This testimony is true. For this cause, reprove them sharply, that they may be sound in the faith,
KJV
This witness is true. Wherefore rebuke them sharply, that they may be sound in the faith;
Commentary
Commentary
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 .
1 Paul, a servant of God, and an apostle of Jesus Christ,
according to the faith of God's elect, and the acknowledging of
the truth which is after godliness;
2 In hope of eternal life, which God, that cannot lie, promised
before the world began;
3 But hath in due times manifested his word through preaching,
which is committed unto me according to the commandment of God
our Saviour;
4 To Titus, mine own son after the common faith: Grace,
mercy, and peace, from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ
our Saviour.
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 (or for ) 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:
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. Their qualifications respecting their life and manners are,
(1.) More general: If any be blameless; not absolutely without
fault, so none are, for there is none that liveth and sinneth
not; nor altogether unblamed, this is rare and difficult. Christ
himself and his apostles were blamed, though not worthy of it. In
Christ thee was certainly nothing blamable; and his apostles were not
such as their enemies charged them to be. But the meaning is, He must
be one who lies not under an ill character; but rather must have good
report, even from those that are without; not grossly or
scandalously guilty, so as would bring reproach upon the holy function;
he must not be such a one.
(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 .
False teachers are described. Faithful ministers must
oppose such in good time, that their folly being made manifest, they
may go no further They had a base end in what they did; serving a
worldly interest under pretence of religion: for the love of money is
the root of all evil. Such should be resisted, and put to shame, by
sound doctrine from the Scriptures. Shameful actions, the reproach
of heathens, should be far from Christians; falsehood and lying,
envious craft and cruelty, brutal and sensual practices, and idleness
and sloth, are sins condemned even by the light of nature. But
Christian meekness is as far from cowardly passing over sin and
error, as from anger and impatience. And though there may be
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national differences of character, yet the heart of man in every age
and place is deceitful and desperately wicked. But the sharpest
reproofs must aim at the good of the reproved; and soundness in
the faith is most desirable and necessary. To those who are defiled
and unbelieving, nothing is pure; they abuse, and turn things lawful
and good into sin. Many profess to know God, yet in their lives deny
and reject him. See the miserable state of hypocrites, such as have
a form of godliness, but are without the power; yet let us not be so
ready to fix this charge on others, as careful that it does not apply to
ourselves. |WHBC 1131.4
3080
This witness is true,.... The apostle confirms what the poet had said; he knew it to be fact from his own experience, and by the observation he had made when in the island: he does not say, that all that Epimenides had said, in the poem referred to, was true; but this character, which he had given of the Cretians, and which he cites, and uses to a good purpose; from whence it may be observed, that the writings of the Heathen poets may be read with profit, and be used to advantage, if carefully and prudently attended to; for what is truth, let it come from whom, or by what means it will, ought to be received.
Wherefore rebuke them sharply: not merely upon the testimony of the poet, but upon the confirmation of it by the apostle; and not because of these general and national characters, but because these things personally and particularly belonged to the persons before described; whom the apostle would have rebuked, both for their bad principles, teaching things that they ought not; and for their immoralities, their lying and deceit, their intemperance, luxury, and idleness, things very unbecoming the Christian name; and therefore since their offences were of an heinous nature, and they lived in them, and were hardened and obstinate, and were like to have a bad influence on others, they must be rebuked "sharply": rebukes ought to be given according to the nature of offences, and the circumstances of them, and the offenders; some are to be given privately, others publicly; some should be reproved with gentleness and meekness, and be used in a tender and compassionate way; others more roughly, though never in a wrathful and passionate manner, yet with some degree of severity, at least with great plainness and faithfulness; laying open the nature of the evils guilty of in all their aggravated circumstances, without sparing them in the least; doing, as surgeons do by wounds, though they take the knife, and use it gently, yet cut deep, to the quick, and go to the bottom of the wound, and lay it open: and so the phrase may be rendered here, "rebuke them cuttingly"; cut them to the quick, and spare them not; deal not with them as Eli with his sons,
Sa1 2:23
but speak out, and expose their crimes, severely reprove them, that others may fear: and
that they may be sound in the faith; that they may be recovered from their errors, to the acknowledgment of the truth; that they may receive the sound doctrine of faith, the wholesome words of Christ, and speak the things which become them, and use sound speech, which cannot be condemned; and that they may be turned from their evil practices, and appear to be sound, as in the doctrine, so in the grace of faith; or that that by their works may appear to be genuine, true, and unfeigned; and that they may be strong and robust, hale and healthful, and not weak and sickly in the profession of their faith. Rebukes being to persons infected with bad principles and practices, like physic to sickly constitutions, a means of removing the causes of disorder; and in rebukes, admonitions, and censures, this always ought to be the end proposed, the good of the persons rebuked, admonished, and censured.
False teachers are described. Faithful ministers must
oppose such in good time, that their folly being made manifest, they
may go no further They had a base end in what they did; serving a
worldly interest under pretence of religion: for the love of money is
the root of all evil.
See the miserable state of hypocrites, such as have
a form of godliness, but are without the power; yet let us not be so
ready to fix this charge on others, as careful that it does not apply to
ourselves. |WHBC 1131.4
3080
Sources: Matthew Henry; Matthew Henry Concise; Gill's Exposition
Commentary
Commentary