostle of Jesus Christ. Here he is described
by his relation and office: A servant of God, not in the general sense only, as a man and a
Christian, but especially as a minister, serving God in the gospel of his Son, Rom. i. 9.
This is a high honour; it is the glory of angels that they are ministering spirits, and sent
forth to minister for those who shall be heirs of salvation, Heb. i. 14. Paul is described
more especially as a chief minister, an apostle of Jesus Christ; one who had seen the
Lord, and was immediately called and commissioned by him, and had his doctrine from
him. Observe, The highest officers in the church are but servants. (Much divinity and
devotion are comprehended in the inscriptions of the epistles.) The apostles of Jesus
Christ, who were employed to spread and propagate his religion, were therein also the
servants of God; they did not set up any thing inconsistent with the truths and duties of
natural religion. Christianity, which they preached, was in order to clear and enforce
those natural principles, as well as to advance them, and to superadd what was fit and
necessary in man's degenerate and revolted state: therefore the apostles of Jesus Christ
were the servants of God, according to the faith of God's elect. Their doctrine agreed
with the faith of all the elect from the beginning of the world, and was for propagating
and promoting the same. Observe, There are elect of God (1 Pet. i. 2), and in these the
Holy Spirit works precious divine faith, proper to those who are chosen to eternal life (2
Thess. ii. 13, 14): God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation, through
sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth, whereunto he called you by our gospel.
Faith is the first principle of sanctification. And the acknowledging of the truth which is
after godliness. The gospel is truth; the great, sure, and saving truth (Col. i. 5), the word
of the truth of the gospel. Divine faith rests not on fallible reasonings and probable
opinions, but on the infallible word, the truth itself, which is after godliness, of a godly
nature and tendency, pure, and purifying the heart of the believer. By this mark judge of
doctrines and of spirits--whether they be of God or not; what is impure, and prejudicial to
true piety and practical religion, cannot be of divine original. All gospel truth is after
godliness, teaching and nourishing reverence and fear of God, and obedience to him; it is
truth not only to be known, but acknowledged; it must be held forth in word and practice,
Phil. ii. 15, 16. With the heart man believes to righteousness, and with the mouth
confession is made unto salvation, Rom. x. 10. Such as retain the truth in unrighteousness
neither know nor believe as they ought. To bring to this knowledge and faith, and to the
acknowledging and professing of the truth which is after godliness, is the great end of the
gospel ministry, even of the highest degree and order in it; their teachings should have
this chief aim, to beget faith and confirm in it. In (orfor) hope of eternal life, v. 2. This is
the further intent of the gospel, to beget hope as well as faith; to take off the mind and
heart from the world, and to raise them to heaven and the things above. The faith and
godliness of Christians lead to eternal life, and give hope and well-grounded expectation
of it; for God, that cannot lie, hath promised it. It is the honour of God that he cannot lie
or deceive: and this is the comfort of believers, whose treasure is laid up in his faithful
promises. But how is he said to promise before the world began? Answer, By promise
some understand his decree: he purposed it in his eternal counsels, which were as it were
his promise in embryo: or rather, say some, pro chronon aionion is before ancient times,
or many years ago, referring to the promise darkly delivered, Gen. iii. 15. Here is the
stability and antiquity of the promise of eternal life to the saints. God, who cannot lie,
hath promised before the world began, that is, many ages since. How excellent then is the
gospel, which was the matter of divine promise so early! how much to be esteemed by us,
and what thanks due for our privilege beyond those before us! Blessed are your eyes, for
they see, &c. No wonder if the contempt of it be punished severely, since he has not only
promised it of old, but (v. 3) has in due times manifested his word through preaching;
that is, made that his promise, so darkly delivered of old, in due time (the proper season
before appointed) more plain by preaching; that which some called foolishness of
preaching has been thus honoured. Faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of
God, by the word preached. Which is committed unto me. The ministry is a trust; none
taketh this honour, but he who is thereunto appointed; and whoso is appointed and called
must preach the word. 1 Cor. ix. 16, Woe is unto me if I preach not the gospel.
Nonpreaching ministers are none of the apostle's successors. According to the
commandment of God our Saviour. Preaching is a work appointed by a God as a Saviour.
See a proof here of Christ's deity, for by him was the gospel committed to Paul when he
was converted (Acts ix. 15, 17, and ch. xxii. 10, 14, 15), and again when Christ appeared
to him, v. 17-21. He therefore is this Saviour; not but that the whole Timothy concur
therein: the Father saves by the Son through the Spirit, and all concur in sending
ministers. Let none rest therefore in men's calling, without God's; he furnishes, inclines,
authorizes, and gives opportunity for the work.
II. The person written to, who is described, 1. By his name, Titus, a Gentile Greek,
yet called both to the faith and ministry. Observe, the grace of God is free and powerful.
What worthiness or preparation was there in one of heathen stock and education? 2. By
his spiritual relation to the apostle: My own (or my genuine) son, not by natural
generation, but by supernatural regeneration. I have begotten you through the gospel, said
he to the Corinthians, 1 Cor. iv. 15. Ministers are spiritual fathers to those whom they are
the means of converting, and will tenderly affect and care for them, and must be
answerably regarded by them. "My own son after the common faith, that faith which is
common to all the regenerate, and which thou hast in truth, and expressest to the life."
This might be said to distinguish Titus from hypocrites and false teachers, and to
recommend him to the regard of the Cretans, as being among them a lively image of the
apostle himself, in faith, and life, and heavenly doctrine. To this Titus, deservedly so dear
to the apostle, is,
III. The salutation and prayer, wishing all blessings to him: Grace, mercy, and peace,
from God the Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ our Saviour. Here are, 1. The blessings
wished: Grace, mercy, and peace. Grace, the free favour of God, and acceptance with
him. Mercy, the fruits of that favour, in pardon of sins, and freedom from all miseries by
it, both here and hereafter. And peace, the positive effect and fruit of mercy. Peace with
God through Christ who is our peace, and with the creatures and ourselves; outward and
inward peace, comprehending all good whatsoever, that makes for our happiness in time
and to eternity. Observe, Grace is the fountain of all blessings. Mercy, and peace, and all
good, spring out of this. Get into God's favour, and all must be well; for, 2. These are the
persons from whom blessings are wished: From God the Father, the fountain of all good.
Every blessing, every comfort, comes to us from God as a Father; he is the Father of all
by creation, but of the good by adoption and regeneration. And the Lord Jesus Christ our
Saviour, as the way and means of procurement and conveyance. All is from the Father by
the Son, who is Lord by nature, heir of all things, and our Lord, Redeemer, and head,
ordering and ruling his members. All are put under him; we hold of him, as in capite, and
owe subjection and obedience to him, who is also Jesus and Christ, the anointed Saviour,
and especially our Saviour, who believe in him, delivering us from sin and hell, and
bringing us to heaven and happiness.
Thus far is the preface to the epistle; then follows the entrance into the matter, by
signifying the end of Titus's being left in Crete.
5 For this cause left I thee in Crete, that thou shouldest set in order the
things that are wanting, and ordain elders in every city, as I had appointed thee:
Here is the end expressed,
I. More generally: For this cause left I thee in Crete, that thou shouldst set in order
the things that are wanting. This was the business of evangelists (in which office Titus
was), to water where the apostles had planted (1 Cor. iii. 6), furthering and finishing what
they had begun; so much epidiorthoun imports, to order after another. Titus was to go
on in settling what the apostle himself had not time for, in his short stay there. Observe,
1. The apostle's great diligence in the gospel; when he had set things on foot in one place,
he hastened away to another. He was debtor to the Greeks and to the barbarians, and
laboured to spread the gospel as far as he could among them all. And, 2. His faithfulness
and prudence. He neglected not the places that he went from; but left some to cultivate
the young plantation, and carry on what was begun. 3. His humility; he disdained not to
be helped in his work, and that by such as were not of so high a rank in the ministry, nor
of so great gifts and furniture, as himself; so that the gospel might be furthered and the
good of souls promoted, he willingly used the hands of others in it: a fit example for
exciting zeal and industry, and engaging to faithfulness and care of the flock, and present
or absent, living and dying, for ministers, as much as in them lies, to provide for the
spiritual edification and comfort of their people. We may here also observe, 4. That Titus,
though inferior to an apostle, was yet above the ordinary fixed pastors or bishops, who
were to tend particular churches as their peculiar stated charge; but Titus was in a higher
sphere, to ordain such ordinary pastors where wanting, and settle things in their first state
and form, and then to pass to other places for like service as there might be need. Titus
was not only a minister of the catholic church (as all others also are), but a catholic
minister. Others had power habitual, and in actu primo, to minister any where, upon call
and opportunity; but evangelists, such as Titus was, had power in actu secundo et
exercito, and could exercise their ministry wherever they came, and claim maintenance of
the churches. They were every where actually in their diocese or province, and had a
right to direct and preside among the ordinary pastors and ministers. Where an apostle
could act as an apostle an evangelist could act as an evangelist; for they worked the work
of the Lord as they did (1 Cor. xvi. 10), in a like unfixed and itinerant manner. Here at
Crete Titus was but occasionally, and for a short time; Paul willed him to despatch the
business he was left for, and come to him at Nicopolis, where he purposed to winter; after
this he was sent to Corinth, was with the apostle at Rome, and was sent thence into
Dalmatia, which is the last we read of him in scripture, so that from scripture no fixed
episcopacy in him does appear; he left Crete, and we find not that he returned thither any
more. But what power had either Paul or Titus here? Was not what they did an
encroachment on the rights of civil rulers? In no sort; they came not to meddle with the
civil rights of any. Luke xii. 14, Who made me a judge or a divider over you? Their work
was spiritual, to be carried on by conviction and persuasion, no way interfering with, or
prejudicing, or weakening, the power of magistrates, but rather securing and
strengthening it; the things wanting were not such as civil magistrates are the fountains or
authors of, but divine and spiritual ordinances, and appointments for spiritual ends,
derived from Christ the king and head of the church: for settling these was Titus left. And
observe, No easy thing is it to raise churches, and bring them to perfection. Paul had
himself been here labouring, and yet were there things wanting; materials are out of
square, need much hewing and fitting, to bring them into right form, and, when they are
set therein, to hold and keep them so. The best are apt to decay and to go out of order.
Ministers are to help against this, to get what is amiss rectified, and what is wanting
supplied. This in general was Titus's work in Crete: and,
II. In special: To ordain elders in every city, that is, ministers, who were mostly out of
the elder and most understanding and experienced Christians; or, if younger in years, yet
such as were grave and solid in their deportment and manners. These were to be set
where there was any fit number of Christians, as in larger towns and cities was usually
the case; though villages, too, might have them where there were Christians enough for it.
These presbyters or elders were to have the ordinary and stated care and charge of the
churches; to feed and govern them, and perform all pastoral work and duty in and
towards them. The word is used sometimes more largely for any who bear ecclesiastical
function in the church, and so the apostles were presbyters or elders (1 Pet. v. 1); but here
it is meant of ordinary fixed pastors, who laboured in the word and doctrine, and were
over the churches in the Lord; such as are described here throughout the chapter. This
word presbyter some use in the same sense as sacerdos, and translate it priest, a term not
given to gospel ministers, unless in a figurative or allusive way, as all God's people are
said to be made kings and priests unto God (hiereis, not presbyterous), to offer up
spiritual sacrifices of prayers, praises, and alms. But properly we have no priest under the
gospel, except Christ alone, the high priest of our profession (Heb. iii. 1), who offered up
himself a sacrifice to God for us, and ever lives, in virtue thereof, to make intercession in
our behalf. Presbyters here therefore are not proper priests, to offer sacrifices, either
typical or real; but only gospel ministers, to dispense Christ's ordinances, and to feed the
church of God, over which the Holy Ghost has made them overseers. Observe, 1. A
church without a fixed and standing ministry in it is imperfect and wanting. 2. Where a fit
number of believers is, presbyters or elders must be set; their continuance in churches is
as necessary as their first appointment, for perfecting the saints, and edifying the body of
Christ, till all come to a perfect man in Christ, till the whole number of God's chosen be
called and united to Christ in one body, and brought to their full stature and strength, and
that measure of grace that is proper and designed for them, Eph. iv. 12, 13. This is work
that must and will be doing to the world's end, to which therefore the necessary and
appointed means for it must last. What praise is due to God for such an institution! What
thankfulness from those that enjoy the benefits of it! What pity and prayer for such as
want it! Pray the Lord of the harvest that he will send forth labourers into his harvest.
Faith comes by hearing, and is preserved, maintained, and made fruitful, through it also.
Ignorance and corruption, decays of good and increase of all evil, come by want of a
teaching and quickening ministry. On such accounts therefore was Titus left in Crete, to
set in order the things that were wanting, and to ordain elders in every city; but this he
was to do, not ad libitum, or according to his own will or fancy, but according to
apostolic direction.
III. The rule of his proceeding: As I had appointed thee, probably when he was going
from him, and in the presence and hearing of others, to which he may now refer, not so
much for Titus's own sake as for the people's, that they might the more readily yield
obedience to Titus, knowing and observing that in what he did he was warranted and
supported by apostolic injunction and authority. As under the law all things were to be
made according to the pattern shown to Moses in the mount; so under the gospel all must
be ordered and managed according to the direction of Christ, and of his chief ministers,
who were infallibly guided by him. Human traditions and inventions may not be brought
into the church of God. Prudent disposals for carrying on the ends of Christ's
appointments, according to the general rules of the word, there may, yea, must be; but
none may alter any thing in the substance of the faith or worship, or order and discipline,
of the churches. If an evangelist might not do any thing but by appointment, much less
may others. The church is the house of God, and to him it belongs to appoint the officers
and orders of it, as he pleases: the as here refers to the qualifications and character of the
elders that he was to ordain: "Ordain elders in every city, as I appointed thee, such as I
then described and shall now again more particularly point out to thee," which he does
from the sixth verse to the ninth inclusive.
6 If any be blameless, the husband of one wife, having faithful children not
accused of riot or unruly. 7 For a bishop must be blameless, as the steward of
God; not selfwilled, not soon angry, not given to wine, no striker, not given to
filthy lucre; 8 But a lover of hospitality, a lover of good men, sober, just, holy,
temperate; 9 Holding fast the faithful word as he hath been taught, that he may
be able by sound doctrine both to exhort and to convince the gainsayers. 10
For there are many unruly and vain talkers and deceivers, specially they of the
circumcision: 11 Whose mouths must be stopped, who subvert whole houses,
teaching things which they ought not, for filthy lucre's sake. 12 One of
themselves, even a prophet of their own, said, The Cretians are alway liars, evil
beasts, slow bellies. 13 This witness is true. Wherefore rebuke them sharply,
that they may be sound in the faith; 14 Not giving heed to Jewish fables, and
commandments of men, that turn from the truth. 15 Unto the pure all things
are pure: but unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure; but
even their mind and conscience is defiled. 16 They profess that they know
God; but in works they deny him, being abominable, and disobedient, and unto
every good work reprobate.
The apostle here gives Titus directions about ordination, showing whom he should
ordain, and whom not.
I. Of those whom he should ordain. He points out their qualifications and virtues;
such as respect their life and manners, and such as relate to their doctrine: the former in
the sixth, seventh, and eighth verses, and the latter in the ninth.
[1.] There is his relative character. In his own person, he must be of conjugal chastity:
The husband of one wife. The church of Rome says the husband of no wife, but from the
beginning it was not so; marriage is an ordinance from which no profession nor calling is
a bar. 1 Cor. ix. 5, Have I not power, says Paul, to lead about a sister, a wife, as well as
other apostles? Forbidding to marry is one of the erroneous doctrines of the antichristian
church, 1 Tim. iv. 3. Not that ministers must be married; this is not meant; but the
husband of one wife may be either not having divorced his wife and married another (as
was too common among those of the circumcision, even for slight causes), or the
husband of one wife, that is, at one and the same time, no bigamist; not that he might not
be married to more than one wife successively, but, being married, he must have but one
wife at once, not two or more, according to the too common sinful practice of those
times, by a perverse imitation of the patriarchs, from which evil custom our Lord taught a
reformation. Polygamy is scandalous in any, as also having a harlot or concubine with his
lawful wife; such sin, or any wanton libidinous demeanour, must be very remote from
such as would enter into so sacred a function. And, as to his children, having faithful
children, obedient and good, brought up in the true Christian faith, and living according
to it, at least as far as the endeavours of the parents can avail. It is for the honour of
ministers that their children be faithful and pious, and such as become their religion. Not
accused of riot, nor unruly, not justly so accused, as having given ground and occasion
for it, for otherwise the most innocent may be falsely so charged; they must look to it
therefore that there be no colour for such censure. Children so faithful, and obedient, and
temperate, will be a good sign of faithfulness and diligence in the parent who has so
educated and instructed them; and, from his faithfulness in the less, there may be
encouragement to commit to him the greater, the rule and government of the church of
God. The ground of this qualification is shown from the nature of his office (v. 7): For a
bishop must be blameless, as the steward of God. Those before termed presbyters, or
elders, are in this verse styled bishops; and such they were, having no ordinary fixed and
standing officers above them. Titus's business here, it is plain, was but occasional, and his
stay short, as was before noted. Having ordained elders, and settled in their due form, he
went and left all (for aught that appears in scripture) in the hands of those elders whom
the apostle here calls bishops and stewards of God. We read not in the sacred writings of
any successor he had in Crete; but to those elders or bishops was committed the full
charge of feeding, ruling, and watching over their flock; they wanted not any powers
necessary for carrying on religion and the ministry of it among them, and committing it
down to succeeding ages. Now, being such bishops and overseers of the flock, who were
to be examples to them, and God's stewards to take care of the affairs of his house, to
provide for and dispense to them things needful, there is great reason that their character
should be clear and good, that they should be blameless. How else could it be but that
religion must suffer, their work be hindered, and souls prejudiced and endangered, whom
they were set to save? These are the relative qualifications with the ground of them.
[2.] The more absolute ones are expressed, First, Negatively, showing what an elder
or bishop must not be: Not self-willed. The prohibition is of large extent, excluding self-
opinion, or overweening conceit of parts and abilities, and abounding in one's own
sense,--self-love, and self-seeking, making self the centre of all,--also self-confidence and
trust, and self-pleasing, little regarding or setting by others,--being proud, stubborn,
froward, inflexible, set on one's own will and way, or churlish as Nabal: such is the sense
expositors have affixed to the term. A great honour it is to a minister not to be thus
affected, to be ready to ask and to take advice, to be ready to defer as much as reasonably
may be to the mind and will of others, becoming all things to all men, that they may gain
some. Not soon angry, me orgilon, not one of a hasty angry temper, soon and easily
provoked and inflamed. How unfit are those to govern a church who cannot govern
themselves, or their own turbulent and unruly passions! The minister must be meek and
gentle, and patient towards all men. Not given to wine; thee is no greater reproach on a
minister than to be a wine-bibber, one who loves it, and gives himself undue liberty this
way who continues at the wine or strong drink till it inflames him. Seasonable and
moderate use of this, as of the other good creatures of God, is not unlawful. Use a little
wine for thy stomach's sake, and thine often infirmities, said Paul to Timothy, 1 Tim. v.
23. But excess therein is shameful in all, especially in a minister. Wine takes away the
heart, turns the man into a brute: here most proper is that exhortation of the apostle (Eph.
v. 18), Be not drunk with wine, wherein is excess; but be filled with the Spirit. Here is no
exceeding, but in the former too easily there may: take heed therefore of going too near
the brink. No striker, in any quarrelsome or contentious manner, not injuriously nor out
of revenge, with cruelty or unnecessary roughness. Not given to filthy lucre; not greedy of
it (as 1 Tim. iii. 3), whereby is not meant refusing a just return for their labours, in order
to their necessary support and comfort; but not making gain their first or chief end, not
entering into the ministry nor managing it with base worldly views. Nothing is more
unbecoming a minister, who is to direct his own and others' eyes to another world, than to
be too intent upon this. It is called filthy lucre, from its defiling the soul that inordinately
affects or greedily looks after it, as if it were any otherwise desirable than for the good
and lawful uses of it. Thus of the negative part of the bishop's character. But, Secondly,
Positively: he must be (v. 8) a lover of hospitality, as an evidence that he is not given to
filthy lucre, but is willing to use what he has to the best purposes, not laying up for
himself, so as to hinder charitable laying out for the good of others; receiving and
entertaining strangers (as the word imports), a great and necessary office of love,
especially in those times of affliction and distress, when Christians were made to fly and
wander for safety from persecution and enemies, or in travelling to and fro where there
were not such public houses for reception as in our days, nor, it may be, had many poor
saints sufficiency of their own for such uses--then to receive and entertain them was good
and pleasing to God. And such a spirit and practice, according to ability and occasion, are
very becoming such as should be examples of good works. A lover of good men, or of
good things; ministers should be exemplary in both; this will evince their open piety, and
likeness to God and their Master Jesus Christ: Do good to all, but especially to those of
the household of faith, those who are the excellent of the earth, in whom should be all our
delight. Sober, or prudent, as the word signifies; a needful grace in a minister both for his
ministerial and personal carriage and management. He should be a wise steward, and one
who is not rash, or foolish, or heady; but who can govern well his passions and
affections. Just in things belonging to civil life, and moral righteousness, and equity in
dealings, giving to all their due. Holy, in what concerns religion; one who reverences and
worships God, and is of a spiritual and heavenly conversation. Temperate; it comes from
a word that signifies strength, and denotes one who has power over his appetite and
affections, or, in things lawful, can, for good ends, restrain and hold them in. Nothing is
more becoming a minister than such things as these, sobriety, temperance, justice, and
holiness--sober in respect of himself, just and righteous towards all men, and holy
towards God. And thus of the qualifications respecting the minister's life and manners,
relative and absolute, negative and positive, what he must not, and what he must, be and
do.
2. As to doctrine,
(1.) Here is his duty: Holding fast the faithful word, as he has been taught, keeping
close to the doctrine of Christ, the word of his grace, adhering thereto according to the
instructions he has received--holding it fast in his own belief and profession, and in
teaching others. Observe, [1.] The word of God, revealed in the scripture, is a true and
infallible word; the word of him that is the amen, the true and faithful witness, and whose
Spirit guided the penmen of it. Holy men of God spoke as they were moved by the Holy
Ghost. [2.] Ministers must hold fast, and hold forth, the faithful word in their teaching
and life. I have kept the faith, was Paul's comfort (2 Tim. iv. 7), and not shunned to
declare the whole counsel of God; there was his faithfulness, Acts xx. 27.
(2.) Here is the end: That he may be able, by sound doctrine, both to exhort, and to
convince the gainsayers, to persuade and draw others to the true faith, and to convince
the contrary-minded. How should he do this if he himself were uncertain or unsteady, not
holding fast that faithful word and sound doctrine which should be the matter of this
teaching, and the means and ground of convincing those that oppose the truth? We see
here summarily the great work of the ministry--to exhort those who are willing to know
and do their duty, and to convince those that contradict, both which are to be done by
sound doctrine, that is, in a rational instructive way, by scripture-arguments and
testimonies, which are the infallible words of truth, what all may and should rest and be
satisfied in and determined by. And thus of the qualifications of the elders whom Titus
was to ordain.
II. The apostle's directory shows whom he should reject or avoid--men of another
character, the mention of whom is brought in as a reason of the care he had recommended
about the qualifications of ministers, why they should be such, and only such, as he had
described. The reasons he takes both from bad teachers and hearers among them, v. 10, to
the end.
1. From bad teachers. (1.) Those false teachers are described. They were unruly,
headstrong and ambitious of power, refractory and untractable (as some render it), and
such as would not bear nor submit themselves to the discipline and necessary order in the
church, impatient of good government and of sound doctrine. And vain talkers and
deceivers, conceiting themselves to be wise, but really foolish, and thence great talkers,
falling into errors and mistakes, and fond of them, and studious and industrious to draw
others into the same. Many such there were, especially those of the circumcision,
converts as they pretended, at least, from the Jews, who yet were for mingling Judaism
and Christianity together, and so making a corrupt medley. These were the false teachers.
(2.) Here is the apostle's direction how to deal with them (v. 11): Their mouths must be
stopped; not by outward force (Titus had no such power, nor was this the gospel method),
but by confutation and conviction, showing them their error, not giving place to them
even for an hour. In case of obstinacy indeed, breaking the peace of the church, and
corrupting other churches, censures are to have place, the last means for recovering the
faulty and preventing the hurt of many. Observe, Faithful ministers must oppose seducers
in good time, that, their folly being made manifest, they may proceed no further. (3.) The
reasons are given for this. [1.] From the pernicious effects of their errors: They subvert
whole houses, teaching things which they ought not (namely, the necessity of
circumcision, and of keeping the law of Moses, &c.), so subverting the gospel and the
souls of men; not some few only, but whole families. It was unjustly charged on the
apostles that they turned the world upside down; but justly on these false teachers that
they drew many from the true faith to their ruin: the mouths of such should be stopped,
especially considering, [2.] Their base end in what they do: For filthy lucre's sake,
serving a worldly interest under pretence of religion. Love of money is the root of all evil.
Most fit it is that such should be resisted, confuted, and put to shame, by sound doctrine,
and reasons from the scriptures. Thus of the grounds respecting the bad teachers.
II. In reference to their people or hearers, who are described from ancient testimony
given of them.
1. Here is the witness (v. 12): One of themselves, even a prophet of their own, that is,
one of the Cretans, not of the Jews, Epimenides a Greek poet, likely to know and unlikely
to slander them. A prophet of their own; so their poets were accounted, writers of divine
oracles; these often witnessed against the vices of the people: Aratus, Epimenides, and
others among the Greeks; Horace, Juvenal, and Persius, among the Latins: much
smartness did they use against divers vices.
2. Here is the matter of his testimony: Kretes aei pseustai, kaka theria, gasteres
argai--The Cretans are always liars, evil beasts, slow bellies. Even to a proverb, they
were infamous for falsehood and lying; kretizein, to play the Cretan, or to lie, is the
same; and they were compared to evil beasts for their sly hurtfulness and savage nature,
and called slow bellies for their laziness and sensuality, more inclined to eat than to work
and live by some honest employment. Observe, Such scandalous vices as were the
reproach of heathens should be far from Christians: falsehood and lying, invidious craft
and cruelty, all beastly and sensual practices, with idleness and sloth, are sins condemned
by the light of nature. For these were the Cretans taxed by their own poets.
3. Here is the verification of this by the apostle himself: v. 13. This witness is true,
The apostle saw too much ground for that character. The temper of some nations is more
inclined to some vices than others. The Cretans were too generally such as here
described, slothful and ill-natured, false and perfidious, as the apostle himself vouches.
And thence,
4. He instructs Titus how to deal with them: Wherefore rebuke them sharply. When
Paul wrote to Timothy he bade him instruct with meekness; but now, when he writes to
Titus, he bids him rebuke them sharply. The reason of the difference may be taken from
the different temper of Timothy and Titus; the former might have more keenness in his
disposition, and be apt to be warm in reproving, whom therefore he bids to rebuke with
meekness; and the latter might be one of more mildness, therefore he quickens him, and
bids him rebuke sharply. Or rather it was from the difference of the case and people:
Timothy had a more polite people to deal with, and therefore he must rebuke them with
meekness; and Titus had to do with those who were more rough and uncultivated, and
therefore he must rebuke them sharply; their corruptions were many and gross, and
committed without shame or modesty, and therefore should be dealt with accordingly.
There must in reproving be a distinguishing between sins and sins; some are more gross
and heinous in their nature, or in the manner of their commission, with openness and
boldness, to the greater dishonour of God and danger and hurt to men: and between
sinners and sinners; some are of a more tender and tractable temper, apter to be wrought
on by gentleness, and to be sunk and discouraged by too much roughness and severity;
others are more hardy and stubborn, and need more cutting language to beget in them
remorse and shame. Wisdom therefore is requisite to temper and manage reproofs aright,
as may be most likely to do good. Jude 22, 23, Of some have compassion, making a
difference; and others save with fear, pulling them out of the fire. The Cretans' sins and
corruptions were many, great, and habitual; therefore they must be rebuked sharply. But
that such direction might not be misconstrued,
5. Here is the end of it noted: That they may be sound in the faith (v. 14), not giving
heed to Jewish fables, and commandments of men, that turn from the truth; that is, that
they may be and show themselves truly and effectually changed from such evil tempers
and manners as those Cretans in their natural state lived in, and may not adhere to nor
regard (as some who were converted might be too ready to do) the Jewish traditions and
the superstitions of the Pharisees, which would be apt to make them disrelish the gospel,
and the sound and wholesome truths of it. Observe, (1.) The sharpest reproofs must aim
at the good of the reproved: they must not be of malice, nor hatred, nor ill-will, but of
love; not to gratify pride, passion, nor any evil affection in the reprover, but to reclaim
and reform the erroneous and the guilty. (2.) Soundness in the faith is most desirable and
necessary. This is the soul's health and vigour, pleasing to God, comfortable to the
Christian, and what makes ready to be cheerful and constant in duty. (3.) A special means
to soundness in the faith is to turn away the ear from fables and the fancies of men (1
Tim. i. 4): Neither give heed to fables and endless genealogies, that minister questions
rather than godly edifying, which is in faith. So ch. iv. 7, Refuse profane and old wives'
fables, and exercise thyself rather to godliness. Fancies and devices of men in the
worship of God are contrary to truth and piety. Jewish ceremonies and rites, that were at
first divine appointments, the substance having come and their season and use being over,
are now but unwarranted commands of men, which not only stand not with, but turn
from, the truth, the pure gospel truth and spiritual worship, set up by Christ instead of that
bodily service under the law. (4.) A fearful judgment it is to be turned away from the
truth, to leave Christ for Moses, the spiritual worship of the gospel for the carnal
ordinances of the law, or the true divine institutions and precepts for human inventions
and appointments. Who hath bewitched you (said Paul to the Galatians, ch. iii. 1, 3) that
you should not obey the truth? Having begun in the Spirit, are you made perfect by the
flesh? Thus having shown the end of sharply reproving the corrupt and vicious Cretans,
that they might be sound in the faith, and not heed Jewish fables and commands of men,
6. He gives the reasons of this, from the liberty we have by the gospel from legal
observances, and the evil and mischief of a Jewish spirit under the Christian dispensation
in the last two verses. To good Christians that are sound in the faith and thereby purified
all things are pure. Meats and drinks, and such things as were forbidden under the law
(the observances of which some still maintain), in these there is now no such distinction,
all are pure (lawful and free in their use), but to those that are defiled and unbelieving
nothing is pure; things lawful and good they abuse and turn to sin; they suck poison out
of that from which others draw sweetness; their mind and conscience, those leading
faculties, being defiled, a taint is communicated to all they do. The sacrifice of the wicked
is an abomination to the Lord, Prov. xv. 8. And ch. xxi. 4, The ploughing of the wicked is
sin, not in itself, but as done by him; the carnality of the mind and heart mars all the
labour of the hand.
Objection. But are not these judaizers (as you call them) men who profess religion,
and speak well of God, and Christ, and righteousness of life, and should they be so
severely taxed? Answer, They profess that they know God; but in works they deny him,
being abominable, and disobedient, and to every good work reprobate, v. 16. There are
many who in word and tongue profess to know God, and yet in their lives and
conversations deny and reject him; their practice is a contradiction to their profession.
They come unto thee as the people cometh, and they sit before thee as my people, and
they hear thy words, but they will not do them: with their mouth they show much love, but
their heart goeth after their covetousness, Ezek. xxxiii. 31. Being abominable, and
disobedient, and to every good work reprobate. The apostle, instructing Titus to rebuke
sharply, does himself rebuke sharply; he gives them very hard words, yet doubtless no
harder than their case warranted and their need required. Being abominable--bdelyktoi,
deserving that God and good men should turn away their eyes from them as nauseous and
offensive. And disobedient--apeitheis, unpersuadable and unbelieving. They might do
divers things; but it was not the obedience of faith, nor what was commanded, or short of
the command. To every good work reprobate, without skill or judgment to do any thing
aright. See the miserable condition of hypocrites, such as have a form of godliness, but
without the power; yet let us not be so ready to fix this charge on others as careful that it
agree not to ourselves, that there be not in us an evil heart of unbelief, in departing from
the living God; but that we be sincere and without offence till the day of Christ, being
filled with the fruits of righteousness, which are by Jesus Christ unto the glory and praise
of God, Phil. i. 10, 11.
T I T U S.
CHAP. II.
The apostle here directs Titus about the faithful discharge of his own office generally (ver. 1), and
particularly as to several sorts of persons (ver. 2-10) and gives the grounds of these and of other following
directions (ver. 11-14), with a summary direction in the close, ver. 15.
1 But speak thou the things which become sound doctrine: 2 That the aged
men be sober, grave, temperate, sound in faith, in charity, in patience. 3 The
aged women likewise, that they be in behaviour as becometh holiness, not false
accusers, not given to much wine, teachers of good things; 4 That they may
teach the young women to be sober, to love their husbands, to love their
children, 5 To be discreet, chaste, keepers at home, good, obedient to their
own husbands, that the word of God be not blasphemed. 6 Young men
likewise exhort to be sober minded. 7 In all things showing thyself a pattern of
good works: in doctrine showing uncorruptness, gravity, sincerity, 8 Sound
speech, that cannot be condemned; that he that is of the contrary part may be
ashamed, having no evil thing to say of you. 9 Exhort servants to be obedient
unto their own masters, and to please them well in all things; not answering
again; 10 Not purloining, but showing all good fidelity; that they may adorn
the doctrine of God our Saviour in all things.
Here is the third thing in the matter of the epistle. In the chapter foregoing, the apostle
had directed Titus about matters of government, and to set in order the things that were
wanting in the churches. Now here he exhorts him,
I. Generally, to a faithful discharge of his own office. His ordaining others to preach
would not excuse himself from preaching, nor might he take care of ministers and elders
only, but he must instruct private Christians also in their duty. The adversative particle
(but) here points back to the corrupt teachers, who vented fables, things vain and
unprofitable: in opposition to them, says he, "But speak thou the things that become
sound doctrine, what is agreeable to the word, which is pure and uncorrupt, healthful and
nourishing to eternal life." Observe, (1.) The true doctrines of the gospel are sound
doctrines, formally and effectively; they are in themselves good and holy, and make the
believers so; they make them fit for, and vigorous in, the service of God. (2.) Ministers
must be careful to teach only such truths. If the common talk of Christians must be
uncorrupt, to the use of edifying, such as may minister grace to the hearers (Eph. iv. 29),
much more must ministers' preaching be such. Thus the apostle exhorts Titus generally:
and then,
II. Specially and particularly, he instructs him to apply this sound doctrine to several
sorts of persons, from v. 2-10. Ministers must not stay in generals, but must divide to
every one his portion, what belongs to his age, or place, or condition of life; they must be
particular as well as practical in their preaching; they must teach men their duty, and must
teach all and each his duty. Here is an excellent Christian directory, accommodated to the
old and to the young; to men and women; to the preacher himself and to servants.
1. To the aged men. By aged men some understand elders by office, including
deacons, &c. But it is rather to be taken of the aged in point of years. Old disciples of
Christ must conduct themselves in every thing agreeably to the Christian doctrine. That
the aged men be sober, not thinking that the decays of nature, which they feel in old age,
will justify them in any inordinacy or intemperance, whereby they conceit to repair them;
they must keep measure in things, both for health and for fitness, for counsel and
example to the younger. Grave: levity is unbecoming in any, but especially in the aged;
they should be composed and stayed, grave in habit, speech, and behaviour; gaudiness in
dress, levity and vanity in the behaviour, how unbeseeming in their years! Temperate,
moderate and prudent, one who governs well his passions and affections, so as not to be
hurried away by them to any thing that is evil or indecent. Sound in the faith, sincere and
stedfast, constantly adhering to the truth of the gospel, not fond of novelties, nor ready to
run into corrupt opinions or parties, nor to be taken with Jewish fables or traditions, or the
dotages of their rabbin. Those who are full of years should be full of grace and goodness,
the inner man renewing more and more as the outer decays. In charity, or love; this is
fitly joined with faith, which works by, and must be seen in, love, love to God and men,
and soundness therein. It must be sincere love, without dissimulation: love of God for
himself, and of men for God's sake. The duties of the second table must be done in virtue
of those of the first; love to men as men, and to the saints as the excellent of the earth, in
whom must be special delight; and love at all times, in adversity as well as prosperity.
Thus must there be soundness in charity or love. And in patience. Aged persons are apt to
be peevish, fretful, and passionate; and therefore need to be on their guard against such
infirmities and temptations. Faith, love, and patience, are three main Christian graces, and
soundness in these is much of gospel perfection. There is enduring patience and waiting
patience, both of which must be looked after; to bear evils becomingly, and contentedly
to want the good till we are fit for it and it for us, being followers of those who through
faith and patience inherit the promises. Thus as to the aged men.
2. To the aged women. These also must be instructed and warned. Some by these
aged women understand the deaconesses, who were mostly employed in looking after the
poor and attending the sick; but it is rather to be taken (as we render it) of all aged
women professing religion. They must be in behaviour as becometh holiness: both men
and women must accommodate their behaviour to their profession. Those virtues before
mentioned (sobriety, gravity, temperance, soundness in the faith, charity, and patience),
recommended to aged men, are not proper to them only, but applicable to both sexes, and
to be looked to by aged women as well as men. Women are to hear and learn their duty
from the word, as well as the men: there is not one way of salvation for one sex or sort,
and another for another; but both must learn and practise the same things, both as aged
and as Christians; the virtues and duties are common. That the aged women likewise (as
well as the men) be in behaviour as becometh holiness; or as beseems and is proper for
holy persons, such as they profess to be and should be, keeping a pious decency and
decorum in clothing and gesture, in looks and speech, and all their deportment, and this
from an inward principle and habit of holiness, influencing and ordering the outward
conduct at all times. Observe, Though express scripture do not occur, or be not brought,
for every word, or look, or fashion in particular, yet general rules there are according to
which all must be ordered; as 1 Cor. x. 31, Whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.
And Phil. iv. 8, Whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever
things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever
things are of good report, if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these
things. And here, whatsoever things are beseeming or unbeseeming holiness form a
measure and rule of conduct to be looked to. Not false accusers--me diabolous, no
calumniators or sowers of discord, slandering and backbiting their neighbours, a great
and too common fault; not only loving to speak, but to speak ill, of people, and to
separate very friends. A slanderer is one whose tongue is set on fire of hell; so much, and
so directly, do these do the devil's work, that for it the devil's name is given to such. This
is a sin contrary to the great duties of love, justice, and equity between one another; it
springs often from malice and hatred, or envy, and such like evil causes, to be shunned as
well as the effect. Not given to much wine; the word denotes such addictedness thereto as
to be under the power and mastery of it. This is unseemly and evil in any, but especially
in this sex and age, and was too much to be found among the Greeks of that time and
place. How immodest and shameful, corrupting and destroying purity both of body and
mind! Of what evil example and tendency, unfitting for the thing, which is a positive duty
of aged matrons, namely, to be teachers of good things! Not public preachers, that is
forbidden (1 Cor. xiv. 34, I permit not a woman to speak in the church), but otherwise
teach they may and should, that is, by example and good life. Hence observe, Those
whose actions and behaviour become holiness are thereby teachers of good things; and,
besides this, they may and should also teach by doctrinal instruction at home, and in a
private way. The words of king Lemuel, the prophecy his mother taught him. Such a
woman is praised, She openeth her mouth with wisdom, and in her tongue is the law of
kindness, Prov. xxxi. 1, 26. Teachers of good things are opposed to teachers of things
corrupt, or to what is trifling and vain, of no good use or tendency, old wives' fables or
superstitious sayings and observances; in opposition to these, their business is, and they
may be called on to it, to be teachers of good things.
3. There are lessons for young women also, whom the aged women must teach,
instructing and advising them in the duties of religion according to their years. For
teaching such things aged women have often better access than the men, even than
ministers have, which therefore they must improve in instructing the young women,
especially the young wives; for he speaks of their duty to their husbands and children.
These young women the more aged must teach, (1.) To bear a good personal character:
To be sober and discreet, contrary to the vanity and rashness which younger years are
subject to: discreet in their judgments and sober in their affections and behaviour.
Discreet and chaste stand well together; many expose themselves to fatal temptations by
that which at first might be but indiscretion. Prov. ii. 11, Discretion shall preserve thee,
understanding shall keep thee from the evil way. Chaste, and keepers at home, are well
joined too. Dinah, when she went to see the daughters of the land, lost her chastity. Those
whose home is their prison, it is to be feared, feel that their chastity is their fetters. Not
but there are occasions, and will be, of going abroad; but a gadding temper for merriment
and company sake, to the neglect of domestic affairs, or from uneasiness at being in her
place, is the opposite evil intended, which is commonly accompanied with, or draws after
it, other evils. 1 Tim. v. 13, 14, They learn to be idle, wandering from house to house;
and not only idle, but tattlers also and busybodies, speaking things which they ought not.
Their business is to guide the house, and they should give no occasion to the enemy to
speak reproachfully. Good, generally, in opposition to all vice; and specially, in her place,
kind, helpful, and charitable; as Dorcas, full of good works and almsdeeds. It may also
have, as some think, a more particular sense; one of a meek and yet cheerful spirit and
temper, not sullen nor bitter; not taunting not fretting and galling any; not of a
troublesome or jarring disposition, uneasy in herself and to those about her; but of a good
nature and pleasing conversation, and likewise helpful by her advice and pains: thus
building her house, and doing her husband good, and not evil, all her days. Thus in their
personal character sober, discreet, chaste, keepers at home, and good: and, (2.) In their
relative capacities: To love their husbands, and to be obedient to them; and where there is
true love this will be no difficult command. God, in nature, and by his will, hath made
this subordination: I suffer not a woman to usurp authority over the man (1 Tim. ii. 12);
and the reason is added: For Adam was first formed, then Eve. Adam was not deceived,
but the woman, being deceived, was in the transgression, v. 13, 14. She fell first, and was
the means of seducing the husband. She was given to be a helper, but proved a most
grievous hinderer, even the instrument of his fall and ruin, on which the bond of
subjection was confirmed, and tied faster on her (Gen. iii. 16): Thy desire shall be to thy
husband, and he shall rule over thee, with less easiness, it may be, than before. It is
therefore doubly enjoined: first in innocency, when was settled a subordination of nature,
Adam being first formed and then Eve, and the woman being taken out of the man; and
then upon the fall, the woman being first in the transgression, and seducing the man; here
now began to be a subjection not so easy and comfortable, being a part of the penalty in
her case; yet through Christ is this nevertheless a sanctified state. Eph. v. 22, 23, Wives
submit yourselves unto you own husbands, as unto the Lord, as owning Christ's authority
in them, whose image they bear; for the husband is the head of the wife, even as Christ is
the head of the church: and he is the saviour of the body. God would have a resemblance
of Christ's authority over the church held forth in the husband's over the wife. Christ is
the head of the church, to protect and save it, to supply it with all good, and secure or
deliver it from evil; and so the husband over the wife, to keep her from injuries, and to
provide comfortably for her, according to his ability. Therefore, as the church is subject
unto Christ, so let the wives be unto their own husbands, as is fit in the Lord (Col. iii. 18),
as comports with the law of Christ, and is for his and the Father's glory. It is not then an
absolute, or unlimited, nor a slavish subjection that is required; but a loving
subordination, to prevent disorder or confusion, and to further all the ends of the relation.
Thus, in reference to the husbands, wives must be instructed in their duties of love and
subjection to them. And to love their children, not with a natural affection only, but a
spiritual, a love springing from a holy sanctified heart and regulated by the word; not a
fond foolish love, indulging them in evil, neglecting due reproof and correction where
necessary, but a regular Christian love, showing itself in their pious education, forming
their life and manners aright, taking care of their souls as well as of their bodies, of their
spiritual welfare as well as of their temporal, of the former chiefly and in the first place.
The reason is added: That the word of God may not be blasphemed. Failures in such
relative duties would be greatly to the reproach of Christianity. "What are these the better
for this their new religion?" would the infidels be ready to say. The word of God and the
gospel of Christ are pure, excellent, and glorious, in themselves; and their excellency
should be expressed and shown in the lives and conduct of their professors, especially in
relative duties; failures here being disgrace. Rom. ii. 24, The name of God is blasphemed
among the Gentiles through you. "Judge what a God he is," would they be ready to say,
"by these his servants; and what his word, and doctrine, and religion, are by these his
followers." Thus would Christ be wounded in the house of his friends. Thus of the duties
of the younger women.
4. Here is the duty of young men. They are apt to be eager and hot, thoughtless and
precipitant; therefore they must be earnestly called upon and exhorted to be considerate,
not rash; advisable and submissive, not wilful and head-strong; humble and mild, not
haughty and proud; for there are more young people ruined by pride than by any other
sin. The young should be grave and solid in their deportment and manners, joining the
seriousness of age with the liveliness and vigour of youth. This will make even those
younger years to pass to good purpose, and yield matter of comfortable reflection when
the evil days come; it will be preventive of much sin and sorrow, and lay the foundation
for doing and enjoying much good. Such shall not mourn at the last, but have peace and
comfort in death, and after it a glorious crown of life.
5. With these instructions to Titus, respecting what he should teach others--the aged
men and women, and the younger of both sexes (Titus himself probably at this time being
a young man also), the apostle inserts some directions to himself. He could not expect so
successfully to teach others, if he did not conduct himself well both in his conversation
and preaching. (1.) Here is direction for his conversation: In all things showing thyself a
pattern of good works, v. 7. Without this, he would pull down with one hand what he
built with the other. Observe, Preachers of good works must be patterns of them also;
good doctrine and good life must go together. Thou that teachest another, teachest thou
not thyself? A defect here is a great blemish and a great hindrance. In all things; some
read, above all things, or above all men. Instructing others in the particulars of their duty
is necessary, and, above all things, example, especially that of the teacher himself, is
needful; hereby both light and influence are more likely to go together. "Let them see a
lively image of those virtues and graces in thy life which must be in theirs. Example may
both teach and impress the things taught; when they see purity and gravity, sobriety and
all good life, in thee, they may be more easily won and brought thereto themselves; they
may become pious and holy, sober and righteous, as thou art." Ministers must be
examples to the flock, and the people followers of them, as they are of Christ. And here is
direction, (2.) For his teaching and doctrine, as well as for his life: In doctrine showing
uncorruptness, gravity, sincerity, sound speech, that cannot be condemned, v. 7, 8. They
must make it appear that the design of their preaching is purely to advance the honour of
God, the interest of Christ and his kingdom, and the welfare and happiness of souls; that
this office was not entered into nor used with secular views, not from ambition nor
covetousness, but a pure aim at the spiritual ends of its institution. In their preaching,
therefore, the display of wit or parts, or of human learning or oratory, is not to be
affected; but sound speech must be used, which cannot be condemned; scripture-
language, as far as well may be, in expressing scripture-truths. This is sound speech, that
cannot be condemned. We have more than once these duties of a minister set together. 1
Tim. iv. 16, Take heed to thyself, and to thy doctrine: and, v. 12. of the same chapter,
"Let no man despise thy youth, but be thou an example of believers in word--in thy
speech, as a Christian, being grave, serious, and to the use of edifying; and in thy
preaching, that it be the pure word of God, or what is agreeable to it and founded on it.
Thus be an example in word: and in conversation, the life corresponding with the
doctrine. In doing this thou shalt both save thyself and those that hear thee." In 2 Tim. iii.
10, Thou hast fully known my doctrine and manner of life (says the same apostle), how
agreeable these have been. And so must it be with others; their teaching must be
agreeable to the word, and their life with their teaching. This is the true and good
minister. 1 Thess. ii. 9, 10. Labouring night and day, we preached to you the gospel of
God; and you are witnesses, and God also, how holily, and justly, and unblamably, we
behaved ourselves among you. This must be looked to, as the next words show, which
are, (3.) The reason both for the strictness of the minister's life and the gravity and
soundness of his preaching: That he who is of the contrary part may be ashamed, having
no evil thing to say of you. Adversaries would be seeking occasion to reflect, and would
do so could they find any thing amiss in doctrine or life; but, if both were right and good,
such ministers might set calumny itself at defiance; they would have not evil thing to say
justly, and so must be ashamed of their opposition. Observe, Faithful ministers will have
enemies watching for their halting, such as will endeavour to find or pick holes in their
teaching or behaviour; the more need therefore for them to look to themselves, that no
just occasion be found against them. Opposition and calumny perhaps may not be
escaped; men of corrupt minds will resist the truth, and often reproach the preachers and
professors of it; but let them see that with well-doing they put to silence the ignorance of
foolish men; that, when they speak evil of them as evil-doers; those may be ashamed who
falsely accuse their good conversation in Christ. This is the direction to Titus himself,
and so of the duties of free persons, male and female, old and young. Then follow,
6. The directions respecting servants. Servants must not think that their mean and low
state puts them beneath God's notice or the obligations of his laws--that, because they are
servants of men, they are thereby discharged from serving God. No; servants must know
and do their duty to their earthly masters, but with an eye to their heavenly one: and Titus
must not only instruct and warn earthly masters of their duties, but servants also of theirs,
both in his public preaching and private admonitions. Servants must attend the ordinances
of God for their instruction and comfort, as well as the masters themselves. In this
direction to Titus there are the duties themselves, to which he must exhort servants, and a
weighty consideration wherewith he was to enforce them.
[1.] To be obedient to their own masters, v. 9. This is the prime duty, that by which
they are characterized. Rom. vi. 16, His servants you are whom you obey. There must be
inward subjection and dutiful respect and reverence in the mind and thoughts. "If I be a
master, where is my fear, the dutiful affection you show to me, together with the suitable
outward significations and expressions of it, in doing what I command you?" This must
be in servants; their will must be subject to their master's will, and their time and labour
at their master's disposal and command. 1 Pet. ii. 18, Servants, be subject to your masters
with all fear, not only to the good and gentle, but also to the froward. The duty results
from the will of God, and relation in which, by his providence, he has put such; not from
the quality of the person. If he be a master, the duties of a servant are to be paid to him as
such. Servants therefore are to be exhorted to be obedient to their own masters. And,
[2.] To please them well in all things, in all lawful things, and such as belong to them
to command, or at least as are not contrary to the will of their great and superior Lord.
We are not to understand it either of obeying or pleasing them absolutely, without any
limitation; but always with a reserve of God's right, which may in no case be entrenched
upon. If his command and the earthly master's come in competition, we are instructed to
obey God rather than man; but then servants must be upon good grounds in this, that
there is an inconsistency, else are they not held to be excused. And not only must the will
of God be the measure of the servant's obedience, but the reason of it also. All must be
done with a respect to him, in virtue of his authority, and for pleasing him primarily and
chiefly, Col. iii. 22-24. In serving the earthly master according to Christ's will, he is
served; and such shall be rewarded by him accordingly. But how are servants to please
their masters in all things, and yet not be men-pleasers? Answer, Men-pleasers, in the
faulty sense, are such as eye men alone, or chiefly, in what they do, leaving God out, or
subordinating him to man; when the will of man shall carry it, though against God's will,
or man's pleasure is more regarded than his,--when this can content them, that the earthly
master is pleased, though God be displeased,--or when more care, or more satisfaction, is
taken in man's being pleased than in God's, this is sinful man-pleasing, of which all must
take heed. Eph. vi. 5-7, "Servants, be obedient to those that are your masters according
to the flesh, with fear and trembling, with singleness of your heart, as unto Christ. Not
with eye-service, as men-pleasers (who look at nothing but the favour or displeasure of
men, or at nothing so much as this), but as the servants of Christ, doing the will of God
from the heart; with good will doing service, as to the Lord, and not to men;" not to them
chiefly, but to Christ, who requires, and who will reward, any good done, whether by
bond or free. Observe therefore, Christian liberty comports well with civil servitude and
subjection. Persons may serve men, and yet be the servants of Christ; these are not
contrary, but subordinate, so far as serving men is according to Christ's will and for his
sake. Christ came not to destroy or prejudice civil order and differences. "Art thou called,
being a servant? Care not for it, 1 Cor. vii. 21. Let not this trouble thee, as if it were a
condition unworthy of a Christian, or wherein the person so called is less pleasing unto
God; for he that is called in the Lord, being a servant, is the Lord's freeman, not free
from that service, but free in it; free spiritually, though not in a civil sense. Likewise also
he that is called, being free, is Christ's servant; he is bound to him, though he be not
under civil subjection to any; so that, bond or free, all are one in Christ." Servants
therefore should not regret nor be troubled at their condition, but be faithful and cheerful
in the station wherein God hath set them, striving to please their masters in all things.
Hard it may be under some churlish Nabals, but it must be aimed at as much as possible.
[3.] Not answering again; not contradicting them, nor disputing it with them; not
giving them any disrespectful or provoking language. Job complained of his servants, that
he called them, and they gave him no answer; that was faulty another way: Non
respondere pro convitio est--Such silence is contempt: but here it is respect, rather to take
a check or reproof with humble silence, not making any confident nor bold replies. When
conscious of a fault, to palliate or stand in justification of it doubles it. Yet this not
answering again excludes not turning away wrath with a soft answer, when season and
circumstances admit. Good and wise masters will be ready to hear and do right; but
answering unseasonably, or in an unseemly manner, or, where the case admits not
excuse, to be pert or confident, shows a want of the humility and meekness which such
relation requires.
[4.] Not purloining, but showing all good fidelity. This is another great essential of
good servants, to be honest, never converting that to their own use which is their master's,
nor wasting the goods they are entrusted with; that is, purloining. They must be just and
true, and do for their masters as they would or should for themselves. Prov. xxviii. 24,
Whoso robbeth his father or his mother, and saith, It is no transgression, the same is the
companion of a destroyer; he will be ready to join with him. Thus having such light
thoughts of taking beyond what is right, though it be from a parent or master, is likely to
harden conscience to go further; it is both wicked in itself, and it tends to more. Be it so
that the master is hard and strait, scarcely making sufficient provision for servants; yet
they must not be their own carvers, nor go about by theft to right themselves; they must
bear their lot, committing their cause to God for righting and providing for them. I speak
not of cases of extremity, for preserving life, the necessaries for which the servant has a
right to. Not purloining, but showing all good fidelity; he must not only not steal nor
waste, but must improve his master's goods, and promote his prosperity and thriving, to
his utmost. He that increased not his master's talent is accused of unfaithfulness, though
he had not embezzled nor lost it. Faithfulness in a servant lies in the ready, punctual, and
thorough execution of his master's orders; keeping his secrets and counsels, despatching
his affairs, and managing with frugality, and to as much just advantage for his master as
he is able; looking well to his trusts, and preventing, as far as he can, all spoil, or loss, or
damage. This is a way to bring a blessing upon himself, as the contrary often brings utter
ruin. If you have not been faithful in that which is another man's, who shall give you that
which is your own? Luke xvi. 12. Thus of the duties themselves, to which servants are to
be exhorted. Then,
(2.) Here is the consideration with which Titus was to enforce them: That they may
adorn the doctrine of God our Saviour in all things; that is, that they may recommend the
gospel and Christ's holy religion to the good opinion of those that are without, by their
meek, humble, obedient, and faithful conduct in all things. Even servants, though they
may think that such as they, in so low and inferior a condition, can do little to bring
repute to Christianity, or adorn the doctrine of Christ, and set forth the excellences of his
truth and ways, yet, if they be careful to do their duty, it will redound to the glory of God
and the credit of religion. The unbelieving masters would think the better of that despised
way, which was every where spoken against, when they found that those of their servants
who were Christians were better than their other servants--more obedient and submissive,
more just and faithful, and more diligent in their places. True religion is an honour to the
professors of it; and they should see that they do not any dishonour to it, but adorn it
rather in all that they are able. Our light must shine among men, so that they, seeing our
good works, may glorify our Father who is in heaven. And thus of the apostle's directions
to Titus, about the discharge of his office, in reference to several sorts of persons.
Nature and Design of the Gospel; The Holy Tendency of the Gospel;
Nature of Christ's Redemption. A. D. 66.
11 For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men,
12 Teaching us that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live
soberly, righteously, and godly, in this present world; 13 Looking for that
blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour
Jesus Christ; 14 Who gave himself for us, that he might redeem us from all
iniquity, and purify unto himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works.
Here we have the grounds or considerations upon which all the foregoing directions
are urged, taken from the nature and design of the gospel, and the end of Christ's death.
I. From the nature and design of the gospel. Let young and old, men and women,
masters and servants, and Titus himself, let all sorts do their respective duties, for this is
the very aim and business of Christianity, to instruct, and help, and form persons, under
all distinctions and relations, to a right frame and conduct. For this,
1. They are put under the dispensation of the grace of God, so the gospel is called,
Eph. iii. 2. It is grace in respect of the spring of it--the free favour and good-will of God,
not any merit or desert in the creature; as manifesting and declaring this good-will in an
eminent and signal manner; and as it is the means of conveying and working grace in the
hearts of believers. Now grace is obliging and constraining to goodness: Let not sin
reign, but yield yourselves unto God; for you are not under the law, but under grace,
Rom. vi. 12-14. The love of Christ constrains us not to live to self, but to him (2 Cor. v.
14, 15); without this effect, grace is received in vain.
2. This gospel grace brings salvation (reveals and offers it to sinners and ensures it to
believers)--salvation from sin and wrath, from death and hell. Hence it is called the word
of life; it brings to faith, and so to life, the life of holiness now and of happiness hereafter.
The law is the ministration of death, but the gospel the ministration of life and peace.
This therefore must be received as salvation (its rules minded, its commands obeyed),
that the end of it may be obtained, the salvation of the soul. And more inexcusable will
the neglecters of this grace of God bringing salvation now be, since,
3. It hath appeared, or shone out more clearly and illustriously than ever before. The
old dispensation was comparatively dark and shadowy; this is a clear and shining light;
and, as it is now more bright, so more diffused and extensive also. For,
4. It hath appeared to all men; not to the Jews only, as the glory of God appeared at
mount Sinai to that particular people, and out of the view of all others; but gospel grace is
open to all, and all are invited to come and partake of the benefit of it, Gentiles as well as
Jews. The publication of it is free and general: Disciple all nations: Preach the gospel to
every creature. The pale is broken down; there is no such enclosure now as formerly. The
preaching of Jesus Christ, which was kept secret since the world began, now is made
manifest, and by the scriptures of the prophets, according to the commandment of the
everlasting God, made known to all nations for the obedience of faith, Rom. xvi. 25, 26.
The doctrine of grace and salvation by the gospel is for all ranks and conditions of men
(slaves and servants, as well as masters), therefore engaging and encouraging all to
receive and believe it, and walk suitably to it, adorning it in all things.
5. This gospel revelation is to teach, and not by way of information and instruction
only, as a schoolmaster does his scholars, but by way of precept and command, as a
sovereign who gives laws to his subjects. It directs what to shun and what to follow, what
to avoid and what to do. The gospel is not for speculation only or chiefly, but for practice
and right ordering of life; for it teaches us,
(1.) To abandon sin: Denying ungodliness and worldly lusts; to renounce and have no
more to do with these, as we have had: Put off, concerning the former conversation, the
old man which is corrupt; that is, the whole body of sins, here distributed into
ungodliness and worldly lusts. "Put away ungodliness and irreligion, all unbelief, neglect
or disesteem of the divine Being, not loving, nor fearing, nor trusting in him, nor obeying
him as we should, neglecting his ordinances, slighting his worship, profaning his name or
day. Thus deny ungodliness (hate and put it away); and worldly lusts, all corrupt and
vicious desires and affections that prevail in worldly men, and carry out to worldly things
the lust of the flesh also, and of the eye, and the pride of life, all sensuality and filthiness,
covetous desires and ambition, seeking and valuing more the praise of men than of God;
put away all these." An earthly sensual conversation suits not a heavenly calling. Those
that are Christ's have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts. They have done it
by covenant-engagement and promise, and have initially and prevailingly done it in act;
they are going on in the work, cleansing themselves more and more from all filthiness of
flesh and spirit. Thus the gospel first unteaches that which is evil, to abandon sin; and
then,
(2.) To make conscience of that which is good: To live soberly, righteously, and
godly, &c. Religion is not made up of negatives only; there must be doing good as well as
eschewing evil; in these conjunctly is sincerity proved and the gospel adorned. We should
live soberly with respect to ourselves, in the due government of our appetites and
passions, keeping the limits of moderation and temperance, avoiding all inordinate
excesses; and righteously towards all men, rendering to all their due, and injuring none,
but rather doing good to others, according to our ability and their need: this seems a part
of justice and righteousness, for we are not born for ourselves alone, and therefore may
not live to ourselves only. We are members one of another, and must seek every man
another's wealth, 1 Cor. x. 24; xii. 25. The public, especially, which includes the interests
of all, must have the regards of all. Selfishness is a sort of unrighteousness; it robs others
of that share in us which is their due. How amiable then will a just and righteous conduct
be! It secures and promotes all interests, not particular only, but general and public, and
so contributes to the peace and happiness of the world. Live righteously therefore as well
as soberly. And godly towards God, in the duties of his worship and service. Regards to
him indeed should run through all. Whether you eat, or drink, or whatsoever you do, do
all to the glory of God, 1 Cor. x. 31. Personal and relative duties must be done in
obedience to his commands, with due aim at pleasing and honouring him, from principles
of holy love and fear of him. But there is an express and direct duty also that we owe to
God, namely, belief and acknowledgment of his being and perfections, paying him
internal and external worship and homage,--loving, fearing, and trusting in him,--
depending on him, and devoting ourselves to him,--observing all those religious duties
and ordinances that he has appointed,--praying to him, praising him, and meditating on
his word and works. This is godliness, looking and coming to God, as our state now is,
not immediately, but as he has manifested himself in Christ; so does the gospel direct and
require. To go to God in any other way, namely, by saints or angels, is unsuitable, yea,
contrary to the gospel rule and warrant. All communications from God to us are through
his Son, and our returns must also be by him. God in Christ we must look at as the object
of our hope and worship. Thus must we exercise ourselves to godliness, without which
there can be no adorning of that gospel which is according to it, which teaches and
requires such a deportment. A gospel conversation must needs be a godly conversation,
expressing our love and fear and reverence of God, our hope and trust and confidence in
him, as manifested in his Son. We are the circumcision (who have in truth what was
signified by that sacrament) who worship God in the Spirit, and rejoice in Christ Jesus,
and have no confidence in the flesh. See in how small a compass our duty is comprised; it
is put into few words, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, and living soberly,
righteously, and godly, in this present world. The gospel teaches us not only how to
believe and hope well, but also to live well, as becomes that faith and hope in this present
world, and as expectants of another and better. There is the world that now is, and that
which is to come; the present is the time and place of our trial, and the gospel teaches us
to live well here, not, however, as our final state, but with an eye chiefly to a future: for it
teaches us in all,
(3.) To look for the glories of another world, to which a sober, righteous, and godly
life in this is preparative: Looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of
the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ. Hope, by a metonymy, is put for the thing
hoped for, namely, heaven and the felicities thereof, called emphatically that hope,
because it is the great thing we look and long and wait for; and a blessed hope, because,
when attained, we shall be completely happy for ever. And the glorious appearing of the
great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ. This denotes both the time of the accomplishing
of our hope and the sureness and greatness of it: it will be at the second appearing of
Christ, when he shall come in his own glory, and in his Father's, and of the holy angels,
Luke ix. 26. His own glory which he had before the world was; and his Father's, being
the express image of his person, and as God-man, his delegated ruler and Judge; and of
the holy angels, as his ministers and glorious attendants. His first coming was in
meanness, to satisfy justice and purchase happiness; his second will be in majesty, to
bestow and instate his people in it. Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many; and
unto those that look for him will he appear the second time, without sin, unto salvation,
Heb. ix. 28. The great God and our Saviour (or even our Saviour) Jesus Christ; for they
are not two subjects, but one only, as appears by the single article, tou megalou Theou
kai Soteros, not kai tou Soteros, and so is kai rendered 1 Cor. xv. 24, When he shall have
delivered up the kingdom to God, even the Father; to Theo kai Patri. Christ then is the
great God, not figuratively, as magistrates and others are sometimes called gods, or as
appearing and acting in the name of God, but properly and absolutely, the true God (1
John v. 20), the mighty God (Isa. ix. 6), who, being in the form of God, thought it not
robbery to be equal with God, Phil. ii. 6. In his second coming he will reward his
servants, and bring them to glory with him. Observe, [1.] There is a common and blessed
hope for all true Christians in the other world. If in this life only they had hope in Christ,
they were of all men the most miserable, 1 Cor. xv. 19. By hope is meant the thing hoped
for, namely, Christ himself, who is called our hope (1 Tim. i. 1), and blessedness in and
through him, even riches of glory (Eph. i. 18), hence fitly termed here that blessed hope.
[2.] The design of the gospel is to stir up all to a good life by this blessed hope. Gird up
the loins of your mind, be sober, and hope to the end for the grace that is to be brought
unto you at the revelation of Jesus Christ, 1 Pet. i. 13. To the same purport here, Denying
ungodliness and worldly lusts, live soberly, righteously, and godly, in this present world,
looking for the blessed hope; not as mercenaries, but as dutiful and thankful Christian.
What manner of persons ought you to be in all holy conversation and godliness, looking
for and hastening to the coming of the day of God! 2 Pet. iii. 11, 12. Looking and
hastening, that is, expecting and diligently preparing for it. [3.] At, and in, the glorious
appearing of Christ will the blessed hope of Christians be attained; for their felicity will
be this, To be where he is, and to behold his glory, John xvii. 24. The glory of the great
God and our Saviour will then break out as the sun. Though in the exercise of his
judiciary power he will appear as the Son of man, yet will he be mightily declared to be
the Son of God too. The divinity, which on earth was much veiled, will shine out then as
the sun in its strength. Hence the work and design of the gospel are to raise the heart to
wait for this second appearing of Christ. We are begotten again to a lively hope of it (1
Pet. i. 3), turned to serve the living God, and wait for his Son from heaven, 1 Thess. i. 9,
10. Christians are marked by this, expecting their Master's coming (Luke xii. 36), loving
his appearance, 2 Tim. iv. 8. Let us then look to this hope; let our loins be girt, and our
lights burning, and ourselves like those who wait for their Lord; the day or hour we know
not, but he that shall come will come, and will not tarry, Heb. x. 37. [4.] The comfort and
joy of Christians are that their Saviour is the great God, and will gloriously manifest
himself at his second coming. Power and love, majesty and mercy, will then appear
together in the highest lustre, to the terror and confusion of the wicked, but to the
everlasting triumph and rejoicing of the godly. Were he not thus the great God, and not a
mere creature, he could not be their Saviour, nor their hope. Thus of the considerations to
enforce the directions of all sorts to their respective duties from the nature and design of
the gospel. And herewith is connected another ground, namely,
II. From the end of Christ's death: Who gave himself for us, that he might redeem us
from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works, v. 14.
To bring us to holiness and happiness was the end of Christ's death, as well as the scope
of his doctrine. Here we have,
1. The purchaser of salvation--Jesus Christ, that great God and our Saviour, who
saves not simply as God, much less as man alone; but as God-man, two natures in one
person: man, that he might obey, and suffer, and die, for man, and be meet to deal with
him and for him; and God, that he might support the manhood, and give worth and
efficacy to his undertakings, and have due regard to the rights and honour of the deity, as
well as the good of his creature, and bring about the latter to the glory of the former. Such
a one became us; and this was,
2. The price of our redemption: He gave himself. The Father gave him, but he gave
himself too; and, in the freeness and voluntariness, as well as the greatness of the
offering, lay the acceptableness and merit of it. Therefore doth my Father love me,
because I lay down my life, that I might take it again. No man taketh it from me, but I lay
it down of myself, John x. 17, 18. So John xvii. 19, "For their sakes I sanctify myself, or
separate and devote myself to this work, to be both a priest and a sacrifice to God for the
sins of men." The human nature was the offering, and the divine the altar, sanctifying the
gift, and the whole the act of the person. He gave himself a ransom for all, 1 Tim. ii. 6.
Once in the end of the world hath he appeared, to put away sin by the sacrifice of
himself. He was the priest and sacrifice too. We are redeemed, not with silver and gold,
but the precious blood of Christ (1 Pet. i. 18, 19), called the blood of God (Acts xx. 28),
that is, of him who is God.
3. The persons for whom: For us, us poor perishing sinners, gone off from God, and
turned rebels against him. He gave himself for us, not only for our good, but in our stead.
Messiah was cut off, not for himself, but for us. He suffered, the just for the unjust, that
he might bring us to God, 1 Pet. iii. 18. He was made sin for us (an offering and sacrifice
for sin), that we might be made the righteousness of God in him, 2 Cor. v. 21. Wonderful
condescension and grace! He loved us, and gave himself for us; what can we do less than
love and give up ourselves to him? Especially considering,
4. The ends of his giving himself for us, (1.) That he might redeem us from all
iniquity. This is fitted to the first lesson, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts. Christ
gave himself to redeem us from these, therefore put them away. To love and live in sin is
to trample under foot redeeming blood, to despise and reject one of the greatest benefits
of it, and to act counter to its design. But how could the short sufferings of Christ redeem
us from all iniquity? Answer, Through the infinite dignity of his person. He who was God
suffered, though not as God. The acts and properties of either nature are attributed to the
person. God purchased his church with his own blood, Acts xx. 28. Could payment be
made at once, no need of suffering for ever. A mere creature could not do this, from the
finiteness of his nature; but God-man could. The great God and our Saviour gave himself
for us: this accounts for it. By one offering he hath for ever perfected those that are
sanctified, Heb. ix. 25, 26; x. 14. He needed not to offer himself often, nor could he be
holden of death, when he had once undergone it. Happy end and fruit of Christ's death,
redemption from all iniquity! Christ died for this: and, (2.) To purify to himself a peculiar
people. This enforces the second lesson: To live soberly, righteously, and godly, in this
present world. Christ died to purify as well as to pardon--to obtain grace, to heal the
nature, as well as to free from guilt and condemnation. He gave himself for his church, to
cleanse it. Thus does he make to himself a peculiar people, by purifying them. Thus are
they distinguished from the world that lies in wickedness; they are born of God, and
assimilated to him, bear his image, are holy as their heavenly Father is holy. Observe,
Redemption from sin and sanctification of the nature go together, and both make a
peculiar people unto God: freedom from guilt and condemnation, freedom from the
power of lusts, and purification of soul by the Spirit. These are a chosen generation, a
royal priesthood, a holy nation, and so a peculiar people. And, (3.) Zealous of good
works. This peculiar people, as they are made so by grace purifying them, so must they
be seen to be so by doing good, and a zeal therein. Observe, The gospel is not a doctrine
of licentiousness, but of holiness and good life. We are redeemed from our vain
conversation, to serve God in holiness and righteousness all the days of our life. Let us
see then that we do good, and have zeal in it; only looking that zeal be guided by
knowledge and spirited with love, directed to the glory of God, and always in some good
thing. And thus of the motive to the duties directed, from the end of Christ's death.
15 These things speak, and exhort, and rebuke with all authority. Let no
man despise thee.
The apostle closes the chapter (as he began it) with a summary direction to Titus upon
the whole, in which we have the matter and manner of ministers' teaching, and a special
instruction to Titus in reference to himself.
I. The matter of ministers' teaching: These thing, namely, those before mentioned: not
Jewish fables and traditions, but the truths and duties of the gospel, of avoiding sin, and
living soberly, righteously, and godly, in this present world. Observe, Ministers in their
preaching must keep close to the word of God. If any man speak, let him speak as the
oracles of God, 1 Pet. iv. 11, and not the figments and inventions of his own brain.
II. The manner; by doctrine, and exhortation, and reproof with all authority. 2 Tim.
iii. 16, All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for
reproof, for correction, and for instruction in righteousness; that is, to teach sound
doctrine, to convince of sin and refute error, to reform the life, and to carry forward in
what is just and good; that the man of God (the Christian or minister) may be perfect,
thoroughly furnished to all good works that are to be practised by himself or to be taught
to others. Here is what will furnish for all parts of his duty, and the right discharge of
them. "These things speak, or teach; shun not to declare the whole counsel of God." The
great and necessary truths and duties of the gospel, especially, these speak and exhort,
parakalei, press with much earnestness. Ministers must not be cold and lifeless in
delivering heavenly doctrine and precepts, as if they were indifferent things or of little
concern; but they must urge them with earnestness suitable to their nature and
importance; they must call upon persons to mind and heed, and not be hearers only,
deceiving themselves; but doers of the word, that they may be blessed therein. And
rebuke; convince and reprove such as contradict or gainsay, or neglect and do not receive
the truth as they should, or retain it in unrighteousness--those who hear it not with such a
believing and obedient mind and heart as they ought, but, instead of this (it may be) live
in contrary practices, showing themselves stubborn and disobedient, and to every good
work reprobate. Rebuke with all authority, as coming in the name of God, and armed with
his threatenings and discipline, whoever make light of which will do it at their peril.
Ministers are reprovers in the gate.
III. Here is a special instruction to Titus in reference to himself: "Let no man despise
thee; that is, give no occasion to do so, nor suffer it without reproof, considering that he
who despiseth despiseth not man, but God." Or thus, "Speak and exhort these things,
press them upon all, as they may respectively be concerned; with boldness and
faithfulness reprove sin, and carefully look to thyself and thy own conduct, and then none
will despise thee." The most effectual way for ministers to secure themselves from
contempt is to keep close to the doctrine of Christ, and imitate his example--to preach and
live well, and do their duty with prudence and courage; this will best preserve both their
reputation and their comfort.
Perhaps too an admonition might be here intended to the people--that Titus, though
young, and but a substitute of the apostle, yet should not be condemned by them, but
considered and respected as a faithful minister of Christ, and encouraged and supported
in his work and office. "Know those that labour among you, and are over you in the
Lord, and admonish you; and esteem them very highly in love for their work's sake, 1
Thess. v. 12, 13. Mind their teaching, respect their persons, support them in their
function, and, what in you lies, further their endeavours for the honour of God and the
salvation of souls."
T I T U S.
CHAP. III.
Of duties which concern Christians more in common, and the reasons of them, ver. 1-8. What Titus in
teaching should avoid, and how he should deal with a heretic, with some other directions (ver. 9-14), and
salutations in the close, ver. 15.
Here is the fourth thing in the matter of the epistle. The apostle had directed Titus in
reference to the particular and special duties of several sorts of persons; now he bids him
exhort to what concerned them more in common, namely, to quietness and submission to
rulers, and readiness to do good, and to equitable and gentle behaviour towards all men--
things comely and ornamental of religion; he must therefore put them in mind of such
things. Ministers are people's remembrancers of their duty. As they are remembrancers
for the people to God in prayers (Isa. lxii. 6), so are they from God to them in preaching:
I will not be negligent to put you always in remembrance, 2 Pet. i. 12. Forgetfulness of
duty is a common frailty; there is need therefore of reminding and quickening them
thereto. Here are the duties themselves, and the reasons of them.
I. The duties themselves, which they were to be reminded of. 1. Put them in mind to
be subject to principalities and powers, to obey magistrates. Magistracy is God's
ordinance for the good of all, and therefore must be regarded and submitted to by all; not
for wrath and by force only, but willingly and for conscience' sake. Principalities, and
powers, and magistrates, that is, all civil rulers, whether supreme and chief or
subordinate, in the government under which they live, of whatever form it be; that they
be subject to them and obey them in things lawful and honest, and which it belongs to
their office to require. The Christian religion was misrepresented by its adversaries as
prejudicial to the rights of princes and civil powers, and tending to faction and sedition,
and to rebellion against lawful authority; therefore to put to silence the ignorance of
foolish men, and stop the mouths of malicious enemies, Christians must be reminded to
show themselves examples rather of all due subjection and obedience to the government
that is over them. Natural desire of liberty must be guided and bounded by reason and
scripture. Spiritual privileges do not make void or weaken, but confirm and strengthen,
their obligations to civil duties: "Remind them therefore to be subject to principalities
and powers and to obey magistrates." And, 2. To be ready to every good work. Some
refer this to such good works as are required by magistrates and within their sphere:
"Whatever tends to good order, and to promote and secure public tranquility and peace,
be not backward, but ready, to promote such things." But, though this be included, if not
first intended, yet is it not to be hereto restrained. The precept regards doing good in all
kinds, and on every occasion that may offer, whether resecting God, ourselves, or our
neighbour--what may bring credit to religion in the world. Whatsoever things are true,
honest, just, pure, lovely, of good report: if there be any virtue, if there be any praise,
think on these things (Phil. iv. 8), to do and follow and further them. Mere harmlessness,
or good words and good meanings only, are not enough without good works. Pure
religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this, to visit the fatherless, and the
widow in their affliction, and keep unspotted from the world. "Not only take, but seek,
occasion for doing good, keep fitness and readiness that way; put it not off to others, but
embrace and lay hold on it thyself, delight and rejoice therein, put all in mind of this."
And, 3. To speak evil of no man: medena blasphemein, to revile, or curse, or blaspheme
none: or (as our translation more generally) to speak evil of none, unjustly and falsely, or
unnecessarily, without call, and when it may do hurt but no good to the person himself or
any other. If no good can be spoken, rather than speak evil unnecessarily, say nothing.
We must never take pleasure in speaking ill of others, nor make the worst of any thing,
but the best we can. We must not go up and down as tale-bearers, carrying ill-natured
stories, to the prejudice of our neighbour's good name and the destruction of brotherly
love. Misrepresentations, or insinuations of bad intentions, or of hypocrisy in what is
done, things out of our reach or cognizance, these come within the reach of this
prohibition. As this evil is too common, so it is of great malignity. If any man seemeth to
be religious and bridleth not his tongue, that man's religion is vain, Jam. i. 26. Such
loose uncharitable talk is displeasing to God, and hurtful among men. Prov. xvii. 9, He
that covereth a transgression seeketh love (that is, to himself by this tenderness and
charity, or rather to the transgressor); but he that repeateth a matter (that blazes and tells
the faults of another abroad) separateth very friends; he raises dissensions and alienates
his friend from himself, and perhaps from others. This is among the sins to be put off
(Eph. iv. 31); for, if indulged, it unfits for Christians communion here and the society of
the blessed in heaven, 1 Cor. vi. 10. Remind them therefore to avoid this. And, 4. To be
no brawlers; amachous einai--no fighters, either with hand or tongue, no quarrelsome
contentious persons, apt to give or return ill and provoking language. A holy contending
there is for matters good and important, and in a manner suitable and becoming, not with
wrath nor injurious violence. Christian must follow the things that are conducive to
peace, and that in a peaceful, not a rough and boisterous and hurtful way, but as becomes
the servants of the God of peace and love (Rom. xii. 19), Dearly beloved, avenge not
yourselves, but rather give place unto wrath; this is the Christian's wisdom and duty. The
glory of a man is to pass over a transgression; it is the duty of a reasonable, and therefore
certainly of a Christian man, whose reason is improved and advanced by religion; such
may not, and will not, presently fall foul on one who has offended him, but, like God,
will be slow to anger, and ready to forgive. Contention and strife arise from men's lusts,
and exorbitant unruly passions, which must be curbed and moderated, not indulged; and
Christians need to be reminded of these things, that they do not by a wrathful contentious
spirit and behaviour displease and dishonour God and discredit religion, promoting feuds
in the places where they live. He that is slow to anger is better than the mighty, and he
that ruleth his spirit than he that taketh a city. Wherefore it follows, 5. But gentle;
epieikeis, equitable and just, or candid and fair in constructions of things, not taking
words or actions in the worst sense; and for peace sometimes yielding somewhat of strict
right. And, 6. Showing all meekness to all men. We must be of a mild disposition, and not
only have meekness in our hearts, but show it in our speech and conduct. All meekness--
meekness in all instances and occasions, not towards friends only, but to all men, though
still with wisdom, as James admonishes, Jam. iii. 13. "Distinguish the person and the sin;
pity the one and hate the other. Distinguish between sin and sin; look not on all alike,
there are motes and beams. Distinguish also between sinner and sinner: of some have
compassion, others save with fear, pulling them out of the fire, thus making a difference,
Jude 22, 23. Mind these things; the wisdom that is from above is pure and peaceable,
gentle and easy to be entreated." Meekness of spirit and demeanour renders religion
amiable; it is a commanded imitation of Christ the grand exemplar, and what brings it
own reward with it, in the ease and comfort of the disposition itself and the blessings
accompanying it. These shall be glad and rejoice, shall be taught and guided in their way,
and satisfied with bread, and beautified with salvation. Thus of the duties themselves,
which Titus was to put people in mind of: for which,
1. From their own past condition. Consideration of men's natural condition is a great
means and ground of equity and gentleness, and all meekness, towards those who are yet
in such a state. This has a tendency to abate pride and work pity and hope in reference to
those who are yet unconverted: "We ourselves also were so and so, corrupt and sinful,
therefore we should not be impatient and bitter, hard and severe, towards those who are
but as ourselves once were. Should we then have been willing to be contemned, and
proudly and rigorously dealt with? No, but treated with gentleness and humanity; and
therefore we should now so treat those who are unconverted, according to that rule of
equity: Quod tibi non vis fieri, alteri ne feceris--What you would not have done to you
that do not you to another." Their past natural condition is set forth in divers particulars.
We ourselves also were sometimes, (1.) Foolish; without true spiritual understanding and
knowledge, ignorant of heavenly things. Observe, Those should be most disposed to bear
with others' follies who may remember many of their own; those should be meek and
gentle, and patient towards others, who once needed and doubtless then expected the
same. We ourselves also were sometimes foolish. And, (2.) Disobedient; heady and
unpersuadable, resisting the word, and rebellious even against the natural laws of God,
and those which human society requires. Well are these set together, foolish and
obedient. For what folly like this, to disobey God and his laws, natural or revealed? This
is contrary to right reason, and men's true and greatest interests; and what so foolish as to
violate and go counter to these? (3.) Deceived, or wandering; namely, out of the ways of
truth and holiness. Man in this his degenerate state is of a straying nature, thence
compared to a lost sheep; this must be sought and brought back, and guided in the right
way, Ps. cxix. 176. He is weak, and ready to be imposed upon by the wiles and subtleties
of Satan, and of men lying in wait to seduce and mislead. (4.) Serving divers lusts and
pleasures; namely, as vassals and slaves under them. Observe, Men deceived are easily
entangled and ensnared; they would not serve divers lusts and pleasures as they do, were
they not blinded and beguiled into them. See here too what a different notion the word
gives of a sensual and fleshly life from what the world generally has of it. Carnal people
think they enjoy their pleasures; the word calls it servitude and vassalage: they are very
drudges and bond slaves under them; so far are they from freedom and felicity in them
that they are captivated by them, and serve them as taskmasters and tyrants. Observe
further, It is the misery of the servants of sin that they have many masters, one lust
hurrying them one way, and another; pride commands one thing, covetousness another,
and often a contrary. What vile slaves are sinners, while they conceit themselves free! the
lusts that tempt them promise them liberty, but in yielding they become the servants of
corruption; for of whom a man is overcome of the same is he brought into bondage. (5.)
Living in malice, one of those lusts that bear rule in them. Malice desires hurt to another
and rejoices in it. (6.) And envy, which grudges and repines at another's good, frets at his
prosperity and success in any thing: both are roots of bitterness, whence many evils
spring: evil thoughts and speeches, tongues set on fire of hell, detracting from and
impairing the just and due praises of others. Their words are swords, wherewith they slay
the good name and honour of their neighbour. This was the sin of Satan, and of Cain who
was of that evil one, and slew his brother; for wherefore slew he him, but of this envy and
malice, because his own works were evil, and his brother's righteous? These were some
of the sins in which we lived in our natural state. And, (7.) Hateful, or odious--deserving
to be hated. (8.) And hating one another. Observe, Those that are sinful, living and
allowing themselves in sin, are hateful to God and all good men. Their temper and ways
are so, though not simply their persons. It is the misery of sinners that thy hate one
another, as it is the duty and happiness of saints to love one another. What contentions
and quarrels flow from men's corruptions, such as were in the nature of those who by
conversion are now good, but in their unconverted state made them ready to run like
furious wild beasts one upon another! The consideration of its having been thus with us
should moderate our spirits, and dispose us to be more equal and gentle, meek and
tenderhearted, towards those who are such. This is the argument from their own past
condition here described. And he reasons,
2. From their present state. "We are delivered out of that our miserable condition by
no merit nor strength of our own; but only by the mercy and free grace of God, and merit
of Christ, and operation of his Spirit. Therefore we have no ground, in respect of
ourselves, to condemn those who are yet unconverted, but rather to pity them, and cherish
hope concerning them, that they, though in themselves as unworthy and unmeet as we
were, yet may obtain mercy, as we have:" and so upon this occasion the apostle again
opens the causes of our salvation, v. 4-7.
(1.) We have here the prime author of our salvation--God the Father, therefore termed
here God our Saviour. All things are of God, who hath reconciled us to himself by Jesus
Christ, 2 Cor. v. 18. All things belonging to the new creation, and recovery of fallen man
to life and happiness, of which the apostle is there speaking, all these things are of God
the Father, as contriver and beginner of this work. There is an order in acting, as in
subsisting. The Father begins, the Son manages, and the Holy Spirit works and perfects
all. God (namely, the Father) is a Saviour by Christ, through the Spirit. John iii. 16, God
so loved the world as to give his only begotten Son, that whoever believes in him might
not perish, but have everlasting life. He is the Father of Christ, and through him the
Father of mercies; all spiritual blessings are by Christ from him, Eph. i. 3. We joy in God
through Jesus Christ, Rom. v. 11. And with one mind, and one mouth, glorify God, even
the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, Rom. xv. 5.
(2.) The spring and rise of it--the divine philanthropy, or kindness and love of God to
man. By grace we are saved from First to last. This is the ground and motive. God's pity
and mercy to man in misery were the first wheel, or rather the Spirit in the wheels, that
sets and keeps them all in motion. God is not, cannot be, moved by any thing out of
himself. The occasion is in man, namely, his misery and wretchedness. Sin bringing that
misery, wrath might have issued out rather than compassion; but God, knowing how to
adjust all with his own honour and perfections, would pity and save rather than destroy.
He delights in mercy. Where sin abounded, grace did much more abound. We read of
riches of goodness and mercy, Rom. ii. 4; Eph. ii. 7. Let us acknowledge this, and give
him the glory of it, not turning it to wantonness, but to thankfulness and obedience.
(3.) Here is the means, or instrumental cause--the shining out of this love and grace of
God in the gospel, after it appeared, that is, in the word. The appearing of love and grace
has, through the Spirit, great virtue to soften and change and turn to God, and so is the
power of God to salvation to every one that believeth. Thus having asserted God to be the
author, his free grace the spring, and the manifestation of this in the gospel the means of
salvation, that the honour of all still may be the better secured to him,
(4.) False grounds and motives are here removed: Not by works of righteousness
which we have done, but according to his mercy, he saved us; not for foreseen works of
ours, but his own free grace and mercy alone. Works must be in the saved (where there is
room for it), but not among the causes of his salvation; they are the way to the kingdom,
not the meriting price of it; all is upon the principle of undeserved favour and mercy from
first to last. Election is of grace: we are chosen to be holy, not because it was
antecedently seen that we should be so, Eph. i. 4. It is the fruit, not the cause, of election:
God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation through sanctification of the Spirit
and belief of the truth, 2 Thess. ii. 13. So effectual calling, in which election breaks out,
and is first seen: He hath saved us, and called us with a holy calling; not according to
our works, but according to his own purpose and grace, which was given us in Christ
Jesus before the world began, 2 Tim. i. 9. We are justified freely by grace (Rom. iii. 24),
and sanctified and saved by grace: By grace you are saved, through faith; and that not of
yourselves, it is the gift of God, Eph. ii. 8. Faith and all saving graces are God's free gift
and his work; the beginning, increase, and perfection of them in glory, all are from him.
In building men up to be a holy temple unto God, from the foundation to the top-stone,
we must cry nothing but Grace, grace unto it. It is not of works, lest any man should
boast; but of grace, that he who glorieth should glory only in the Lord. Thus the true
cause is shown, and the false removed.
(5.) Here is the formal cause of salvation, or that wherein it lies, the beginnings of it
at least--in regeneration or spiritual renewing, as it is here called. Old things pass away,
and all things become new, in a moral and spiritual, not in a physical and natural, sense.
It is the same man, but with other dispositions and habits; evil ones are done away, as to
the prevalency of them at present; and all remains of them in due time will be so, when
the work shall be perfected in heaven. A new prevailing principle of grace and holiness is
wrought, which inclines, and sways, and governs, and makes the man a new man, a new
creature, having new thoughts, desires, and affections, a new and holy turn of life and
actions; the life of God in man, not only from God in a special manner, but conformed
and tending to him. Here is salvation begun, and which will be growing and increasing to
perfection; therefore it is said, He saved us. What is so begun, as sure to be perfected in
time, is expressed as if it already were so. Let us look to this therefore without delay; we
must be initially saved now, by regeneration, if on good ground we would expect
complete salvation in heaven. The change then will be but in degree, not in kind. Grace is
glory begun, as glory is but grace in its perfection. How few mind this! Most act as if
they were afraid to be happy before the time; they would have heaven, they pretend, at
last, yet care not for holiness now; that is, they would have the end without the beginning;
so absurd are sinners. But without regeneration, that is, the first resurrection, there is no
attaining the second glorious one, the resurrection of the just. Here then is formal
salvation, in the new divine life wrought by the gospel.
(6.) Here is the outward sign and seal thereof in baptism, called therefore the washing
of regeneration. The work itself is inward and spiritual; but it is outwardly signified and
sealed in this ordinance. Water is of a cleansing and purifying nature, does away the filth
of the flesh, and so was apt to signify the doing away of the guilt and defilement of sin by
the blood and Spirit of Christ, though that aptness alone, without Christ's institution,
would not have been sufficient. This it is that makes it of this signification on God's part,
a seal of righteousness by faith, as circumcision was, in the place of which it succeeds;
and on ours an engagement to be the Lord's. Thus baptism saves figuratively and
sacramentally, where it is rightly used. Arise, and be baptized, and wash away thy sins,
calling upon the name of the Lord, Acts xxii. 16. So Eph. v. 26, That he might sanctify
and cleanse us by the washing of water by the word. Slight not this outward sign and seal,
where it may be had according to Christ's appointment; yet rest not in the outward
washing, but look to the answer of a good conscience, without which the external
washing will avail nothing. The covenant sealed in baptism binds to duties, as well as
exhibits and conveys benefits and privileges; if the former be not minded, in vain are the
latter expected. Sever not what God has joined; in both the outer and inner part is baptism
complete; as he that was circumcised became debtor to the whole law (Gal. v. 3), so is he
that is baptized to the gospel, to observe all the commands and ordinances thereof, as
Christ appointed. Disciple all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of
the Son, and of the Holy Ghost; teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have
commanded you, Matt. xxviii. 19, 20. This is the outward sign and seal of salvation,
baptism, called here the washing of regeneration.
(7.) Here is the principal efficient, namely, the Spirit of God; it is the renewing of the
Holy Ghost; not excluding the Father and the Son, who in all works without themselves
are concurring; nor the use of means, the word and sacraments, by which the Spirit
works; through his operation it is that they have their saving effect. In the economy of our
salvation, the applying and effecting part is especially attributed to the Holy Spirit. We
are said to be born of the Spirit, to be quickened and sanctified by the Spirit, to be led and
guided, strengthened and helped, by the Spirit. Through him we mortify sin, perform
duty, walk in God's ways; all the acts and operations of the divine life in us, the works
and fruits of righteousness without us, all are through this blessed and Holy Spirit, who is
therefore called the Spirit of life, and of grace and holiness; all grace is from him.
Earnestly therefore is he to be sought, and greatly to be heeded by us, that we quench not
his holy motions, nor resist and oppose him in his workings. Res delicatula est Spiritus--
The Spirit is a tender thing. As we act towards him, so may we expect he will to us; if we
slight, and resist, and oppose his workings, he will slacken them; if we continue to vex
him, he will retire. Grieve not therefore the Holy Spirit of God, whereby you are sealed
to the day of redemption, Eph. iv. 30. The Spirit seals by his renewing and sanctifying,
his witnessing and assuring work; he distinguishes and marks out for salvation, and fits
for it; it is his work: we could not turn to God by any strength of our own, any more than
we can be justified by any righteousness of our own.
(8.) Here is the manner of God's communicating this Spirit in the gifts and graces of
it; not with a scanty and niggardly hand, but most freely and plentifully: Which he shed
on us abundantly. More of the Spirit in its gifts and graces is poured out under the gospel
than was under the law, whence it is eminently styled the ministration of the Spirit, 2 Cor.
iii. 8. A measure of the Spirit the church has had in all ages, but more in gospel times,
since the coming of Christ, than before. The law came by Moses, but grace and truth by
Jesus Christ; that is, a more plentiful effusion of grace, fulfilling the promises and
prophecies of old. Isa. xliv. 3, I will pour water upon him that is thirsty, and floods upon
the dry ground. I will pour my Spirit upon thy seed, and my blessing upon thy offspring:
this greatest and best of blessings, an effusion of grace, and of the sanctifying gifts of the
Spirit. Joel ii. 28, I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh; not on Jews only, but Gentiles
also. This was to be in gospel times; and accordingly (Acts ii. 17, 18, 33), speaking of
Christ risen and ascended, having received of the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost,
he hath shed forth (says Peter) this that you now see and hear: and ch. x. 44, 45, The
Holy Ghost fell on all those that heart the word, Gentiles as well as Jews. This indeed
was, in a great measure, in the miraculous gifts of the Holy Ghost, but not without his
sanctifying graces also accompanying many if not all of them. There was then great
abundance of common gifts of illumination, outward calling and profession, and general
faith, and of more special gifts of sanctification too, such as faith, and hope, and love, and
other graces of the Spirit. Let us get a share in these. What will it signify if much be shed
forth and we remain dry? Our condemnation will but be aggravated the more if under
such a dispensation of grace we remain void of grace. Be filled with the Spirit, says the
apostle; it is duty as well as privilege, because of the means which God in the gospel is
ready to bless and make effectual; this is the manner of God's communicating grace and
all spiritual blessings under the gospel--plentifully; he is not straitened towards us, but we
towards him and in ourselves.
(9.) Here is the procuring cause of all, namely, Christ: Through Jesus Christ our
Saviour. He it is who purchased the Spirit and his saving gifts and graces. All come
through him, and through him as a Saviour, whose undertaking and work it is to bring to
grace and glory; he is our righteousness and peace, and our head, from whom we have all
spiritual life and influences. He is made of God to us wisdom, righteousness,
sanctification, and redemption. Let us praise God for him above all; let us go to the
Father by him, and improve him to all sanctifying and saving purposes. Have we grace?
Let us thank him with the Father and Spirit for it: account all things but loss and dung for
the excellency of the knowledge of him, and grow and increase therein more and more.
(10.) Here are the ends why we are brought into this new spiritual condition, namely,
justification, and heirship, and hope of eternal life: That, being justified by his grace, we
should be made heirs according to the hope of eternal life. Justification in the gospel
sense is the free remission of a sinner, and accepting him as righteous through the
righteousness of Christ received by faith. In it there is the removing of guilt that bound to
punishment, and the accepting and dealing with the person as one that now is righteous in
God's sight. This God does freely as to us, yet through the intervention of Christ's
sacrifice and righteousness, laid hold on by faith (Rom. iii. 20, &c.): By the deeds of the
law shall no flesh be justified; but through the righteousness of God, which is by faith of
Jesus Christ unto all and upon all those that believe, whence (v. 24) we are said to be
justified freely by his grace, through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ, whom God
hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness
for the remission of sins, that he might be just, and the justifier of him that believeth in
Jesus. God, in justifying a sinner in the way of the gospel, is gracious to him, and yet just
to himself and his law, forgiveness being through a perfect righteousness, and satisfaction
made to justice by Christ, who is the propitiation for sin, and not merited by the sinner
himself. So it is here: Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according
to his mercy he saved us, that, being justified by his grace, we should be made heirs
according to the hope of eternal life. It is by grace, as the spring and rise (as was said),
though through the redemption that is in Christ as making the way, God's law and justice
being thereby satisfied, and by faith applying that redemption. By him (by Christ) all that
believe are justified from all things from which they could not be justified by the law of
Moses, Acts xiii. 39. Hence the apostle desires to be found in him, not having his own
righteousness, which was of the law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the
righteousness which is of God by faith. Let us not trust therefore in our own righteousness
or merit of good works, but in Christ's righteousness alone, received by faith for
justification and acceptance with God. Inherent righteousness we must have, and the
fruits of it in works of obedience; not however as our justifying righteousness before
God, but as fruits of our justification, and evidences of our interest in Christ and
qualification for life and happiness, and the very beginning and part of it; but the
procuring of all this is by Christ, that, being justified by his grace, we should be made
heirs. Observe, Our justification is by the grace of God, and our justification by that grace
is necessary in order to our being made heirs of eternal life; without such justification
there can be no adoption and sonship, and so no right of inheritance. John i. 12, Whoever
received him (namely, Christ), to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to
those that believed on his name. Eternal life is set before us in the promise, the Spirit
works faith in us and hope of that life, and so are we made heirs of it and have a kind of
possession of it even now; faith and hope bring it near, and fill with joy in the well-
grounded expectation of it. The meanest believer is a great heir. Though he has not his
portion in hand, he has good hope through grace, and may bear up under all difficulties.
There is a better state in view. He is waiting for an inheritance incorruptible, undefiled,
and that fadeth not away, reserved in heaven for him. How well may such comfort
themselves with these words! And now all this gives good reason why we should show
all meekness to all men, because we have experienced so much benefit by the kindness
and love of God to us, and may hope that they, in God's time, may be partakers of the like
grace as we are. And thus of the reasons of equal and gentle, meek and tender behaviour
to wards others, from their own bad condition in time past, and the present more happy
state into which they are brought, without any merit or deservings of their own, and
whereinto by the same grace others may be brought also.
III. The apostle, having opened the duties of Christians in common, with the reasons
respecting themselves, adds another from their goodness and usefulness to men. Observe,
When he has opened the grace of God towards us, he immediately presses the necessity
of good works; for we must not expect the benefit of God's mercy, unless we make
conscience of our duty (v. 8): This is a faithful saying, and these things I will that thou
affirm constantly (this is a true Christian doctrine of highest importance, and which
ministers must most earnestly and constantly press and inculcate), that those who have
believed in God do not think that a bare naked faith will save them; but it must be an
operative working faith, bringing forth the fruit of righteousness; they must make it their
care to maintain good works, not to do them occasionally only, and when opportunities
come in their way, but to seek opportunities for doing them. These things are good and
profitable unto men: these good works, say some, or the teaching of these things, rather
than idle questions, as follows. These things are good in themselves and the teaching of
them useful to mankind, making persons a common good in their places. Note, Ministers,
in teaching, must see that they deliver what is sound and good in itself, and profitable to
those that hear: all must be to the use of edifying both of persons and societies.
I. That the apostle's meaning might be more clear and full, and especially fitted to the
time and state of things in Crete, and the many judaizers among them, he tells Titus what,
in teaching, he should shun, v. 9. There are needful questions to be discussed and cleared,
such as make for improvement in useful knowledge; but idle and foolish enquiries,
tending neither to God's glory nor the edification of men, must be shunned. Some may
have a show of wisdom, but are vain, as many among the Jewish doctors, as well as of
later schoolmen, who abound with questions of no moment or use to faith or practice;
avoid these.--And genealogies (of the gods, say some, that the heathen poets made such
noise about; or rather those that the Jews were so curious in): some lawful and useful
enquiries might be made into these things, to see the fulfilling of the scriptures in some
cases, and especially in the descent of Christ the Messiah; but all that served to pomp
only, and to feed vanity, in boasting of a long pedigree, and much more such as the
Jewish teachers were ready to busy themselves in and trouble their hearers with, even
since Christ had come, and that distinction of families and tribes had been taken away, as
if they would build again that policy which now is abolished, these Titus must withstand
as foolish and vain.--And contentious, and strivings about the law. There were those who
were for the Mosaic rites and ceremonies, and would have them continued in the church,
though by the gospel and the coming of Christ they were superseded and done away.
Titus must give no countenance to these, but avoid and oppose them; for they are
unprofitable and vain: this is to be referred to all those foolish questions and
genealogies, as well as those strivings about the law. They are so far from instructing and
building up in godliness, that they are hindrances of it rather: the Christian religion, and
good works, which are to be maintained, will hereby be weakened and prejudiced, the
peace of the church disturbed, and the progress of the gospel hindered. Observe,
Ministers must not only teach things good and useful, but shun and oppose the contrary,
what would corrupt the faith, and hinder godliness and good works; nor should people
have itching ears, but love and embrace sound doctrine, which tends most to the use of
edifying.
II. But because, after all, there will be heresies and heretics in the church, the apostle
next directs Titus what to do in such a case, and how to deal with such, v. 10. He who
forsakes the truth as it is in Christ Jesus, who broaches false doctrines and propagates
them to the corrupting of the faith in weighty and momentous points, and breaks the
peace of the church about them, after due means used to reclaim him, must be rejected.
"Admonish him once and again, that, if possible, he may be brought back, and thou
mayest gain thy brother; but, if this will not reduce him, that others be not hurt, cast him
out of the communion, and warn all Christians to avoid him."--Knowing that he that is
such is subverted (turned off from the foundation) and sinneth grievously, being self-
condemned. Those who will not be reclaimed by admonitions, but are obstinate in their
sins and errors, are subverted and self-condemned; they inflict that punishment upon
themselves which the governors of the church should inflict upon them: they throw
themselves out of the church, and throw off its communion, and so are self-condemned.
Observe, 1. How great an evil real heresy is, not lightly therefore to be charged upon any,
though greatly to be taken heed of by all. Such a one is subverted or perverted--a
metaphor from a building so ruined as to render it difficult if not impossible to repair and
raise it up again. Real heretics have seldom been recovered to the true faith: not so much
defect of judgment, as perverseness of the will, being in the case, through pride, or
ambition, or self-willedness, or covetousness, or such like corruption, which therefore
must be taken heed of: "Be humble, love the truth and practise it, and damning heresy
will be escaped." 2. Pains and patience must be used about those that err most grievously.
They are not easily and soon to be given up and cast off, but competent time and means
must be tried for their recovery. 3. The church's means even with heretics are persuasive
and rational. They must be admonished, instructed, and warned; so much nouthesia
imports. 4. Upon continued obstinacy and irreclaimableness, the church has power, and is
obliged, to preserve its own purity, by severing such a corrupt member which discipline
may by God's blessing become effectual to reform the offender, or if not it will leave him
the more inexcusable in his condemnation.
III. The apostle subjoins some further directions, v. 12, 13. Here are two personal
things enjoined:--
1. That Titus should hold himself ready to come to Paul at Nicopolis (a city of Thrace,
as is reckoned, on the borders of Macedonia), as soon as Artemas or Tychicus should be
sent to Crete, to supply his place, and take care of the churches there when he should
leave them. The apostle would not have them in their young and weak state be without
one or other of chief sufficiency, to guide and help them. Titus, it seems, was not their
ordinary fixed bishop or pastor, but an evangelist, otherwise Paul would not have called
him so much from his charge. Of Artemas we read little, but Tychicus is mentioned on
many occasions with respect. Paul calls him a beloved brother, and faithful minister, and
fellow-servant in the Lord: one fit therefore for the service intimated. When Paul says to
Titus, Be diligent to come to me to Nicopolis, for I have determined there to winter, it is
plain that the epistle was not written from Nicopolis, as the postscript would have it, for
then he would have said, I determined here, not there, to winter.
2. The other personal charge to Titus is that he would bring two of his friends on their
journey diligently, and see them furnished, so that nothing should be wanting to them.
This was to be done, not as a piece of common civility only, but of Christian piety, out of
respect both to them and the work they were sent about, which probably was to preach
the gospel, or to be in some way serviceable to the churches. Zenas is styled the lawyer,
whether in reference to the Roman or the Mosaic law, as having some time been his
profession, is doubtful. Apollos was an eminent and faithful minister. Accompanying
such persons part of their way, and accommodating them for their work and journeys,
was a pious and needful service; and to further this, and lay in for it, what the apostle had
before exhorted Titus to teach (v. 8) he repeats here: Let ours also learn to maintain good
works for necessary uses, that they be not unfruitful, v. 14. Let Christians, those who have
believed in God, learn to maintain good works, especially such as these, supporting
ministers in their work of preaching and spreading the gospel, hereby becoming fellow-
helpers to the truth, 3 John 5-8. That they be not unfruitful. Christianity is not a fruitless
profession; the professors of it must be filled with the fruits of righteousness, which are
by Jesus Christ, to the glory and praise of God. It is not enough that they be harmless, but
they must be profitable, doing good, as well as eschewing evil.--"Let ours set up and
maintain some honest labour and employment, to provide for themselves and their
families, that they be not unprofitable burdens on the earth;" so some understand it. Let
them not think that Christianity gives them a writ of ease; no, it lays an obligation upon
them to seek some honest work and calling, and therein to abide with God. This is of
good report, will credit religion and be good to mankind; they will not be unprofitable
members of the body, not burdensome and chargeable to others, but enabled to be helpful
to those in want. To maintain good works for necessary uses; not living like drones on
the labours of others, but themselves fruitful to the common benefit.
IV. The apostle concludes with salutations and benedictions, v. 5. Though perhaps not
personally known (some of them at least), yet all by Paul testify their love and good
wishes to Titus, owning him thereby in his work, and stimulating him to go on therein.
Great comfort and encouragement it is to have the heart and prayers of other Christians
with and for us. Greet those that love us in the faith, or for the faith, who are our loving
fellow-christians. Holiness, or the image of God in any, is the great endearing thing that
gives strength to all other bonds, and is itself the best. Grace be with you all. Amen. This
is the closing benediction, not to Titus alone, but to all the faithful with him, which shows
that though the epistle bears the single name of Titus in the inscription, yet it was for the
use of the churches there, and they were in the eye, and upon the heart, of the apostle, in
the writing of it. "Grace be with you all, the love and favour of God, with the fruits and
effects thereof, according to need, spiritual ones especially, 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, his desire of their good, and a means of obtaining for them, and
bringing down upon them, the thing requested. Observe, Grace is the chief thing to be
wished and begged for, with respect to ourselves or others; it is, summarily, all good.
Amen shuts up the prayer, expressing desire and hope, that so it may, and so it shall be.
Page 584
emendation prompted by the analogy of the threefold salutation in 1 Tm 1.2 and 2 Tm 1.2. Other
minor fluctuations, such as the insertion of u`mi/n (33) or soi (copsa), are obviously scribal
modifications.
1.9 evle,gcein
After evle,gcein a trilingual manuscript of the thirteenth century (no. 460, Greek with Latin
and Arabic versions) adds Mh. ceirotonei/n diga,mouj mhde. diako,nouj auvtou.j
poiei/n( mhde. gunai/kaj e;cein evk digami,aj\ mhde. proserce,sqwsan evn tw|/
qusiasthri,w| leitourgei/n to. qei/on) tou.j a;rcontaj tou.j avdikokri,taj kai. a[rpagaj kai.
yeu,staj kai. avneleh,monaj e;legce w`j qeou/ dia,konoj (“Do not appoint those who have
married twice or make them deacons, and do not take wives in a second marriage; let them not
come to serve the Deity at the altar. As God’s servant reprove the rulers who are unjust judges
and robbers and liars and unmerciful”). (See also the comment on ver. 11.)
It is difficult to decide whether kai, was added in accordance with the rhetorical usage known
as hendiadys, or whether it was omitted by copyists who, not appreciating such usage, deleted it
both as unnecessary and as apparently disturbing to the sense. A majority of the Committee
preferred to follow the testimony of D G I K Y 1739 itd, g vg Speculum al, which read kai,, but to
enclose the word within
Page 585
1.11 ca,rin
After ca,rin the trilingual manuscript 460 (see also the comment on ver. 9) adds ta.
te,kna
oi` tou.j ivdi,ouj gonei/j u`bri,zontej h' tu,ptonej evpisto,mize kai. e;legce kai. nouqe,tei
w`j path.r te,kna (“The children who abuse or strike their parents you must check and reprove
and admonish as a father his children”).
2.5 oivkourgou,j
Textus Receptus), which occurs frequently in classical Greek, a* A C D* F G I 33 177 330 623
Clement of Rome al read oivkourgou,j, which occurs elsewhere only in Soranus, a medical
writer of the second century A.D. A majority of the Committee preferred the latter reading because
of superior external support, and because it was regarded more probable that an unusual word
should have been altered by copyists to a well-known word, than vice versa.
The text may be punctuated with or without a comma after oivkourgou,j.
2.7 avfqori,an
Page 586
After avrcai/j the Textus Receptus adds kai,, following the later uncials (Dc K P) as well as
most of the minuscules, versions, and Fathers. The more difficult asyndetic construction is
supported by the best witnesses of both the Alexandrian and the Western types of text ( aACD gr
*
G Y 33 1739 itg). It is possible that the conjunction may have fallen out accidentally in
transcription (ar,aickaiexouciaic). On the other hand, since kai, is lacking also between the
following two infinitives (according to the decisive weight of witnesses; only F gr G itg syrp Basil
insert kai,), it appears that the author deliberately framed his sentence concisely, and that the
presence of kai, is the result of the desire of copyists to relieve the asyndeton.
3.9 e;reij
On the one hand, from the point of view of transcriptional probability it is more likely that
copyists would have altered e;rin to e;reij, in agreement with the plurals before and after it, than
vice versa. On the other hand, external evidence appears to favor the plural form: e;reij (or its
phonetic equivalent, e;rij) is supported by A C K L P 075 0142 most minuscules it d, g vg syrp, h
a
copsa, bo, whereas e;rin (or its phonetic equivalent e;rein) is supported by * Dgr* F G Y 999 arm
eth al. A majority of the Committee preferred to be guided in its judgment by the weight of the
external evidence (which includes all versions except the Ethiopic), especially since the context
seems to call for a reference to a plurality of disagreements.
The impulse to identify the origin of h` ca,rij in the benediction prompted copyists to insert
tou/ kuri,ou (D) or tou/ qeou/ (F G vg). Influence from 2 Tm 4.22 accounts for the substitution of
meta. tou/ pneu,mato,j sou in 33, and for the addition of kai. meta. tou/ pneu,mato,j sou in 81.
The concluding avmh,n ( a c
Dc F G H Y al) is obviously secondary, for the word is absent in a
variety of early and diverse witnesses (î61vid a* A C D* 048 1739 1881 al), and the
Page 587
temptation for copyists to add the liturgical conclusion would be great.
3.15 Subscription
(a) The subscription in a C 33 eth is pro.j Ti,ton. Other subscriptions include the following:
(b) pro.j Ti,ton evplhrw,qh D; (c) evtele,sqh evpistolh. pro.j Ti,ton F G; (d) pro.j Ti,ton
evgra,fh avpo. Nikopo,lewj A P arab; (e) pro.j Ti,ton th/j Krhtw/n evkklhsi,aj prw/ton
evpi,skopon ceirotonhqe,nta evgra,fh avpo. Nikopo,lewj th/j Makedoni,aj K 101 1908
1927, followed by the Textus Receptus; (f) Pau,lou avposto,lou (L tou/ a`gi,ou avposto,lou
Pau,lou) evpistolh. pro.j Ti,ton th/j Krhtw/n (L Kritw/n) evkklhsi,aj prw/ton evpi,skopon
ceirotonhqe,nta\ evgra,fh avpo. Nikopo,lewj th/j Makedoni,aj H L 462; (g) as (d) plus th/j
Makedoni,aj Euthaliusms; (h) To Titus it was finished, it was written in Nicopolis and he sent it by
Artemas his disciple, copbo; (i) Was finished the epistle to Titus, which was written from Nicopolis
and was sent through Zina and Apollo, syrp; (j) Was finished the epistle to Titus, who was the first
bishop of the Church at Crete, which was written from Nicopolis of Macedonia, syr h.