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Text -- 1 Timothy 1:6 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
1:6 Some have strayed from these and turned away to empty discussion.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Vanity | Strife | Minister | JANGLING | FORGO | Doctrines | ASIDE | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Robertson , Vincent , Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
, Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Barclay , Constable , College

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: 1Ti 1:6 - -- Having swerved ( astochēsantes ). First aorist active participle of astocheō , compound Koiné[28928]š verb (Polybius, Plutarch) from astochos...

Having swerved ( astochēsantes ).

First aorist active participle of astocheō , compound Koiné[28928]š verb (Polybius, Plutarch) from astochos (a privative and stochos , a mark), "having missed the mark."In N.T. only here, 1Ti 6:21; 2Ti 2:18. With the ablative case hōn (which).

Robertson: 1Ti 1:6 - -- Have turned aside ( exetrapēsan ). Second aorist passive indicative of ektrepō , old and common verb, to turn or twist out or aside. In medical s...

Have turned aside ( exetrapēsan ).

Second aorist passive indicative of ektrepō , old and common verb, to turn or twist out or aside. In medical sense in Heb 12:13. As metaphor in 1Ti 1:6; 1Ti 6:20; 2Ti 4:4.

Robertson: 1Ti 1:6 - -- Vain talking ( mataiologian ). Late word from mataiologos , only here in N.T., in the literary Koiné.

Vain talking ( mataiologian ).

Late word from mataiologos , only here in N.T., in the literary Koiné.

Vincent: 1Ti 1:6 - -- Having swerved ( ἀστοχήσαντες ) Pasto . In lxx, Sir. 7:19; 8:9. It means to miss the mark .

Having swerved ( ἀστοχήσαντες )

Pasto . In lxx, Sir. 7:19; 8:9. It means to miss the mark .

Vincent: 1Ti 1:6 - -- Have turned aside ( ἐξετράπησαν ) o P. Comp. 1Ti 5:15; 1Ti 6:20; 2Ti 4:4; Heb 12:13.

Have turned aside ( ἐξετράπησαν )

o P. Comp. 1Ti 5:15; 1Ti 6:20; 2Ti 4:4; Heb 12:13.

Vincent: 1Ti 1:6 - -- Vain jangling ( ματαιολογίαν ) N.T.o . o lxx. o Class. The word illustrates the writer's fondness for unusual compounds. Jangling ...

Vain jangling ( ματαιολογίαν )

N.T.o . o lxx. o Class. The word illustrates the writer's fondness for unusual compounds. Jangling is an early English word from the old French jangler , comp. jongleur a teller of tales . Hence jangling is empty chatter . So Chaucer,

" Them that jangle of love."

Troil . and Cress ii . 800 .

And Piers Ploughman,

" And al day to drynken

At diverse tavernes

And there to jangle and jape."

Vision , Pass . ii . 1069 .

Shakespeare,

" This their jangling I esteem a sport."

Mids . Night's D . iii . 2 .

Wiclif, Exo 17:7 (earlier version), uses jangling for wrangling . " And he clepide the name of the place Temptynge for the jangling of the sons of Israel."

Wesley: 1Ti 1:6 - -- Love and a good conscience.

Love and a good conscience.

Wesley: 1Ti 1:6 - -- An affectation of high and extensive knowledge sets a man at the greatest distance from faith, and all sense of divine things.

An affectation of high and extensive knowledge sets a man at the greatest distance from faith, and all sense of divine things.

Wesley: 1Ti 1:6 - -- And of all vanities, none are more vain than dry, empty disputes on the things of God.

And of all vanities, none are more vain than dry, empty disputes on the things of God.

JFB: 1Ti 1:6 - -- Namely, from a pure heart, good conscience, and faith unfeigned, the well-spring of love.

Namely, from a pure heart, good conscience, and faith unfeigned, the well-spring of love.

JFB: 1Ti 1:6 - -- Literally, "having missed the mark (the 'end') to be aimed at." It is translated, "erred," 1Ti 6:21; 2Ti 2:18. Instead of aiming at and attaining the ...

Literally, "having missed the mark (the 'end') to be aimed at." It is translated, "erred," 1Ti 6:21; 2Ti 2:18. Instead of aiming at and attaining the graces above named, they "have turned aside (1Ti 5:15; 2Ti 4:4; Heb 12:13) unto vain jangling"; literally, "vain talk," about the law and genealogies of angels (1Ti 1:7; Tit 3:9; Tit 1:10); 1Ti 6:20, "vain babblings and oppositions." It is the greatest vanity when divine things are not truthfully discussed (Rom 1:21) [BENGEL].

Clarke: 1Ti 1:6 - -- From which some having swerved - From which some, though they have pretended to aim at the τελος, scope, or mark, have missed that mark. This ...

From which some having swerved - From which some, though they have pretended to aim at the τελος, scope, or mark, have missed that mark. This is the import of the original word αστοχησαντες

Clarke: 1Ti 1:6 - -- Turned aside unto vain jangling - The original term, ματαιολογιαν, signifies empty or vain talking; discourses that turn to no profit; ...

Turned aside unto vain jangling - The original term, ματαιολογιαν, signifies empty or vain talking; discourses that turn to no profit; a great many words and little sense; and that sense not worth the pains of hearing. Such, indeed, is all preaching where Jesus Christ is not held forth.

Calvin: 1Ti 1:6 - -- 6.From which some having gone astray He continues to pursue the metaphor of an object or end; for the verbἀστοχεῖν, the participle of whic...

6.From which some having gone astray He continues to pursue the metaphor of an object or end; for the verbἀστοχεῖν, the participle of which is here given, signifies to err or go aside from a mark. 12

Have turned aside to idle talking This is a remarkable passage, in which he condemns for “idle talking” 13 all the doctrines which do not aim at this single end, and at the same time points out that the views and thoughts of all who aim at any other object vanish away. It is, indeed, possible that useless trifles may be regarded by many persons with admiration; but the statement of Paul remains unshaken, that everything that does not edify in godliness isματαιολογία, 14 “idle talking.” We ought; therefore to take the greatest possible care not to seek anything in the holy and sacred word of God but solid edification, lest otherwise he inflict on us severe punishment for abusing it.

TSK: 1Ti 1:6 - -- From which some having swerved : or, Which some not aiming at, 1Ti 6:21; 2Ti 2:18 *Gr: 1Ti 4:10 turned : 1Ti 5:15, 1Ti 6:4, 1Ti 6:5, 1Ti 6:20; 2Ti 2:2...

From which some having swerved : or, Which some not aiming at, 1Ti 6:21; 2Ti 2:18 *Gr: 1Ti 4:10

turned : 1Ti 5:15, 1Ti 6:4, 1Ti 6:5, 1Ti 6:20; 2Ti 2:23, 2Ti 2:24; Tit 1:10, Tit 3:9

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: 1Ti 1:6 - -- From which some having swerved - Margin, "not aiming at."The word here used - ἀστοχέω astocheō - means properly, to miss the...

From which some having swerved - Margin, "not aiming at."The word here used - ἀστοχέω astocheō - means properly, to miss the mark; to err; and then, to swerve from compare 1Ti 6:21; 2Ti 2:18. It does not mean that they had ever had that from which they are said to have swerved - for it does not follow that a man who misses a mark had ever hit it - but merely that they failed of the things referred to, and had turned to vain talk. The word "which" ὧν hōn , in the plural, refers not to the law, but to the things enumerated - a pure heart, a good conscience, and unfeigned faith.

Have turned aside unto vain jangling - Vain talk, empty declamation, discourses without sense. The word here used does not mean contention or strife, but that kind of discourse which is not founded in good sense. They were discourses on their pretended distinctions in the law; on their traditions and ceremonies; on their useless genealogies, and on the fabulous statements which they had appended to the law of Moses.

Poole: 1Ti 1:5-6 - -- Ver. 5,6 Now the end of the commandment is charity: the word translated commandment here is paraggelia , which rather signifies a particular charg...

Ver. 5,6 Now the end of the commandment is charity: the word translated commandment here is paraggelia , which rather signifies a particular charge given by superiors as to some thing, than a general law, Act 5:28 16:24 ; and so in this chapter, 1Ti 1:18 ; which inclineth me to think, that though the proposition be true of the whole law of God, (for love is the fulfilling of the law ), and more eminently of the Divine doctrine in the gospel, for the end and perfection it aims at and produces is a pure, ardent love of God, and of men for his sake, and of the gospel, yet it is rather here to be restrained to the commandment relating to preaching, or discoursing the revealed will of God relating to men’ s salvation, the end of which is doubtless charity, which ought to be finis operantis, the end of the workman, what he ought to intend and aim at; and is finis operis, the effect of the work, viz. the begetting in the souls of people love to God and their neighbour, neither of which can rationally be obtained by preachers telling people idle stories, and filling their heads with idle questions and speculations.

Out of a pure heart: which love to God and men must proceed from a clean, and holy, and sincere heart.

And of a good conscience and a good and holy life, when conscience doth not sourly reflect upon men for presumptuous miscarriages.

And of faith unfeigned which must all be rooted in and attended with a faith unfeigned; rooted in it, as faith signifies a steady assent to Divine revelation; attended with it, as it signifies the soul’ s repose and rest upon Christ for the fulfilling of the promises annexed to him that believes and liveth up to such propositions. These are the noble ends of the whole law of God, and particularly of the charge or command God hath given ministers as to preaching, which can by no means be attained by teachers’ discoursing fables and endless genealogies to people, nor by people’ s attendance to such discourses, for they can only fill people’ s heads with notions and unprofitable questions, which serve to gender strife and contention amongst people, instead of love either to God or men, and so to defile instead of purifying the heart, and have no influence at all upon a holy life, all which can grow out of no root but an unfeigned faith.

From which from which things (for the article is plural, wn ); from which commandment, and from the end of which commandment, from which pure heart, good conscience, and faith unfeigned.

Some having swerved: astochsantev , the word signifies to wander from a scope or mark. Some men either propounding to themselves ends in their discourses to people different from the command concerning preaching, and the true end of that, or at least wandering from that true end, they have turned aside. To do an action well, two things are necessary:

1. The propounding to ourselves a right end;

2. A moving to it by due means and in right order: whoso faileth in either of these, can no more do an action well, than he can shoot an arrow well, that either eyeth no mark, or levelleth his arrow quite beside it.

The preachers reflected on by the apostle, either never considered the true end of preaching, or never regarded it in their action; this made them turn aside from theology to mataeology, from preaching to vain jangling; so we translate it, but the word signifieth foolish talking; so we translate the adjective: Tit 1:10 , and so the word properly signifieth, any kind of foolish, impertinent discourse, either serving to no good end, or at least not that which the discourse pretendeth to. And indeed all discourses of fables, and unprofitable, idle questions, tending not to edifying, is no better than foolish talking.

Gill: 1Ti 1:6 - -- From which some having swerved,.... The apostle, in this verse and the next, describes the persons he suspected of teaching other doctrines, and of in...

From which some having swerved,.... The apostle, in this verse and the next, describes the persons he suspected of teaching other doctrines, and of introducing fables and endless genealogies; they were such who departed from the above things; they erred from the commandment, or law, notwithstanding their great pretensions to a regard unto it; at least they missed the mark, the end and design of it; they went astray from that, and instead of promoting charity or love, created feuds, contentions, and divisions in the churches; and were far from having a pure heart, being filthy dreamers, and sensual persons, destitute of the Spirit of God, and were such who put away a good conscience, and made shipwreck of faith: such were Hymenaeus, Philetus, Alexander, and others, of whom he also says, they

have turned aside to vain jangling; which he elsewhere calls empty talk, and vain babblings, 1Ti 6:20, from the solid doctrines of the Gospel, and a solid way of handling them, they turned to vain, idle, useless, and unprofitable subjects of discourse, and to treating upon subjects in a vain, jejune, and empty manner; entertaining their hearers with foolish and trifling questions and answers to them about the law, and with strifes about words, which were unserviceable and unedifying; they were unruly and vain talkers, Tit 1:10.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

Geneva Bible: 1Ti 1:6 ( 5 ) From which some having swerved have turned aside unto vain jangling; ( 5 ) That which he spoke before generally of vain and curious controversi...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: 1Ti 1:1-20 - --1 Timothy is put in mind of the charge which was given unto him by Paul at his going to Macedonia.5 Of the right use and end of the law.11 Of Saint Pa...

MHCC: 1Ti 1:5-11 - --Whatever tends to weaken love to God, or love to the brethren, tends to defeat the end of the commandment. The design of the gospel is answered, when ...

Matthew Henry: 1Ti 1:5-11 - -- Here the apostle instructs Timothy how to guard against the judaizing teachers, or others who mingled fables and endless genealogies with the gospel...

Barclay: 1Ti 1:3-7 - --It is clear that at the back of the Pastoral Epistles there is some heresy which is endangering the Church. Right at the beginning it will be well to...

Barclay: 1Ti 1:3-7 - --But this danger came with an even greater threat from the Greek side. At this time in history there was developing a Greek line of thought which came...

Barclay: 1Ti 1:3-7 - --The danger of Gnosticism was not only intellectual. It had serious moral and ethical consequences. We must remember that its basic belief was that m...

Barclay: 1Ti 1:3-7 - --In this passage there is a clear picture of the mind of the dangerous heretic. There is a kind of heresy in which a man differs from orthodox belief ...

Barclay: 1Ti 1:3-7 - --As this passage draws the picture of the thinker who disturbs the Church, it also draws the picture of the really Christian thinker. He, too, has ...

Constable: 1Ti 1:3-20 - --II. TIMOTHY'S MISSION IN EPHESUS 1:3-20 In chapter 1 Paul charged Timothy to remain faithful to the task with wh...

Constable: 1Ti 1:3-11 - --A. The task Timothy faced 1:3-11 Paul penned these opening words to remind Timothy to correct teachers in the Ephesian church who were majoring on min...

College: 1Ti 1:1-20 - --1 TIMOTHY 1 I. THE SALUTATION (1:1-2) 1 Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus by the command of God our Savior and of Christ Jesus our hope, 2 To Timothy...

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Introduction / Outline

Robertson: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) First Timothy Probably a.d. 65 From Macedonia By Way of Introduction Assuming the Pauline authorship the facts shape up after this fashion. Pau...

JFB: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) GENUINENESS.--The ancient Church never doubted of their being canonical and written by Paul. They are in the Peschito Syriac version of the second cen...

JFB: 1 Timothy (Outline) ADDRESS: PAUL'S DESIGN IN HAVING LEFT TIMOTHY AT EPHESUS, NAMELY, TO CHECK FALSE TEACHERS; TRUE USE OF THE LAW; HARMONIZING WITH THE GOSPEL; GOD'S GR...

TSK: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) This Epistle bears the impress of its genuineness and authenticity, which are corroborated by the most decisive external evidence; and its Divine insp...

TSK: 1 Timothy 1 (Chapter Introduction) Overview 1Ti 1:1, Timothy is put in mind of the charge which was given unto him by Paul at his going to Macedonia; 1Ti 1:5, Of the right use and e...

Poole: 1 Timothy 1 (Chapter Introduction) ARGUMENT Timothy is thought to have been a native of Lystra in Lycaonia, Act 16:1 . His mother, Eunice, was a Jewess, Act 16:1 ; a believer, 2Ti 1:...

MHCC: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) The design of the epistle appears to be, that Timothy having been left at Ephesus, St. Paul wrote to instruct him in the choice of proper officers in ...

MHCC: 1 Timothy 1 (Chapter Introduction) (1Ti 1:1-4) The apostle salutes Timothy. (1Ti 1:5-11) The design of the law as given by Moses. (1Ti 1:12-17) Of his own conversion and call to the a...

Matthew Henry: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The First Epistle of St. Paul to Timothy Hitherto Paul's epistles were directed to churches; now follow...

Matthew Henry: 1 Timothy 1 (Chapter Introduction) After the inscription (1Ti 1:1, 1Ti 1:2) we have, I. The charge given to Timothy (1Ti 1:3, 1Ti 1:4). II. The true end of the law (1Ti 1:5-11), wh...

Barclay: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) A GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO THE LETTERS OF PAUL The Letters Of Paul There is no more interesting body of documents in the New Testament than the letter...

Barclay: 1 Timothy 1 (Chapter Introduction) The Royal Command (1Ti_1:1-2) The Hope Of The World (1Ti_1:1-2 Continued) Timothy, My Son (1Ti_1:1-2 Continued) Grace, Mercy And Peace (1Ti_1...

Constable: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical background Timothy apparently became a Christian as a result o...

Constable: 1 Timothy (Outline) Outline I. Salutation 1:1-2 II. Timothy's mission in Ephesus 1:3-20 A. T...

Constable: 1 Timothy 1 Timothy Bibliography Andrews, J. N. "May Women Speak in Meeting?" Review and Herald. January 2, 1879. Reprint...

Haydock: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) THE FIRST EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL, THE APOSTLE, TO TIMOTHY. INTRODUCTION. St. Paul passing through Lycaonia, about the year 51, some of the brethr...

Gill: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 1 TIMOTHY Timothy, to whom this epistle is written, was eminent for his early piety and acquaintance with the sacred Scriptures; hi...

Gill: 1 Timothy 1 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO 1 TIMOTHY 1 In this chapter, after the inscription and salutation, the apostle having entreated Timothy to abide at Ephesus, observ...

College: 1 Timothy (Book Introduction) FOREWORD A movement which prides itself in its back-to-the-Bible underpinnings and its plea for unity should welcome any effort of the stature of the...

College: 1 Timothy (Outline) OUTLINE I. THE SALUTATION - 1:1-2 II. PAUL'S CHARGE TO TIMOTHY - 1:3-20 A. The Charge and the False Teachers - 1:3-7 B. The Lawful Use of...

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