collapse all  

Text -- Titus 1:10-16 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
1:10 For there are many rebellious people, idle talkers, and deceivers, especially those with Jewish connections, 1:11 who must be silenced because they mislead whole families by teaching for dishonest gain what ought not to be taught. 1:12 A certain one of them, in fact, one of their own prophets, said, “Cretans are always liars, evil beasts, lazy gluttons.” 1:13 Such testimony is true. For this reason rebuke them sharply that they may be healthy in the faith 1:14 and not pay attention to Jewish myths and commands of people who reject the truth. 1:15 All is pure to those who are pure. But to those who are corrupt and unbelieving, nothing is pure, but both their minds and consciences are corrupted. 1:16 They profess to know God but with their deeds they deny him, since they are detestable, disobedient, and unfit for any good deed.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Cretans the inhabitants of Crete.
 · Jewish the people descended from Israel


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Titus, Epistle to | TEXT AND MANUSCRIPTS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT | Quotations | PAPYRUS | Numbers, Book of | Minister | Luke, Gospel according to | JUDE, THE EPISTLE OF | JEW, JEWESS, JEWISH | GNOSTICISM | GLUTTON; GLUTTONOUS | FILTH; FILTHINESS; FILTHY | FAITHLESS | FABLE | Doctrines | DEFILE; DEFILEMENT | Commandments | CASTAWAY | BEAST | ASHAMED | more
Table of Contents

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

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

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

Other
Critics Ask , Evidence

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Robertson: Tit 1:10 - -- Vain talkers ( mataiologoi ). Late and rare compound, empty talkers, in Vett. Val. and here. See note on 1Ti 1:6 for mataiologia .

Vain talkers ( mataiologoi ).

Late and rare compound, empty talkers, in Vett. Val. and here. See note on 1Ti 1:6 for mataiologia .

Robertson: Tit 1:10 - -- Deceivers ( phrenapatai ). Late and rare compound, in papyri, eccl. writers, here alone in N.T. "Mind-deceivers."See note on Gal 6:3 for phrenapatā...

Deceivers ( phrenapatai ).

Late and rare compound, in papyri, eccl. writers, here alone in N.T. "Mind-deceivers."See note on Gal 6:3 for phrenapatāin .

Robertson: Tit 1:10 - -- Specially they of the circumcision ( malista hoi ek tēs peritomēs ). Same phrase in Act 11:2; Gal 2:12; Col 4:11. Jews are mentioned in Crete in ...

Specially they of the circumcision ( malista hoi ek tēs peritomēs ).

Same phrase in Act 11:2; Gal 2:12; Col 4:11. Jews are mentioned in Crete in Act 2:11. Apparently Jewish Christians of the Pharisaic type tinged with Gnosticism.

Robertson: Tit 1:11 - -- Whose mouths must be stopped ( hous dei epistomizein ). Literally, "whom it is necessary to silence by stopping the mouth."Present active infinitive ...

Whose mouths must be stopped ( hous dei epistomizein ).

Literally, "whom it is necessary to silence by stopping the mouth."Present active infinitive epistomizein , old and common verb (epi , stoma , mouth), here only in N.T. To stop the mouth either with bridle or muzzle or gag.

Robertson: Tit 1:11 - -- Overthrow ( anatrepousin ). Old and common verb, to turn up, to overturn. In N.T. only here and 2Ti 2:18. In papyri to upset a family by perversion o...

Overthrow ( anatrepousin ).

Old and common verb, to turn up, to overturn. In N.T. only here and 2Ti 2:18. In papyri to upset a family by perversion of one member.

Robertson: Tit 1:11 - -- Things which they ought not ( ha mē dei ). Note subjective negative mē with indefinite relative and indicative mode.

Things which they ought not ( ha mē dei ).

Note subjective negative mē with indefinite relative and indicative mode.

Robertson: Tit 1:11 - -- For filthy lucre’ s sake ( aischrou kerdous charin ). The Cretans are given a bad reputation for itinerating prophets for profit by Polybius, Li...

For filthy lucre’ s sake ( aischrou kerdous charin ).

The Cretans are given a bad reputation for itinerating prophets for profit by Polybius, Livy, Plutarch. Paul’ s warnings in 1Ti 3:3, 1Ti 3:8; 1Ti 6:5 reveal it as "a besetting temptation of the professional teacher"(Parry). See Tit 1:7 above. Disgraceful gain, made in shameful ways.

Robertson: Tit 1:12 - -- A prophet of their own ( idios autōn prophētēs ). "Their own prophet."Self-styled "prophet"(or poet), and so accepted by the Cretans and by Cic...

A prophet of their own ( idios autōn prophētēs ).

"Their own prophet."Self-styled "prophet"(or poet), and so accepted by the Cretans and by Cicero and Apuleius, that is Epimenides who was born in Crete at Cnossos. It is a hexameter line and Callimachus quoted the first part of it in a Hymn to Zeus. It is said that Epimenides suggested to the Athenians the erection of statues to "unknown gods"(Act 17:23).

Robertson: Tit 1:12 - -- Liars ( pseustai ). See note on 1Ti 1:10 for the word. The Cretans had a bad reputation on this line, partly due to their claim to having the tomb of...

Liars ( pseustai ).

See note on 1Ti 1:10 for the word. The Cretans had a bad reputation on this line, partly due to their claim to having the tomb of Zeus.

Robertson: Tit 1:12 - -- Evil beasts ( kaka thēria ). "Wicked wild beasts."Lock asks if the Minotaur was partly responsible.

Evil beasts ( kaka thēria ).

"Wicked wild beasts."Lock asks if the Minotaur was partly responsible.

Robertson: Tit 1:12 - -- Idle gluttons ( gasteres argai ). "Idle bellies."Blunt and forceful. See note on Phi 3:19 "whose god is the belly"(hē koilia ). Both words give th...

Idle gluttons ( gasteres argai ).

"Idle bellies."Blunt and forceful. See note on Phi 3:19 "whose god is the belly"(hē koilia ). Both words give the picture of the sensual gormandizer.

Robertson: Tit 1:13 - -- Testimony ( marturia ). Of the poet Epimenides. Paul endorses it from his recent knowledge.

Testimony ( marturia ).

Of the poet Epimenides. Paul endorses it from his recent knowledge.

Robertson: Tit 1:13 - -- Sharply ( apotomōs ). Old adverb from apotomos (from apotemnō , to cut off), in N.T. only here and 2Co 13:10, "curtly,""abruptly."It is necessa...

Sharply ( apotomōs ).

Old adverb from apotomos (from apotemnō , to cut off), in N.T. only here and 2Co 13:10, "curtly,""abruptly."It is necessary to appear rude sometimes for safety, if the house is on fire and life is in danger.

Robertson: Tit 1:13 - -- That they may be sound ( hina hugiainōsin ). Final clause with hina and present active subjunctive of hugiainō , for which verb see note on 1Ti...

That they may be sound ( hina hugiainōsin ).

Final clause with hina and present active subjunctive of hugiainō , for which verb see note on 1Ti 1:10.

Robertson: Tit 1:14 - -- See note on 1Ti 1:4 for prosechō and muthois , only here we have Jewish (Ioudaikois ) added. Perhaps a reference to the oral traditions condemn...

See note on 1Ti 1:4 for prosechō and muthois , only here we have Jewish (Ioudaikois ) added. Perhaps a reference to the oral traditions condemned by Christ in Mar 7:2-8. See also Col 2:22, apparently Pharisaic type of Gnostics. @@Who turn away from the truth ( apostrephomenōn ).

Present middle (direct) participle of apostrephō , "men turning themselves away from the truth"(accusative according to regular idiom). "The truth"(1Ti 4:3) is the gospel (Eph 4:21).

Robertson: Tit 1:15 - -- To them that are defiled ( tois memiammenois ). Perfect passive articular participle of miainō , old verb, to dye with another colour, to stain, in...

To them that are defiled ( tois memiammenois ).

Perfect passive articular participle of miainō , old verb, to dye with another colour, to stain, in N.T. only here, Jud 1:8; Heb 12:15. See memiantai (perf. pass. indic.) in this verse. Molunō (1Co 8:7) is to smear.

Robertson: Tit 1:15 - -- Unbelieving ( apistois ). As in 1Co 7:12.; 1Ti 5:8. The principle or proverb just quoted appears also in 1Co 6:12; 1Co 10:23; Rom 14:20. For the defi...

Unbelieving ( apistois ).

As in 1Co 7:12.; 1Ti 5:8. The principle or proverb just quoted appears also in 1Co 6:12; 1Co 10:23; Rom 14:20. For the defilement of mind (nous ) and conscience (suneidēsis ) in both Gentile and Jew by sin, see Romans 1:18-2:29.

Robertson: Tit 1:16 - -- They profess ( homologousin ). Present active indicative of homologeō , common verb (homou , legō ) as in Rom 10:10. Eidenai (know) is second...

They profess ( homologousin ).

Present active indicative of homologeō , common verb (homou , legō ) as in Rom 10:10. Eidenai (know) is second perfect active infinitive of oida in indirect assertion.

Robertson: Tit 1:16 - -- By their works ( tois ergois ). Instrumental case.

By their works ( tois ergois ).

Instrumental case.

Robertson: Tit 1:16 - -- They deny ( arnountai ). Present middle of arneomai , old verb, common in the Gospels and the Pastoral Epistles (1Ti 5:8; Tit 2:12; 2Ti 2:12).

They deny ( arnountai ).

Present middle of arneomai , old verb, common in the Gospels and the Pastoral Epistles (1Ti 5:8; Tit 2:12; 2Ti 2:12).

Robertson: Tit 1:16 - -- Abominable ( bdeluktoi ). Verbal adjective from bdelussomai . Only in lxx and here.

Abominable ( bdeluktoi ).

Verbal adjective from bdelussomai . Only in lxx and here.

Robertson: Tit 1:16 - -- Disobedient ( apeitheis ). See note on Rom 1:30.

Disobedient ( apeitheis ).

See note on Rom 1:30.

Robertson: Tit 1:16 - -- Reprobate ( adokimoi ). See note on 1Co 9:27; Rom 1:28.

Reprobate ( adokimoi ).

See note on 1Co 9:27; Rom 1:28.

Vincent: Tit 1:10 - -- Vain talkers ( ματαιολόγοι ) N.T.o . o lxx, o Class. See on vain jangling , 1Ti 1:6.

Vain talkers ( ματαιολόγοι )

N.T.o . o lxx, o Class. See on vain jangling , 1Ti 1:6.

Vincent: Tit 1:10 - -- Deceivers ( φρεναπάται ) N.T.o . o lxx, o Class. See on φρεναπατᾶν to deceive , Gal 6:3.

Deceivers ( φρεναπάται )

N.T.o . o lxx, o Class. See on φρεναπατᾶν to deceive , Gal 6:3.

Vincent: Tit 1:10 - -- They of the circumcision ( οἱ ἐκ τῆς περιτομῆς ) The phrase only here in Pastorals. Ὁι ἐκ περιτομῆς A...

They of the circumcision ( οἱ ἐκ τῆς περιτομῆς )

The phrase only here in Pastorals. Ὁι ἐκ περιτομῆς Act 10:45; Act 11:2; Rom 4:12; Gal 2:12; Col 4:11. There can be no doubt of the presence of Jews in Crete. Tacitus ( Hist . v. 2) even makes the absurd statement that the Jews were Cretan exiles; and that from their residence in the vicinity of the Cretan Mount Ida they were called Idaei , whence Judaei . There appears to have been some confusion between the Palestinians and the Philistines - the Cherethim or Cherethites , who, in Eze 25:16; Zep 2:5 are called in lxx Κρῆτες Jews were in the island in considerable numbers between the death of Alexander and the final destruction of Jerusalem. In 1 Macc. 15:23 the Cretan city of Gortyna is mentioned among the places to which letters were written by Lucius, the Roman consul, on behalf of the Jews when Simon Maccabaeus renewed the treaty which his brother Judas had made with Rome. Josephus ( Ant . 17:12, 1; Bell . Jud . 2:7, 1) says that Herod's pseudo-son Alexander imposed on the Cretan Jews on his way to Italy. Philo ( Leg . ad Cai . § 36) makes the Jewish envoys say to Caligula that all the principal islands of the Mediterranean, including Crete, were full of Jews.

Vincent: Tit 1:11 - -- Whose mouths must be stopped ( οὓς δεὶ ἐπιστομίζειν ) Lit. whom it is necessary to silence . Ἑπιστ...

Whose mouths must be stopped ( οὓς δεὶ ἐπιστομίζειν )

Lit. whom it is necessary to silence . Ἑπιστομίζειν , N.T.o . o lxx. Originally, to put something into the mouth , as a bit into a horse's mouth. Ἑπιστόμιον is the stop of a water-pipe or of a hydraulic organ. Comp. φιμοῦν 1Ti 5:18.

Vincent: Tit 1:11 - -- Who subvert ( οἵτινες ἀνατρέπουσιν ) The double relative is explanatory of must ; in as much as they , etc. ...

Who subvert ( οἵτινες ἀνατρέπουσιν )

The double relative is explanatory of must ; in as much as they , etc. For subvert rend. overthrow . See on 2Ti 2:18.

Vincent: Tit 1:11 - -- Houses ( οἴκους ) Families.

Houses ( οἴκους )

Families.

Vincent: Tit 1:12 - -- One of themselves ( τις ἐξ αὐτῶν ) Ἁυτῶν refers to the gainsayers , Tit 1:9, Tit 1:10. Τις refers to Epimenides,...

One of themselves ( τις ἐξ αὐτῶν )

Ἁυτῶν refers to the gainsayers , Tit 1:9, Tit 1:10. Τις refers to Epimenides, contemporary with Solon, and born in Crete b.c. 659. A legend relates that, going by his father's order in search of a sheep, he lay down in a cave, where he fell asleep and slept for fifty years. He then appeared with long hair and a flowing beard, and with an astonishing knowledge of medicine and natural history. It was said that he had the power of sending his soul out of his body and recalling it at pleasure, and that he had familiar intercourse with the gods and possessed the power of prophecy. He was sent for to Athens at the request of the inhabitants, in order to pave the way for the legislation of Solon by purifications and propitiatory sacrifices, intended to allay the feuds and party discussions which prevailed in the city. In return for his services he refused the Athenians' offers of wealth and public honors, and asked only a branch of the sacred olive, and a decree of perpetual friendship between Athens and his native city. He is said to have lived to the age of 157 years, and divine honors were paid him by the Cretans after his death. He composed a Theogony, and poems concerning religious mysteries. He wrote also a poem on the Argonautic Expedition, and other works. Jerome mentions his treatise On Oracles and Responses , from which the quotation in this verse is supposed to have been taken. According to Diogenes Laertius (i. 10) Epimenides, in order to remove a pestilence from Athens, turned some sheep loose at the Areopagus, and wherever they lay down sacrificed to the proper God: whence, he says, there are still to be found, in different demes of the Athenians, anonymous altars. Comp. Act 17:22, Act 17:23.

Vincent: Tit 1:12 - -- The Cretans, etc. The words Κρῆτες - ἀργαί form a hexameter line.

The Cretans, etc.

The words Κρῆτες - ἀργαί form a hexameter line.

Vincent: Tit 1:12 - -- Always ( ἀεὶ ) Habitually.

Always ( ἀεὶ )

Habitually.

Vincent: Tit 1:12 - -- Liars ( ψεῦσται ) In Pastorals here and 1Ti 1:10. Once in Paul, Rom 3:4. Mostly in John. The Cretan habit of lying passed into a verb, ...

Liars ( ψεῦσται )

In Pastorals here and 1Ti 1:10. Once in Paul, Rom 3:4. Mostly in John. The Cretan habit of lying passed into a verb, κρητίζειν to speak like a Cretan = to lie: also into a noun, κρητισμός Cretan behavior = lying . Similarly, the licentiousness of Corinth appeared in the verb κορινθιάζεσθαι to practice whoredom , and in the noun κορινθιαστής a whoremonger . Comp. Ov. Artis Amat . i. 296.

" non hoc, centum quae sustinet urbes

Quamvis sit mendax, Creta negare potest."

" Crete, which a hundred cities doth maintain,

Cannot deny this, though to lying given."

A familiar saying was τρία κάππα κάκιστα the three worst K's , Κρῆτες, Καππάδοκαι, Κίλικες Cretans , Cappadocians , Cilicians .

Vincent: Tit 1:12 - -- Evil beasts ( κακὰ θηρία ) Rude, cruel, and brutal.

Evil beasts ( κακὰ θηρία )

Rude, cruel, and brutal.

Vincent: Tit 1:12 - -- Slow-bellies ( γαστέρες ἀργαί ) Better, idle - bellies . Rev. gives the correct idea, idle gluttons . They are so given to...

Slow-bellies ( γαστέρες ἀργαί )

Better, idle - bellies . Rev. gives the correct idea, idle gluttons . They are so given to gluttony that they are mere bellies . Comp. Phi 3:19. Γαστὴρ , elsewhere in N.T. always in connection with childbearing. So mostly in lxx, but in a few instances as here. See Job 20:23; Psa 17:14; Sir. 37:5. In Job 20:14 as the rendering of ÷ֶøֶá , bowels . Ἁργός idle , o P. However such words may have befitted the pagan seer, it is not pleasant to regard them as taken up and endorsed by the great Christian apostle, who thus is made to stigmatise as liars, beasts, and gluttons a whole people, among whom he had himself so successfully labored that several churches had been founded in a short time. They are strange words from a venerable Christian minister to a younger minister to whom he had intrusted the care of those very souls; and, in any case, are superfluous, as addressed to one who must have known the characteristics of the Cretans quite as well as the writer himself.

Vincent: Tit 1:13 - -- Sharply ( ἀποτόμως ) Only here and 2Co 13:10 (note). Paul has ἀποτομία severity , Rom 11:22 (note). lxx, ἀποτό...

Sharply ( ἀποτόμως )

Only here and 2Co 13:10 (note). Paul has ἀποτομία severity , Rom 11:22 (note). lxx, ἀποτόμως severely , only Wisd. 5:22; ἀποτόμος severe (not in N.T.), Wisd. 5:20; 11:10; 12:9. From ἀποτέμνειν to cut off . It signifies abrupt , harsh , summary dealing.

Vincent: Tit 1:14 - -- Not giving heed ( μὴ προσέχοντες ) Reprove sharply, that they may be sound in the faith, and may show their soundness by not giv...

Not giving heed ( μὴ προσέχοντες )

Reprove sharply, that they may be sound in the faith, and may show their soundness by not giving heed, etc. See on 1Ti 1:4.

Vincent: Tit 1:14 - -- To Jewish fables ( Ἱουδαΐκοῖς μύθοις ) See on 1Ti 1:4. Note Jewish . The nature of these we do not know.

To Jewish fables ( Ἱουδαΐκοῖς μύθοις )

See on 1Ti 1:4. Note Jewish . The nature of these we do not know.

Vincent: Tit 1:14 - -- Commandments of men ( ἐντολαῖς ἀνθρώπων ) See on 1Ti 6:14. Comp. Col 2:22. Prescriptions concerning abstinence from meats...

Commandments of men ( ἐντολαῖς ἀνθρώπων )

See on 1Ti 6:14. Comp. Col 2:22. Prescriptions concerning abstinence from meats, marriage, etc. The men are probably those of the circumcision , Tit 1:10. What they teach theoretically, by means of the myths , they bring to bear practically, by means of their precepts .

Vincent: Tit 1:14 - -- That turn from the truth ( ἀποστρεφομένων τὴν ἀλήθειαν ) Comp. 2Ti 4:4, where the truth and fables appea...

That turn from the truth ( ἀποστρεφομένων τὴν ἀλήθειαν )

Comp. 2Ti 4:4, where the truth and fables appear in contrast.

Vincent: Tit 1:15 - -- Unto the pure ( τοῖς καθαροῖς ) The pure in heart and conscience. See 2Ti 1:3.

Unto the pure ( τοῖς καθαροῖς )

The pure in heart and conscience. See 2Ti 1:3.

Vincent: Tit 1:15 - -- All things are pure Comp. 1Ti 4:4, 1Ti 4:5; Act 10:15; Mar 7:15, Mar 7:18, Mar 7:19; 1Co 10:26, 1Co 10:30; Rom 14:20. The aphorism is suggested b...

All things are pure

Comp. 1Ti 4:4, 1Ti 4:5; Act 10:15; Mar 7:15, Mar 7:18, Mar 7:19; 1Co 10:26, 1Co 10:30; Rom 14:20. The aphorism is suggested by the commandments of men , Tit 1:14.

Vincent: Tit 1:15 - -- Unto them that are defiled ( τοῖς μεμιαμμένοις ) Only here in Pastorals. See also Joh 18:28 (note); Heb 12:15; Jud 1:8. Only ...

Unto them that are defiled ( τοῖς μεμιαμμένοις )

Only here in Pastorals. See also Joh 18:28 (note); Heb 12:15; Jud 1:8. Only in Joh 18:28 in a ceremonial sense. Elsewhere of moral pollution.

Vincent: Tit 1:15 - -- Nothing is pure Their moral pollution taints everything with its own quality. The purest things become suggestors and ministers of impurity.

Nothing is pure

Their moral pollution taints everything with its own quality. The purest things become suggestors and ministers of impurity.

Vincent: Tit 1:15 - -- Mind and conscience ( ὁ νοῦς καὶ ἡ συνείδησις ) For νοῦς see on Rom 7:23 : for συνείδησις , see o...

Mind and conscience ( ὁ νοῦς καὶ ἡ συνείδησις )

For νοῦς see on Rom 7:23 : for συνείδησις , see on 1Pe 3:16.

Vincent: Tit 1:16 - -- They profess ( ὁμολογοῦσιν ) Better, confess . See on 2Co 9:13, and comp. 1Ti 6:12. Not loudly and publicly profess (as H...

They profess ( ὁμολογοῦσιν )

Better, confess . See on 2Co 9:13, and comp. 1Ti 6:12. Not loudly and publicly profess (as Huther), but confess as opposed to deny (Joh 1:20); comp. Heb 11:13; Rom 10:9, Rom 10:10.

Vincent: Tit 1:16 - -- Abominable ( βδελυκτοὶ ) N.T.o . Class. lxx, Pro 17:15; Sir. 41:5; 2 Macc. 1:27. See on βδέλυγμα abomination , Mat 24:15, a...

Abominable ( βδελυκτοὶ )

N.T.o . Class. lxx, Pro 17:15; Sir. 41:5; 2 Macc. 1:27. See on βδέλυγμα abomination , Mat 24:15, and comp. Rev 17:4, Rev 17:5; Rev 21:27. The kindred verb, βδελύσσεσθαι abhor , Rom 2:22; Rev 21:8.

Vincent: Tit 1:16 - -- Reprobate ( ἀδόκιμοι ) See on Rom 1:28; see on 1Co 9:27, and comp. 2Ti 3:8. The phrase reprobate unto every good work , N.T....

Reprobate ( ἀδόκιμοι )

See on Rom 1:28; see on 1Co 9:27, and comp. 2Ti 3:8. The phrase reprobate unto every good work , N.T.o .

Wesley: Tit 1:10 - -- The Jewish converts.

The Jewish converts.

Wesley: Tit 1:11 - -- The word properly means, to put a bit into the mouth of an unruly horse.

The word properly means, to put a bit into the mouth of an unruly horse.

Wesley: Tit 1:12 - -- So all poets were anciently called; but, besides, Diogenes Laertius says that Epimenides, the Cretan poet, foretold many things.

So all poets were anciently called; but, besides, Diogenes Laertius says that Epimenides, the Cretan poet, foretold many things.

Wesley: Tit 1:12 - -- Fierce and savage.

Fierce and savage.

Wesley: Tit 1:14 - -- The Jewish or other teachers, whoever they were that turned from the truth.

The Jewish or other teachers, whoever they were that turned from the truth.

Wesley: Tit 1:15 - -- Those whose hearts are purified by faith this we allow.

Those whose hearts are purified by faith this we allow.

Wesley: Tit 1:15 - -- All kinds of meat; the Mosaic distinction between clean and unclean meats being now taken away.

All kinds of meat; the Mosaic distinction between clean and unclean meats being now taken away.

Wesley: Tit 1:15 - -- The apostle joins defiled and unbelieving, to intimate that nothing can be clean without a true faith: for both the understanding and conscience, thos...

The apostle joins defiled and unbelieving, to intimate that nothing can be clean without a true faith: for both the understanding and conscience, those leading powers of the soul, are polluted; consequently, so is the man and all he does.

JFB: Tit 1:10 - -- "insubordinate."

"insubordinate."

JFB: Tit 1:10 - -- Omitted in the oldest manuscripts. "There are many unruly persons, vain talkers, and deceivers"; "unruly" being predicated of both vain talkers and de...

Omitted in the oldest manuscripts. "There are many unruly persons, vain talkers, and deceivers"; "unruly" being predicated of both vain talkers and deceivers.

JFB: Tit 1:10 - -- Opposed to "holding fast the faithful word" (Tit 1:9). "Vain jangling" (1Ti 1:6); "foolish questions, unprofitable and vain" (Tit 3:9). The source of ...

Opposed to "holding fast the faithful word" (Tit 1:9). "Vain jangling" (1Ti 1:6); "foolish questions, unprofitable and vain" (Tit 3:9). The source of the evil was corrupted Judaism (Tit 1:14). Many Jews were then living in Crete, according to JOSEPHUS; so the Jewish leaven remained in some of them after conversion.

JFB: Tit 1:10 - -- Literally, "deceivers of the minds of others" (Greek, Gal 6:3).

Literally, "deceivers of the minds of others" (Greek, Gal 6:3).

JFB: Tit 1:11 - -- Literally, "muzzled," "bridled" as an unruly beast (compare Psa 32:9).

Literally, "muzzled," "bridled" as an unruly beast (compare Psa 32:9).

JFB: Tit 1:11 - -- Greek, "(seeing that they are) such men as"; or "inasmuch as they" [ELLICOTT].

Greek, "(seeing that they are) such men as"; or "inasmuch as they" [ELLICOTT].

JFB: Tit 1:11 - -- "overthrowing" their "faith" (2Ti 2:18). "They are the devil's levers by which he subverts the houses of God" [THEOPHYLACT].

"overthrowing" their "faith" (2Ti 2:18). "They are the devil's levers by which he subverts the houses of God" [THEOPHYLACT].

JFB: Tit 1:11 - -- (1Ti 3:3, 1Ti 3:8; 1Ti 6:5).

JFB: Tit 1:12 - -- Epimenides of Phæstus, or Gnossus, in Crete, about 600. He was sent for to purify Athens from its pollution occasioned by Cylon. He was regarded as a...

Epimenides of Phæstus, or Gnossus, in Crete, about 600. He was sent for to purify Athens from its pollution occasioned by Cylon. He was regarded as a diviner and prophet. The words here are taken probably from his treatise "concerning oracles." Paul also quotes from two other heathen writers, ARATUS (Act 17:28) and MENANDER (1Co 15:33), but he does not honor them so far as even to mention their names.

JFB: Tit 1:12 - -- Which enhances his authority as a witness. "To Cretanize" was proverbial for to lie: as "to Corinthianize" was for to be dissolute.

Which enhances his authority as a witness. "To Cretanize" was proverbial for to lie: as "to Corinthianize" was for to be dissolute.

JFB: Tit 1:12 - -- Not merely at times, as every natural man is. Contrast Tit 1:2, "God that cannot lie." They love "fables" (Tit 1:14); even the heathen poets laughed a...

Not merely at times, as every natural man is. Contrast Tit 1:2, "God that cannot lie." They love "fables" (Tit 1:14); even the heathen poets laughed at their lying assertion that they had in their country the sepulchre of Jupiter.

JFB: Tit 1:12 - -- Rude, savage, cunning, greedy. Crete was a country without wild beasts. Epimenides' sarcasm was that its human inhabitants supplied the place of wild ...

Rude, savage, cunning, greedy. Crete was a country without wild beasts. Epimenides' sarcasm was that its human inhabitants supplied the place of wild beasts.

JFB: Tit 1:12 - -- Indolent through pampering their bellies. They themselves are called "bellies," for that is the member for which they live (Rom 16:18; Phi 3:19).

Indolent through pampering their bellies. They themselves are called "bellies," for that is the member for which they live (Rom 16:18; Phi 3:19).

JFB: Tit 1:13 - -- "This testimony (though coming from a Cretan) is true."

"This testimony (though coming from a Cretan) is true."

JFB: Tit 1:13 - -- Gentleness would not reclaim so perverse offenders.

Gentleness would not reclaim so perverse offenders.

JFB: Tit 1:13 - -- That those seduced by the false teachers may be brought back to soundness in the faith. Their malady is strifes about words and questions (Tit 3:9; 1T...

That those seduced by the false teachers may be brought back to soundness in the faith. Their malady is strifes about words and questions (Tit 3:9; 1Ti 6:4).

JFB: Tit 1:14 - -- (See on 1Ti 1:4; 1Ti 4:7; 2Ti 4:4). These formed the transition stage to subsequent Gnosticism; as yet the error was but profitless, and not tending t...

(See on 1Ti 1:4; 1Ti 4:7; 2Ti 4:4). These formed the transition stage to subsequent Gnosticism; as yet the error was but profitless, and not tending to godliness, rather than openly opposed to the faith.

JFB: Tit 1:14 - -- As to ascetic abstinence (Tit 1:15; Mar 7:7-9; Col 2:16, Col 2:20-23; 1Ti 4:3).

As to ascetic abstinence (Tit 1:15; Mar 7:7-9; Col 2:16, Col 2:20-23; 1Ti 4:3).

JFB: Tit 1:14 - -- Whose characteristic is that they turn away from the truth (2Ti 4:4).

Whose characteristic is that they turn away from the truth (2Ti 4:4).

JFB: Tit 1:15 - -- External, "are pure" in themselves; the distinction of pure and impure is not in the things, but in the disposition of him who uses them; in oppositio...

External, "are pure" in themselves; the distinction of pure and impure is not in the things, but in the disposition of him who uses them; in opposition to "the commandments of men" (Tit 1:14), which forbade certain things as if impure intrinsically. "To the pure" inwardly, that is, those purified in heart by faith (Act 15:9; Rom 14:20; 1Ti 4:3), all outward things are pure; all are open to, their use. Sin alone touches and defiles the soul (Mat 23:26; Luk 11:41).

JFB: Tit 1:15 - -- Either within or without (Rom 14:23).

Either within or without (Rom 14:23).

JFB: Tit 1:15 - -- Their mental sense and intelligence.

Their mental sense and intelligence.

JFB: Tit 1:15 - -- Their moral consciousness of the conformity or discrepancy between their motives and acts on the one hand, and God's law on the other. A conscience an...

Their moral consciousness of the conformity or discrepancy between their motives and acts on the one hand, and God's law on the other. A conscience and a mind defiled are represented as the source of the errors opposed in the Pastoral Epistles (1Ti 1:19; 1Ti 3:9; 1Ti 6:5).

JFB: Tit 1:16 - -- That is, make a profession acknowledging God. He does not deny their theoretical knowledge of God, but that they practically know Him.

That is, make a profession acknowledging God. He does not deny their theoretical knowledge of God, but that they practically know Him.

JFB: Tit 1:16 - -- The opposite of the previous "profess" or "confess" Him (1Ti 5:8; 2Ti 2:12; 2Ti 3:5).

The opposite of the previous "profess" or "confess" Him (1Ti 5:8; 2Ti 2:12; 2Ti 3:5).

JFB: Tit 1:16 - -- Themselves, though laying so much stress on the contracting of abomination from outward things (compare Lev 11:10-13; Rom 2:22).

Themselves, though laying so much stress on the contracting of abomination from outward things (compare Lev 11:10-13; Rom 2:22).

JFB: Tit 1:16 - -- To God (Tit 3:3; Eph 2:2; Eph 5:6).

To God (Tit 3:3; Eph 2:2; Eph 5:6).

JFB: Tit 1:16 - -- Rejected as worthless when tested (see on Rom 1:28; 1Co 9:27; 2Ti 3:8).

Rejected as worthless when tested (see on Rom 1:28; 1Co 9:27; 2Ti 3:8).

Clarke: Tit 1:10 - -- There are many unruly - Persons who will not receive the sound doctrine, nor come under wholesome discipline

There are many unruly - Persons who will not receive the sound doctrine, nor come under wholesome discipline

Clarke: Tit 1:10 - -- Vain talkers - Empty boasters of knowledge, rights, and particular privileges; all noise, empty parade, and no work

Vain talkers - Empty boasters of knowledge, rights, and particular privileges; all noise, empty parade, and no work

Clarke: Tit 1:10 - -- Deceivers - Of the souls of men by their specious pretensions

Deceivers - Of the souls of men by their specious pretensions

Clarke: Tit 1:10 - -- They of the circumcision - The Judaizing teachers, who maintained the necessity of circumcision, and of observing the rites and ceremonies of the Mo...

They of the circumcision - The Judaizing teachers, who maintained the necessity of circumcision, and of observing the rites and ceremonies of the Mosaic law, in order to the perfecting of the Gospel.

Clarke: Tit 1:11 - -- Whose mouths must be stopped - Unmask them at once; exhibit them to the people; make manifest their ignorance and hypocrisy; and let them be confoun...

Whose mouths must be stopped - Unmask them at once; exhibit them to the people; make manifest their ignorance and hypocrisy; and let them be confounded before the people whom they are endeavoring to seduce

Clarke: Tit 1:11 - -- Subvert whole houses - Turn whole Christian families from the faith, attributing to the broad way what belongs only to the strait gate; ministering ...

Subvert whole houses - Turn whole Christian families from the faith, attributing to the broad way what belongs only to the strait gate; ministering to disorderly passions, and promising salvation to their proselytes, though not saved from their sins.

Clarke: Tit 1:12 - -- One of themselves, even a prophet of their own - This was Epimenides, who was born at Gnossus, in Crete, and was reckoned by many the seventh wise m...

One of themselves, even a prophet of their own - This was Epimenides, who was born at Gnossus, in Crete, and was reckoned by many the seventh wise man of Greece, instead of Periander, to whom that honor was by them denied. Many fabulous things are related of this poet, which are not proper to be noticed here. He died about 538 years before the Christian era. When St. Paul calls him a prophet of their own, he only intimates that he was, by the Cretans, reputed a prophet. And, according to Plutarch, (in Solone), the Cretans paid him divine honors after his death. Diogenes Laertius mentions some of his prophecies: beholding the fort of Munichia, which guarded the port of Athens, he cried out: "O ignorant men! if they but knew what slaughters this fort shall occasion, they would pull it down with their teeth!"This prophecy was fulfilled several years after, when the king, Antipater, put a garrison in this very fort, to keep the Athenians in subjection. See Diog. Laert., lib. i. p. 73

Plato, De Legibus, lib. ii., says that, on the Athenians expressing great fear of the Persians, Epimenides encouraged them by saying "that they should not come before ten years, and that they should return after having suffered great disasters."This prediction was supposed to have been fulfilled in the defeat of the Persians in the battles of Salamis and Marathon

He predicted to the Lacedemonians and Cretans the captivity to which they should one day be reduced by the Arcadians. This took place under Euricrates, king of Crete, and Archidamus, king of Lacedemon; vide Diog. Laert., lib. i. p. 74, edit. Meibom

It was in consequence of these prophecies, whether true or false, that his countrymen esteemed him a prophet; that he was termed ανηρ αθειος, a divine man, by Plato; and that Cicero, De Divin., lib. i., says he was futura praesciens, et vaticinans per furorem : "He knew future events, and prophesied under a divine influence."These things are sufficient to justify the epithet of prophet, given him here by St. Paul. It may also be remarked that vates and poeta , prophet and poet, were synonymous terms among the Romans

Clarke: Tit 1:12 - -- The Cretians are always liars - The words quoted here by the apostle are, according to St. Jerome, Socrates, Nicephorus, and others, taken from a wo...

The Cretians are always liars - The words quoted here by the apostle are, according to St. Jerome, Socrates, Nicephorus, and others, taken from a work of Epimenides, now no longer extant, entitled Περι χρησμων· Concerning Oracles. The words form a hexameter verse: -

Κρητες αει ψευσται, κακα θηρια, γαστερες αργαι.

The Cretans are always liars; destructive wild beasts; sluggish gluttons

That the Cretans were reputed to be egregious liars, several of the ancients declare; insomuch that Κρητιζειν, to act like a Cretan, signifies to lie; and χρησθαι Κρητισμῳ, to deceive. The other Greeks reputed them liars, because they said that among them was the sepulchre of Jupiter, who was the highest object of the Greek and Roman worship. By telling this truth, which all others would have to pass for a lie, the Cretans showed that the object of their highest admiration was only a dead man

Clarke: Tit 1:12 - -- Evil beasts - Ferocious and destructive in their manners

Evil beasts - Ferocious and destructive in their manners

Clarke: Tit 1:12 - -- Slow bellies - Addicted to voluptuousness, idleness, and gluttony; sluggish or hoggish men.

Slow bellies - Addicted to voluptuousness, idleness, and gluttony; sluggish or hoggish men.

Clarke: Tit 1:13 - -- This witness is true - What Epimenides said of them nearly 600 years before continued still to be true. Their original character had undergone no mo...

This witness is true - What Epimenides said of them nearly 600 years before continued still to be true. Their original character had undergone no moral change

Clarke: Tit 1:13 - -- Rebuke them sharply - Αποτομως· Cuttingly, severely; show no indulgence to persons guilty of such crimes

Rebuke them sharply - Αποτομως· Cuttingly, severely; show no indulgence to persons guilty of such crimes

Clarke: Tit 1:13 - -- That they may be sound in the faith - That they may receive the incorrupt doctrine, and illustrate it by a holy and useful life.

That they may be sound in the faith - That they may receive the incorrupt doctrine, and illustrate it by a holy and useful life.

Clarke: Tit 1:14 - -- Not giving heed to Jewish fables - See on 1Ti 1:4 (note); 1Ti 4:7 (note)

Not giving heed to Jewish fables - See on 1Ti 1:4 (note); 1Ti 4:7 (note)

Clarke: Tit 1:14 - -- Commandments of men - The injunctions of the scribes and Pharisees, which they added to the law of God

Commandments of men - The injunctions of the scribes and Pharisees, which they added to the law of God

Clarke: Tit 1:14 - -- That turn from the truth - For such persons made the word of God of none effect by their traditions. Sometimes the verb αποστρεφομαι s...

That turn from the truth - For such persons made the word of God of none effect by their traditions. Sometimes the verb αποστρεφομαι signifies to be averse from, slight, or despise. So, here, the persons in question despised the truth, and taught others to do the same.

Clarke: Tit 1:15 - -- Unto the pure all things are pure - This appears to have been spoken in reference to the Jewish distinctions of clean and unclean meats. To the genu...

Unto the pure all things are pure - This appears to have been spoken in reference to the Jewish distinctions of clean and unclean meats. To the genuine Christian every kind of meat proper for human nourishment is pure, is lawful, and may be used without scruple. This our Lord had long before decided. See on Luk 11:39-41 (note)

Clarke: Tit 1:15 - -- But unto them that are defiled - In their consciences, and unbelieving, απιστοις, unfaithful both to offered and received grace, nothing is...

But unto them that are defiled - In their consciences, and unbelieving, απιστοις, unfaithful both to offered and received grace, nothing is pure - they have no part in Christ, and the wrath of God abides upon them. Their mind is contaminated with impure and unholy images and ideas, and their conscience is defiled with the guilt of sins already committed against God.

Clarke: Tit 1:16 - -- They profess that they know God - He still speaks concerning the unbelieving Jews, the seducing teachers, and those who had been seduced by their ba...

They profess that they know God - He still speaks concerning the unbelieving Jews, the seducing teachers, and those who had been seduced by their bad doctrine. None were so full of pretensions to the knowledge of the true God as the Jews. They would not admit that any other people could have this knowledge; nor did they believe that God ever did or ever would reveal himself to any other people; they supposed that to give the law and the prophets to the Gentiles would be a profanation of the words of God. Hence they became both proud, uncharitable, and intolerant; and in this disposition they continue till the present day

Clarke: Tit 1:16 - -- But in works they deny him - Their profession and practice were at continual variance. Full of a pretended faith, while utterly destitute of those w...

But in works they deny him - Their profession and practice were at continual variance. Full of a pretended faith, while utterly destitute of those works by which a genuine faith is accredited and proved. Dio Cassius represents Caesar as saying of his mutinous soldiers: Ονομα Ῥωμαιων εχοντας, εργα δε Κελτων δρωντας . "Having the name of Romans, while they had the manners of the Gauls."How near are those words to the saying of the apostle

Clarke: Tit 1:16 - -- Being abominable - Βδελυκτοι . This word sometimes refers to unnatural lusts

Being abominable - Βδελυκτοι . This word sometimes refers to unnatural lusts

Clarke: Tit 1:16 - -- And disobedient - Απειθεις· Unpersuadable, unbelieving, and consequently disobedient. Characters remarkably applicable to the Jews throug...

And disobedient - Απειθεις· Unpersuadable, unbelieving, and consequently disobedient. Characters remarkably applicable to the Jews through all their generations

Clarke: Tit 1:16 - -- Unto every good work reprobate - Αδοκιμοι· Adulterate; like bad coin, deficient both in the weight and goodness of the metal, and without...

Unto every good work reprobate - Αδοκιμοι· Adulterate; like bad coin, deficient both in the weight and goodness of the metal, and without the proper sterling stamp; and consequently not current. If they did a good work, they did not do it in the spirit in which it should be performed. They had the name of God’ s people; but they were counterfeit. The prophet said; Reprobate silver shall men call them

1.    Though the principal part of this chapter, and indeed of the whole epistle, may be found in nearly the same words in the First Epistle to Timothy, yet there are several circumstances here that are not so particularly noted in the other; and every minister of Christ will do well to make himself master of both; they should be carefully registered in his memory, and engraven on his heart

2.    The truth, which is according to godliness, in reference to eternal life, should be carefully regarded. The substantial knowledge of the truth must have faith for its foundation, godliness for its rule, and eternal life for its object and end. He who does not begin well, is never likely to finish fair. He who does not refer every thing to eternity, is never likely to live either well or happily in time

3.    There is one subject in this chapter not sufficiently attended to by those who have the authority to appoint men to ecclesiastical offices; none should be thus appointed who is not able, by sound doctrine, both to exhort and convince the gainsayers. The powers necessary for this are partly natural, partly gracious, and partly acquired

1.    If a man have not good natural abilities, nothing but a miracle from heaven can make him a proper preacher of the Gospel; and to make a man a Christian minister, who is unqualified for any function of civil life, is sacrilege before God

2.    If the grace of God do not communicate ministerial qualifications, no natural gifts, however splendid, can be of any avail. To be a successful Christian minister, a man must feel the worth of immortal souls in such a way as God only can show it, in order to spend and be spent in the work. He who has never passed through the travail of the soul in the work of regeneration in his own heart, can never make plain the way of salvation to others

3.    He who is employed in the Christian ministry should cultivate his mind in the most diligent manner; he can neither learn nor know too much. If called of God to be a preacher, (and without such a call he had better be a galley slave), he will be able to bring all his knowledge to the assistance and success of his ministry. If he have human learning, so much the better; if he be accredited, and appointed by those who have authority in the Church, it will be to his advantage; but no human learning, no ecclesiastical appointment, no mode of ordination, whether Popish, Episcopal, Protestant, or Presbyterian, can ever supply the Divine unction, without which he never can convert and build up the souls of men. The piety of the flock must be faint and languishing when it is not animated by the heavenly zeal of the pastor; they must be blind if he be not enlightened; and their faith must be wavering when he can neither encourage nor defend it

4.    In consequence of the appointment of improper persons to the Christian ministry, there has been, not only a decay of piety, but also a corruption of religion. No man is a true Christian minister who has not grace, gifts, and fruit; if he have the grace of God, it will appear in his holy life and godly conversation. If to this he add genuine abilities, he will give full proof of his ministry; and if he give full proof of his ministry, he will have fruit; the souls of sinners will be converted to God through his preaching, and believers will be built up on their most holy faith. How contemptible must that man appear in the eyes of common sense, who boasts of his clerical education, his sacerdotal order, his legitimate authority to preach, administer the Christian sacraments, etc., while no soul is benefited by his ministry! Such a person may have legal authority to take tithes, but as to an appointment from God, he has none; else his word would be with power, and his preaching the means of salvation to his perishing hearers.

Calvin: Tit 1:10 - -- 10.For there are === many unruly. 224 After having laid down a general rule, which ought to be everywhere observed, in order that Titus may be more ...

10.For there are === many unruly. 224 After having laid down a general rule, which ought to be everywhere observed, in order that Titus may be more attentive to adhere to it, he holds out to him the urgent necessity which ought to excite him more than all things else. He warns him that he has to deal with many obstinate and incorrigible persons, that many are puffed up with vanity and idle talk, that many are deceivers; and that therefore they ought to choose, on the other hand, such leaders as are qualified and well prepared to oppose them. For, if the children of this world, when dangers arise, increase their solicitude and watchfulness, it would be disgraceful for us, when Satan is using his utmost efforts to remain careless and inactive, as if we were in a state of peace.

===Unruly Instead of ( inobedientes) disobedient, which is the rendering in the old translation forἀνυπότακτοι Erasmus translates it ( intractabiles) incorrigible. He means those who cannot endure to be brought to obey, and who throw off the yoke of subjection. He gives the appellation of vain talkers, 225 not only to the authors of false doctrines, but to those who, addicted to ambitious display, occupy themselves with nothing but useless subtleties. Ματαιολογία 226 (vain talking) is contrasted with useful and solid doctrine, and therefore includes all trivial and frivolous speculations, which contain nothing but empty bombast, because they contribute nothing to piety and the fear of God. And such is all the scholastic theology that is found, in the present day, in Popery. Yet he calls the same persons deceivers of minds. It may be thought preferable to view this as relating to a different class of persons; but, for my own part, I think that it means the same class; for the teachers of such trifles entice and fascinate the minds of men, so as no longer to receive sound doctrine.

Chiefly they who are of the circumcision He says that they are chiefly of the Jews; for it is highly requisite that such plagues shall be known by all. We ought not to listen to those who plead that we should spare the reputation of this or that individual, when the matter in question is the great danger of the whole Church. And so much the greater danger was to be apprehended from that nation, because it claimed superiority above others on account of the sacredness of its lineage. This is therefore the reason why Paul reproves the Jews more sharply, in order to take from them the power of doing injury.

Calvin: Tit 1:11 - -- 11.Whose mouth must be stopped A good pastor ought therefore to be on the watch, so as not to give silent permission to wicked and dangerous doctrine...

11.Whose mouth must be stopped A good pastor ought therefore to be on the watch, so as not to give silent permission to wicked and dangerous doctrines to make gradual progress, or to allow wicked men an opportunity of spreading them. But it may be asked, “How is it possible for a bishop to constrain obstinate and self-willed men to be silent? For such persons, even though they are vanquished in argument, still do not hold their peace; and it frequently happens that, the more manifestly they are refuted and vanquished, they become the more insolent; for not only is their malice strengthened and inflamed, but they give themselves up to indolence.” I reply, when they have been smitten down by the sword of God’s word, and overwhelmed by the force of the truth, the Church may command them to be silent; and if they persevere, they may at least be banished from the society of believers, so that they shall have no opportunity of doing harm. 227 Yet by “shutting the mouth” Paul simply means — “to refute their vain talking,” even though they should not cease to make a noise; for he who is convicted by the word of God, however he may chatter, has nothing to say.

Who overturn whole houses If the faith of one individual were in danger of being overturned, (for we are speaking of the perdition of a single soul redeemed by the blood of Christ) the pastor should immediately gird himself for the combat; how much less tolerable is it to see whole houses overturned?

Teaching things which they ought not The manner in which they were overturned is described in these words. Hence we may infer how dangerous it is to make even the smallest departure from sound doctrine; for he does not say that the doctrines, by which they overturned the faith of many, were openly wicked; but we may understand by this designation every kind of corruptions, when there is a turning aside from the desire of edification. Thus it is in reality, that, amidst so great weakness of the flesh, we are exceedingly prone to fall; and hence it arises, that Satan easily and speedily destroys, by his ministers, what godly teachers had reared with great and long-continued toil.

He next points out the source of the evil, a desire of dishonest gain; by which he reminds us how destructive a plague avarice is in teachers; for, as soon as they give themselves up to the pursuit of gain, they must labor to obtain the favor and countenance of men. This is quickly followed by the corruption of pure doctrine.

Calvin: Tit 1:12 - -- 12.One of themselves, a prophet of their own I have no doubt that he who is here spoken of is Epimenides, who was a native of Crete; for, when the Ap...

12.One of themselves, a prophet of their own I have no doubt that he who is here spoken of is Epimenides, who was a native of Crete; for, when the Apostle says that this author was “one of themselves,” and was “a prophet of their own,” he undoubtedly means that he belonged to the nation of the Cretans. Why he calls him a Prophet--is doubtful. Some think that the reason is, that the book from which Paul borrowed this passage bears the titleΠερὶ Χρησμῶν “concerning oracles.” Others are of opinion that Paul speaks ironically, by saying that they have such a Prophet — a Prophet worthy of a nation which refuses to listen to the servants of God. But as poets are sometimes called by the Greeks (προφὢται) “prophets,” and as the Latin authors call them Vates , I consider it to denote simply a teacher. The reason why they were so called appears to have been, that they were always reckoned to be (γένος θεῖον καὶ ἐνθουσιαστικόν) a divine race and moved by divine inspiration.” Thus also Adimantus, in the Second Book of Plato’s treatiseΠερὶ Πολιτείας after having called the poets υἵους Θεῶν “sons of the gods,” adds, that they also became their prophets. For this reason I think that Paul accommodates his style to the ordinary practice. Nor is it of any importance to inquire on what occasion Epimenides calls his countrymen liars, namely, because they boast of having the sepulcher of Jupiter; but seeing that the poet takes it from an ancient and well-known report, the Apostle quotes it as a proverbial saying. 228

From this passage we may infer that those persons are superstitious, who do not venture to borrow anything from heathen authors. All truth is from God; and consequently, if wicked men have said anything that is true and just, we ought not to reject it; for it has come from God. Besides, all things are of God; and, therefore, why should it not be lawful to dedicate to his glory everything that can properly be employed for such a purpose? But on this subject the reader may consult Basil’s discourse 229πρὸς τοὺς νέους, ὅπως ἂν ἐξ ἑλλ κ.τ.λ

Calvin: Tit 1:13 - -- 13.This testimony is true 230 How worthiness soever the witness may have been, 231 yet the truth which has been spoken by him is acknowledged by Paul...

13.This testimony is true 230 How worthiness soever the witness may have been, 231 yet the truth which has been spoken by him is acknowledged by Paul. The inhabitants of Crete, of whom he speaks with such sharpness were undoubtedly very wicked. The Apostle, who is wont to reprove mildly those who deserved to be treated with extreme severity, would never have spoken so harshly of the Cretans, if he had not been moved by very strong reasons. What term more reproachful than these opprobrious epithets can be imagined; that they were “lazy, devoted to the belly, destitute of truth, evil beasts?” Nor are these vices charged against one or a few persons, but he condemns the whole nation.

It was truly a wonderful purpose of God, that he called a nation so depraved, and so infamous on account of its vices, to be among the first who should partake of the gospel; but his goodness is not less worthy of admiration, in having bestowed heavenly grace on those who did not even deserve to live in this world. 232 In that country so corrupt, as if in the midst of hell, the Church of Christ held a position, and did not cease to be extended, though it was infected by the corruption of the evils which prevailed there; for here Paul not only reproves those who were strangers to the faith, but expressly reproves those who had made a profession of Christianity. Perceiving that these vices so hateful have already taken root, and are spreading far and wide, he does not spare the reputation of the whole nation, that he may attempt the care of those whom there was some hope of healing.

Wherefore rebuke them sharply Of that circumspection and prudence with which a bishop ought to be endowed, it is not the least part, that he regulate his manner of teaching by the dispositions and conduct of men. We must not deal with obstinate and unruly persons in the same manner as with those who are meek and teachable; for, in instructing the latter, we ought to use such mildness as is suitable to their teachable disposition, while the stubbornness of the former must be severely corrected, and (as the saying is) for a bad knot there must be a bad wedge. 233 The reason why Titus ought to be more sharp and severe in rebuking them has been already stated, namely, that they are “evil beasts.”

That they may be sound in the faith Whether the “soundness” or “healthfulness” is here contrasted with the diseases which he has mentioned, or whether he simply commands them to remain in the sound faith, is uncertain. I prefer the latter view. As they already are exceedingly vicious, and may easily be corrupted more and more, he wishes them to be more closely and strictly kept within the pure faith. 234

Calvin: Tit 1:14 - -- 14.And may not listen to Jewish fables He now shews in what “sound faith” consists — when it is not corrupted by any “fables.” But in guard...

14.And may not listen to Jewish fables He now shews in what “sound faith” consists — when it is not corrupted by any “fables.” But in guarding against the danger he prescribes this remedy — not to give ear to them; for God wishes us to be so attentive to his word, that there shall be no entrance for trifles. And, indeed, when the truth of God has once gained admission all that can be brought against it will be so tasteless, that it will not attract our minds. If, therefore, we wish to preserve the faith uncontaminated, let us learn carefully to restrain our senses, so that they may not give themselves up to strange contrivances; for, as soon as any person shall begin to listen to fables, he will lose the purity of faith.

All trivial inventions he calls “fables,” or, as we would say, “trifles;” for what he immediately adds, about “the commandments of men,” has the same meaning. And he calls those men enemies of the truth who, not satisfied with the pure doctrine of Christ, mix up with them their own fooleries; for all that men of themselves contrive ought to be accounted “fabulous.”

He attributes this vice chiefly to the Jews, because, under the presence of the divine law, they introduced superstitious ceremonies. The Gentiles, being aware that they had been wretchedly deceived during their whole life, more easily renounced their former course of life; while the Jews, having been educated in the true religion, obstinately defended the ceremonies to which they had been accustomed, and could not be convinced that the Law had been abrogated. In this manner they disturbed all churches, because, as soon as the gospel began to make its appearance anywhere, they did not cease to corrupt its purity by mixing it with their leaven. Accordingly, Paul not only forbids them, in general terms, to degenerate from sound doctrine, but points out, as with the finger, the present evil which needed to be remedied, that they may be on their guard against it.

Calvin: Tit 1:15 - -- 15.To the pure all things indeed are pure He glances at one class of fabulous opinions; for the choice of the kinds of food, (such as was temporarily...

15.To the pure all things indeed are pure He glances at one class of fabulous opinions; for the choice of the kinds of food, (such as was temporarily enjoined by Moses,) together with purifications and washings, were insisted on as being still necessary, and they even made holiness to consist almost wholly in these minute observances. How dangerous to the Church this was, we have already explained. First, a snare of bondage was laid on the consciences; and next, ignorant persons, bound by this superstition, had a veil drawn over their eyes, which hindered them from advancing in the pure knowledge of Christ. If any of the Gentiles refused to submit to this yoke, because he had not been accustomed to it, the Jews vehemently contended for it, as if it had been the chief article of religions. Not without good reason, therefore, does Paul firmly oppose such corrupters of the gospel. In this passage, indeed, he not only refutes their error, but wittily laughs at their folly, in laboring anxiously, any advantage, about abstaining from certain kinds of food and things of that nature

In the first clause of this verse he upholds Christian liberty, by asserting, that to believers nothing is unclean; but at the same time he indirectly censures the false apostles who set no value on inward purity, which alone is esteemed by God. He therefore rebukes their ignorance, in not understanding that Christians are pure without the ceremonies enjoined by the Law; and next he chastises their hypocrisy, in disregarding uprightness of heart, and occupying themselves with useless exercises. But as the subject now in hand is not the health of the body, but peace of conscience, he means nothing else than that the distinction of the kinds of food, which was in force under the Law, has now been abolished. For the same reason it is evident, that they do wrong, who impose religious scruples on consciences in this matter; for this is not a doctrine intended for a single age, but an eternal oracle of the Holy Spirit, which cannot lawfully be set aside by any new law.

Accordingly, this must be true till the end of the world, that there is no kind of food which is unlawful in the sight of God; and, therefore, this passage is fitly and appropriately quoted in opposition to the tyrannical law of the Pope, which forbids the eating of flesh on certain days. And yet I am not unacquainted with the sophistical arguments which they employ. They affirm, that they do not forbid the eating of flesh, because they allege that it is unclean, (for they acknowledge that all kinds of food are in themselves clean and pure,) but that abstinence from flesh is enjoined on another ground, that it has a tendency to tame the lust of the flesh; as if the Lord had forbidden to eat swine’s flesh, because he judged swine to be unclean. Even under the Law the fathers reckoned that everything which God created is in itself pure and clean; but they held that they were unclean for this reason, that the use of them was unlawful, because God had forbidden it. All things are, therefore, pronounced by the Apostle to be pure, with no other meaning than that the use of all things is free, as regards the conscience. Thus, if any law binds the consciences to any necessity of abstaining from certain kinds of food, it wickedly takes away from believers that liberty which God had given them.

But to the polluted and unbelieving nothing is pure This is the second clause, in which he ridicules the vain and useless precautions of such instructors. He says that they gain nothing by guarding against uncleanness in certain kinds of food, because they cannot touch anything that is clean to them. Why so? Because they are “polluted,” and, therefore, by their only touching those things which were otherwise pure, they become “polluted.”

To the “polluted” he adds the “unbelieving,” 235 not as being a different class of persons; but the addition is made for the sake of explanation. Because there is no purity in the sight of God but that of faith, it follows that all unbelievers are unclean. By no laws or rules, therefore, will they obtain that cleanness which they desire to have; because, being themselves “polluted,” they will find nothing in the world that is clean to them. 236

But their mind and conscience are polluted He shows the fountain from which flows all the filth which is spread over the whole life of man; for, unless the heart be well purified, although men consider works to have great splendor, and a sweet smell, yet with God they will excite disgust by their abominable smell and by their filthiness.

“The Lord looketh on the heart,” (1Sa 16:7,)

and

“his eyes are on the truth.” (Jer 5:3.)

Whence it arises, that those things which are lofty before men are abomination before God.

The mind denotes the understanding, and the conscience relates rather to the affections of the heart. But here two things ought to be observed; first, that man is esteemed by God, not on account of outward works, but on account of the sincere desire of the heart; and, secondly, that the filth of infidelity is so great, that it pollutes not only the man, but everything that he touches. On this subject let the reader consult Hag 2:11. In like manner Paul teaches that

“all things are sanctified by the word,” (1Ti 4:5,)

because men use nothing in a pure manner till they receive it by faith from the hand of God.

Calvin: Tit 1:16 - -- 16.They profess that they know God He treats those persons as they deserve; for hypocrites, who give their whole attention to minute observances, des...

16.They profess that they know God He treats those persons as they deserve; for hypocrites, who give their whole attention to minute observances, despise fearlessly what constitutes the chief part of the Christian life. The consequence is, that they display their vanity, while contempt of God is manifested in open crimes. And this is what Paul means; that they who wish to be seen abstaining from one kind of food — indulge in wantonness and rebellion, as if they had shaken of the yoke; that their conduct is disgraceful and full of wickedness, and that not a spark of virtue is visible in their whole life.

For they are abominable, disobedient, and to every good work reprobate When he calls them, βδελυκτούς 237 abominable, he seems to allude to their pretended holiness, to which they gave their earnest attention. But Paul declares that they gain no advantage, for they do not cease to be profane and detestable. With good reason does he accuse them of disobedience; for nothing can be more haughty than hypocrites, who exert themselves so laboriously about ceremonies, in order that they may have it in their power to despise with impunity the chief requirements of the law. We may appropriately interpret the wordἀδόκιμοι reprobate in an active signification; as if he had said, that they who wish to be thought so sagacious instructors in trifles — are destitute of judgment and understanding as to good works.

Defender: Tit 1:10 - -- The inhabitants of Crete were generally belligerent and were of a wide variety of ethnic backgrounds, including many displaced Jews. This posed a grea...

The inhabitants of Crete were generally belligerent and were of a wide variety of ethnic backgrounds, including many displaced Jews. This posed a great challenge to those who would establish sound Christian churches there, and Paul wanted to counsel and help Titus in whatever way he could."

Defender: Tit 1:12 - -- Here, Paul is quoting a Cretian poet and reputed prophet by the name of Epeminides, who lived about 600 years before Christ. Paul confirmed that this ...

Here, Paul is quoting a Cretian poet and reputed prophet by the name of Epeminides, who lived about 600 years before Christ. Paul confirmed that this deplorable reputation was still valid in his day (Tit 1:13)."

Defender: Tit 1:14 - -- "Jewish fables" were an amalgamation of pagan myths and Jewish extra-Biblical traditions, superimposed on the Old Testament Scriptures. The "commandme...

"Jewish fables" were an amalgamation of pagan myths and Jewish extra-Biblical traditions, superimposed on the Old Testament Scriptures. The "commandments of men" were ascetic prohibitions and prescriptions that had no Biblical basis, although Pharisaical hypocrisy may have thought they did."

Defender: Tit 1:15 - -- "The plowing of the wicked, is sin," and even "the sacrifice of the wicked is abomination" (Pro 21:4, Pro 21:27)."

"The plowing of the wicked, is sin," and even "the sacrifice of the wicked is abomination" (Pro 21:4, Pro 21:27)."

TSK: Tit 1:10 - -- there : Act 20:29; Rom 16:17-18; 2Co 11:12-15; Eph 4:14; 2Th 2:10-12; 1Ti 1:4, 1Ti 1:6, 1Ti 6:3-5; 2Ti 3:13, 2Ti 4:4; Jam 1:26; 2Pe 2:1, 2Pe 2:2; 1Jo ...

TSK: Tit 1:11 - -- mouths : Tit 1:9, Tit 3:10; Psa 63:11, Psa 107:42; Eze 16:63; Luk 20:40; Rom 3:19; 2Co 11:10 subvert : Mat 23:14; 2Ti 3:6 filthy : Tit 1:7; Isa 56:10,...

TSK: Tit 1:12 - -- of : Act 17:28 liars : Rom 16:18; 1Ti 4:2; 2Pe 2:12, 2Pe 2:15; Jud 1:8-13

TSK: Tit 1:13 - -- rebuke : Tit 2:15; Pro 27:5; 2Co 13:10; 1Ti 5:20; 2Ti 4:2 that : Tit 2:2; Lev 19:17; Psa 119:80, Psa 141:5; 2Co 7:8-12; 1Ti 4:6

TSK: Tit 1:14 - -- Jewish : 1Ti 1:4-7; 2Ti 4:4 commandments : Isa 29:13; Mat 15:9; Mar 7:7; Col 2:22 turn : Gal 4:9; 2Ti 4:4; Heb 12:25; 2Pe 2:22

TSK: Tit 1:15 - -- the pure : Luk 11:39-41; Act 10:15; Rom 14:14, Rom 14:20; 1Co 6:12, 1Co 6:13, 1Co 10:23, 1Co 10:25, 1Co 10:31; 1Ti 4:3, 1Ti 4:4 but : Pro 21:4; Hag 2:...

TSK: Tit 1:16 - -- profess : Num 24:16; Isa 29:13, Isa 48:1, Isa 58:2; Eze 33:31; Hos 8:2, Hos 8:3; Rom 2:18-24; 2Ti 3:5-8; Jud 1:4 being : Job 15:16; Rev 21:8, Rev 21:2...

profess : Num 24:16; Isa 29:13, Isa 48:1, Isa 58:2; Eze 33:31; Hos 8:2, Hos 8:3; Rom 2:18-24; 2Ti 3:5-8; Jud 1:4

being : Job 15:16; Rev 21:8, Rev 21:27

and disobedient : 1Sa 15:22, 1Sa 15:24; Eph 5:6; 1Ti 1:9

unto : Jer 6:30; Rom 1:28; 2Ti 3:8

reprobate : or, void of judgment

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Tit 1:10 - -- For there are many unruly and vain talkers and deceivers - There are many persons who are indisposed to submit to authority (see the word unrul...

For there are many unruly and vain talkers and deceivers - There are many persons who are indisposed to submit to authority (see the word unruly in Tit 1:6); many who are vain talkers - who are more given to talk than to the duties of practical religion (see the character of "Talkative,"in the Pilgrim’ s Progress); and many who live to deceive others under the mask of religion. They make great pretensions to piety; they are fluent in argument, and they urge their views in a plausible manner.

Specially they of the circumcision - Jews, spoken of here as "of the circumcision"particularly, because they urged the necessity of circumcision in order that men might be saved; Notes, Act 15:1. This proves that there were not a few Jews in the island of Crete.

Barnes: Tit 1:11 - -- Whose mouths must be stopped - The word here rendered stopped - ἐπιστομιζειν epistomizein - occurs nowhere else in the New ...

Whose mouths must be stopped - The word here rendered stopped - ἐπιστομιζειν epistomizein - occurs nowhere else in the New Testament. It means, properly, to check, or curb, as with a bridle; to restrain, or bridle in; and then, to put to silence. It is, of course, implied here that this was to be done in a proper way, and in accordance with the spirit of the gospel. The apostle gives Timothy no civil power to do it, nor does he direct him to call in the aid of the civil arm. All the agency which he specifies as proper for this, is that of argument and exhortation. These are the proper means of silencing the advocates of error; and the history of the church shows that the ministers of religion can be safely entrusted with no other; compare Psa 32:8-9.

Who subvert whole houses - Whole families; compare Mat 23:14; 2Ti 3:6. That is, they turn them aside from the faith.

Teaching things which they ought not, for filthy lucre’ s sake - For gain. That is, they inculcate such doctrines as will make themselves popular, and as will give them access to the confidence of the people. They make it their first object to acquire influence as ministers of religion, and then abuse that in order to obtain money from the people. This they would doubtless do under many pretences; such as that it was needful for the support of the gospel, or for the relief of the poor, or perhaps for the assistance of distant Christians in persecution. Religion is the most powerful principle that ever governs the mind; and if a man has the control of that, it is no difficult thing to induce men to give up their worldly possessions. In all ages, there have been impostors who have taken advantage of the powerful principle of religion to obtain money from their deluded followers. No people can be too vigilant in regard to pretended religious teachers; and while it is undoubtedly their duty to contribute liberally for the support of the gospel, and the promotion of every good cause, it is no less their duty to examine with care every proposed object of benevolence, and to watch with an eagle eye those who have the disbursement of the charities of the church. It is very rare that ministers ought to have much to do with disposing of the funds given for benevolent purposes; and when they do, they should in all cases be associated with their lay brethren; see Paley’ s Horae Paulinae , chap. iv., No. 1, 3, note; compare 1Co 16:3. On the phrase "filthy lucre,"see the notes at 1Ti 3:3.

Barnes: Tit 1:12 - -- One of themselves - That is, one of the Cretans. The quotation here shows that Paul had his eye not only on the Jewish teachers there, but on t...

One of themselves - That is, one of the Cretans. The quotation here shows that Paul had his eye not only on the Jewish teachers there, but on the native Cretans. The meaning is, that, alike in reference to Jewish teachers and native-born Cretans, there was need of the utmost vigilance in the selection of persons for the ministry. They all had well-known traits of character, which made it proper that no one should be introduced into the ministry without extreme caution. It would seem, also, from the reasoning of Paul here, that the trait of character here referred to pertained not only to the native Cretans, but also to the character of the Jews residing there; for he evidently means that the caution should extend to all who dwelt on the island,

Even a prophet of their own - Or, a poet; for the word "prophet"- προφήτης prophētēs - like the Latin word "vates ,"was often applied to poets, because they were supposed to be inspired of the muses, or to write under the influence of inspiration. So Virgil, Ecl. ix. 32: Et me fecere poetam Pierides ...me quoque dicunt vatem pastores. Varro, Ling. Lat. vi. 3: Vates poetae dicti sunt. The term "prophet"was also given by the Greeks to one who was regarded as the interpreter of the gods, or who explained the obscure responses of the oracles. As such an interpreter - as one who thus saw future events, he was called a prophet; and as the poets claimed much of this kind of knowledge, the name was given to them. It was also given to one who was regarded as eminently endowed with wisdom, or who had that kind of sagacity by which the results of present conduct might be foreseen, as if he was under the influence of a kind of inspiration.

The word might have been applied to the person here referred to - Epimenides - in this latter sense, because he was eminently endowed with wisdom. He was one of the seven wise men of Greece. He was a contemporary of Solon, and was born at Phaestus, in the island of Crete, b.c. 659, and is said to have reached the age of 157 years. Many marvelous tales are told of him (see Anthon, Class. Dic) which are commonly supposed to be fabulous, and which are to be traced to the invention of the Cretans. The event in his life which is best known is, that he visited Athens, at the request of the inhabitants, to prepare the way by sacrifices for the introduction of the laws of Solon. He was supposed to have contact with the gods, and it was presumed that a special sacredness would attend the religious services in which he officiated. On this account, also, as well as because he was a poet, the name prophet may have been given him. Feuds and animosities prevailed at Athens, which it was supposed such a man might allay, and thus prepare them for the reception of the laws of Solon. The Athenians wished to reward him with wealth and public honors; but he refused to accept of any remuneration, and only demanded a branch of the sacred olive tree, and a decree of perpetual friendship between Athens and his native city. After his death, divine honors were paid to him by the Cretans. He wrote a poem on the Argonautic expedition, and other poems, which are now entirely lost. The quotation here is supposed to be made from a treatise on oracles and responses, which is also lost.

The Cretians are always liars - This character of the Cretans is abundantly sustained by the examples adduced by Wetstein. To be a Cretan, became synonymous with being a liar, in the same way as to be a Corinthian, became synonymous with living a licentious life; compare Introduction to 1 Corinthians, Section 1. Thus, the scholiast says, παροιμία ἐστι τὸ κρητίζειν ἐπὶ τοῦ ψεύδεσθαι paroimia esti to krētizein epi tou pseudesthai - "to act the Cretan, is a proverb for to lie."The particular reason why they had this character abroad, rather than other people, is unknown. Bishop Warburton supposes that they acquired it by claiming to have among them the tomb of Jupiter, and by maintaining that all the gods, like Jupiter, were only mortals who had been raised to divine honors. Thus the Greeks maintained that they always proclaimed a falsehood by asserting this opinion. But their reputation for falsehood seems to have arisen from some deeper cause than this, and to have pertained to their general moral character. They were only more eminent in what was common among the ancient pagan, and what is almost universal among the pagan now; compare the notes at Eph 4:25.

Evil beasts - In their character, beasts or brutes of a ferocious or malignant kind. This would imply that there was a great want of civilization, and that their want of refinement was accompanied with what commonly exists in that condition - the unrestrained indulgence of wild and ferocious passions. See examples of the same manner of speaking of barbarous and malicious men in Wetstein.

Slow bellies - Mere gormandizers. Two vices seem here to be attributed to them, which indeed commonly go together - gluttony and sloth. An industrious man will not be likely to be a gormandizer, and a gormandizer will not often be an industrious man. The mind of the poet, in this, seems to have conceived of them first as an indolent, worthless people; and then immediately to have recurred to the cause - that they were a race of gluttons, a people whose only concern was the stomach; compare Phi 3:19. On the connection between gluttony and sloth, see the examples in Wetstein. Seldom have more undesirable, and, in some respects, incongruous qualities, been grouped together in describing any people. They were false to a proverb, which was, indeed, consistent enough with their being ferocious - though ferocious and wild nations are sometimes faithful to their word; but they were at the same time ferocious and lazy, fierce and gluttonous - qualities which are not often found together. In some respects, therefore, they surpassed the common depravity of human nature, and blended in themselves ignoble properties which, among the worst people, are usually found existing alone. To mingle apparently contradictory qualities of wickedness in the same individual or people, is the height of depravity; as to blend in the same mind apparently inconsistent traits of virtuous character, or those which exist commonly, in their highest perfection, only alone, is the highest virtue.

Barnes: Tit 1:13 - -- This witness is true - That is, this testimony long before borne by one of their own number, was true when the apostle wrote to Titus. The fact...

This witness is true - That is, this testimony long before borne by one of their own number, was true when the apostle wrote to Titus. The fact that this was the general Character of the people, was a reason why he should be on his guard in introducing men into the ministry, and in the arrangement of affairs pertaining to the church. That it was true, see proofs in Wetstein.

Wherefore rebuke them - Notes, 2Ti 4:2.

Sharply - ἀποτόμως apotomōs - "cuttingly, severely"- from ἀποτέμνω apotemnō , "to cut off."The word is used here in the sense of severity, meaning that the reproof should be such as would be understood, and would show them plainly the wickedness of such traits of character. He was not to be mealy-mouthed, but he was to call things by their right names, and not to spare their faults. When men know that they are doing wrong, we should tell them so in few words; if they do not know it, it is necessary to teach them, in order to convince them of their error.

That they may be sound in the faith - That they may not allow the prevailing vices to corrupt their views of religion.

Barnes: Tit 1:14 - -- Not giving heed to Jewish fables ... - See the notes at 1Ti 1:4. And commandments of men that turn from the truth - Notes, Mat 15:3-5.

Not giving heed to Jewish fables ... - See the notes at 1Ti 1:4.

And commandments of men that turn from the truth - Notes, Mat 15:3-5.

Barnes: Tit 1:15 - -- Unto the pure all things are pure - See the notes at Rom 14:14, Rom 14:20. There is probably an allusion here to the distinctions made in respe...

Unto the pure all things are pure - See the notes at Rom 14:14, Rom 14:20. There is probably an allusion here to the distinctions made in respect to meats and drinks among the Jews. Some articles of food were regarded as "clean,"or allowed to be eaten, and some as "unclean,"or forbidden. Paul says that those distinctions ceased under the Christian dispensation, and that to those who had a conscience not easily troubled by nice and delicate questions about ceremonial observances, all kinds of food might be regarded as lawful and proper; compare the notes at 1Ti 4:4-5. If a man habitually maintains a good conscience in the sight of God, it will be accepted of him whether he do or do not abstain from certain kinds of food; compare the notes at Col 2:16. This passage, therefore, should not be interpreted as proving that all things are right and lawful for a Christian, or that whatever he may choose to do will be regarded as pure, but as primarily referring to distinctions in food, and meaning that there was no sanctity in eating one kind of food, and no sin in another, but that the mind was equally pure whatever was eaten.

The phrase has a proverbial cast, though I know not that it was so fused. The principle of the declaration is, that a pure mind - a truly pious mind - will not regard the distinctions of food and drink; of festivals, rites, ceremonies, and days, as necessary to be observed in order to promote its purity. The conscience is not to be burdened and enslaved by these things, but is to be controlled only by the moral laws which God has ordained. But there may be a somewhat higher application of the words - that every ordinance of religion, every command of God, every event that occurs in divine Providence, tends to promote the holiness of one who is of pure heart. He can see a sanctifying tendency in everything, and can derive from all that is commanded, and all that occurs, the means of making the heart more holy. While a depraved mind will turn every such thing to a pernicious use, and make it the means of augmenting its malignity and corruption, to the pure mind it will be the means of increasing its confidence in God, and of making itself more holy. To such a mind everything may become a means of grace.

But unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure - Everything is made the means of increasing their depravity. No matter what ordinances of religion they observe; what distinctions of meats, or drinks, or days they regard, and what events of Providence occur, all are the occasion of augmented depravity. Such distinctions in food they make the means of fostering their pride and producing self-righteousness; the mercies of God they abuse to pamper their own lusts, and the afflictive events of Divine Providence they make the occasion of murmuring and rebellion. Naturally corrupt at heart, no ordinances of religion, and no events of Providence, make them any better, but all tend to deepen their depravity. A sentiment similar to this is found in the classic writers. Thus Seneca, Epis . 98. Malus animus omnia in malum vertit, etiam quae specie optimi venerunt . So again (de Beneficiis v. 12), (Quemadmodum stomachus morbo vitiatus, et colliques bilem, quoscunque acceperit cibos mutat - ita animus caecus, quicquid fill commiseris, id onus suum et perniciem facited .

But even their mind and conscience is defiled - It is not a mere external defilement - a thing which they so much dread - but a much worse kind of pollution, that which extends to the soul and the conscience. Everything which they do tends to corrupt the inner man more and more, and to make them really more polluted and abominable in the sight of God. The wicked, while they remain impenitent, are constantly becoming worse and worse. They make everything the means of increasing their depravity, and even these things which seem to pertain only to outward observances are made the occasion of the deeper corruption of the heart.

Barnes: Tit 1:16 - -- They profess that they know God - That is, the Jewish teachers particularly, who are referred to in Tit 1:14. All those persons were professors...

They profess that they know God - That is, the Jewish teachers particularly, who are referred to in Tit 1:14. All those persons were professors of religion, and claimed that they had a special knowledge of God.

But in works they deny him - Their conduct is such as to show that they have no real acquaintance with him.

Being abominable - In their conduct. The word here used - βδελυκτοὶ bdeluktoi - occurs nowhere else in the New Testament. It means that which is detestable, or to be held in abhorrence.

And disobedient, and unto every good work reprobate - Margin, "void of judgment."On the word here used - ἀδοκίμος adokimos - see the Rom 1:28 note; 2Co 13:5 note. It means here that in reference to everything that was good, their conduct was such that it could not be approved, or deserved disapprobation. It was for this reason; from the character of the people of the island of Crete, and of those who claimed to be teachers there enforcing the obligation of the Mosaic law, that it was so important for Titus to exercise special care in introducing men into the ministry, and in completing the arrangements contemplated in the organization of the churches there. Yet is this character confined to them? Are there none now who profess that they know God, but in works deny him; whose conduct is such that it ought to be abhorred; who are disobedient to the plain commands of God, and whose character in respect to all that pertains to true piety is to be disapproved by the truly pious, and will be by God at the last day? Alas, taking the church at large, there are many such, and the fact that there are such persons is the grand hindrance to the triumphs of religion on the earth. "The way to heaven is blocked up by dead professors of religion."

Poole: Tit 1:10 - -- For there are many unruly and vain takers: we have had both of these words before; the first signifieth stubborn, unruly men; the second, idle, fooli...

For there are many unruly and vain takers: we have had both of these words before; the first signifieth stubborn, unruly men; the second, idle, foolish, vain talkers: the apostle saith, that in that age there were many of these.

And deceivers and such who were deceivers of other men’ s souls, or had their own souls deceived.

Specially they of the circumcision especially (he saith) the Jews, who mixed the law with the gospel; pressed the necessary observance of their ceremonies, and taught that all the Jews should be saved: of these there were many in Crete, they at this time being scattered abroad over the face of the whole earth.

Poole: Tit 1:11 - -- Whose mouths must be stopped the word is active; such ministers ought to be placed in cities as shall be able and fit to stop such persons’ mou...

Whose mouths must be stopped the word is active; such ministers ought to be placed in cities as shall be able and fit to stop such persons’ mouths, by sound doctrine and arguments fit to convince them: or, thou oughtest to stop their mouths by silencing them; though I do not see how this was practicable in a pagan country, otherwise than by persuading Christians not to hear them.

Who subvert whole houses who, as to the foundation of faith and its building, overturn whole families of Christians.

Teaching things which they ought not infusing false doctrine into them.

For filthy lucre’ s sake and all for filthy gain: and all gain is so, that is got by deceiving and ruining of people’ s souls, as to their faith and salvation.

Poole: Tit 1:12 - -- One of themselves, even a prophet of their own Epimenides, a Greek poet, thus spake of the people of this country, whom he calls a prophet, because h...

One of themselves, even a prophet of their own Epimenides, a Greek poet, thus spake of the people of this country, whom he calls a prophet, because he was a poet, and wrote something about such divine oracles as they had.

Said, The Cretians are alway liars: the Cretians were famous for lying and falsehood, so as it became a proverb. He called them

evil beasts either for their cruelty or treachery.

Slow bellies a lazy, idle people, that had much more inclination to eat and drink than they had to work in any honest labour. From all this the apostle would infer, that Titus had the more need be watchful in his place, and faithful in the discharge of his office, being amongst such a people.

Poole: Tit 1:13 - -- This witness is true this testimony of Epimenides is true, what I have found by experience, and those of them that in profession have embraced the Ch...

This witness is true this testimony of Epimenides is true, what I have found by experience, and those of them that in profession have embraced the Christian faith may have some tincture of their nation’ s vices.

Wherefore rebuke them sharply if thou meetest with any such, reprove or convince them apotomwv , cuttingly, that is, sharply, severely: the metaphor possibly is fetched from surgeons, who cut out dead flesh to the quick.

That they may be sound in the faith that they may be sound in the doctrine of the gospel, or in their minds, not infected with any vice.

Poole: Tit 1:14 - -- Not giving heed to Jewish fables: by his calling them Jewish fables, ( not old wives’ fables, as in the Epistle to Timothy), he lets us kn...

Not giving heed to Jewish fables: by his calling them Jewish fables, ( not old wives’ fables, as in the Epistle to Timothy), he lets us know that he reflects upon those Jews that seemed to be proselyted, but yet had a tincture of their Jewish education, and spent their discourse about such fabulous traditions as the Jews had.

And commandments of men and the traditions and constitutions of the scribes and Pharisees.

That turn from the truth abhorring the gospel, and the doctrine of truth in it.

Poole: Tit 1:15 - -- Unto the pure all things are pure: by the pure here (as appeareth by the terms opposed to it) are meant all those whose hearts are purified by fait...

Unto the pure all things are pure: by the pure here (as appeareth by the terms opposed to it) are meant all those whose hearts are purified by faith, working by love in a holy life. To these he saith all things, that is, all the creatures of God, all meats and drinks, are pure. What God hath cleansed none ought to call common or impure, Act 10:14 ; so as, notwithstanding any law of God to the contrary, any believers under the gospel may eat of any meats.

But unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure but if men be unbelievers, and so defiled, having not their hearts purified by faith, Act 15:9 , nothing is pure to them.

But even their mind and conscience is defiled their mind, their notion and understanding, is defiled; and their conscience, which is the practical judgment they make up about things, is defiled: if they forbear to eat, they are defiled through superstition; if they do eat, they sin by acting against the dictate of their conscience, which is the proximate rule of men’ s actions.

Poole: Tit 1:16 - -- They profess that they know God he is speaking of the Jews, who (all of them) professed to know and to believe one living and true God. But in works...

They profess that they know God he is speaking of the Jews, who (all of them) professed to know and to believe one living and true God.

But in works they deny him but they lived like atheists, as if there were no God in the world, Rom 2:17-24 .

Being abominable, and disobedient, and unto every good work reprobate they are persons justly to be abominated of all good men, apeiyeiv , unbelieving in the gospel, disobedient to the rule of the law, and awkward to, and averse from, any good work.

Haydock: Tit 1:10 - -- For there are also many. St. Paul here alludes principally to the Jews, who were of the circumcision, from whom St. Paul suffered much during the gr...

For there are also many. St. Paul here alludes principally to the Jews, who were of the circumcision, from whom St. Paul suffered much during the greater part of his life. They constantly enforced the necessity of the new converted Gentiles observing the law of Moses, and of their being circumcised, if they wished to be saved. There were many Jews of this description in Crete; to resist whom, St. Paul here tells Titus he ought to appoint bishops remarkable for their zeal and learning. (Josephus; Socrates, lib. ii. chap. 38. Hist. Eccles.) ---

Especially they who are of the circumcision; which shews who were chiefly the false teachers. (Witham)

Haydock: Tit 1:11 - -- Whole houses. [8] ] =============================== [BIBLIOGRAPHY] Universas domos, Greek: olous oikous.

Whole houses. [8] ]

===============================

[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Universas domos, Greek: olous oikous.

Haydock: Tit 1:12 - -- One of them, a prophet of their own. [9] He does not mean a true prophet, but as the pretended prophets of Baal were called prophets. St. Paul under...

One of them, a prophet of their own. [9] He does not mean a true prophet, but as the pretended prophets of Baal were called prophets. St. Paul understands Epimenides, a poet of Crete, who by some pagan authors was thought to know things to come; but Aristotle says, he knew only things past, not to come. The ill character he gave of the Cretians was, that they were always liars, evil beasts, slothful bellies, addicted to idleness and sensual pleasures. (Witham)

===============================

[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Propheta, Greek: prophetes. Cretenses, semper mendaces, malז bestiז, ventres pigri; Greek: Kretes, aei pseustai, kaka theria, gasteres argai. Aristotle, lib. iii. Rhetor. chap. xvii. Epimenides ille de futuris non vaticinabatur: Greek: peri ton esomenon ouk emanteueto, alla peri ton gegonoton. ---

Greek: Kretixeiin was proverbially used for uttering falsehood, and it was a received adage, and very illiberal on the inhabitants of Crete, Cappadocia, and Cilicia. Greek: Kretes, Kappodokes, Kilikes, tria Kappa Kakista.

Haydock: Tit 1:13 - -- This testimony, or character, says the apostle, is true, by public fame of them, and therefore they must be rebuked sharply, [10] their condition ...

This testimony, or character, says the apostle, is true, by public fame of them, and therefore they must be rebuked sharply, [10] their condition and dispositions requiring it; which, therefore, is not contrary to the admonition he gave to Timothy, to be gentle towards all. (2 Timothy ii. 24.) (Witham)

===============================

[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Dure, Greek: apotomos; a metaphor from surgeons cutting.

Haydock: Tit 1:14 - -- Jewish fables, and commandments of men. False traditions of the Jewish doctors, which were multiplied at that time. Calvin pretended from hence, th...

Jewish fables, and commandments of men. False traditions of the Jewish doctors, which were multiplied at that time. Calvin pretended from hence, that holydays and fasting days, and all ordinances of the Catholic Church were to be rejected as null, because they are the precepts of men. By the same argument must be rejected all laws and commands of princes and civil magistrates, as being the precepts of men. Fine doctrine! He might have remembered what St. Paul taught, (Romans xiii.) that all power is from God; and what Christ said, (Luke x. 16,) "He that hears you, hears me," &c. He might have observed that the men the apostle here speaks of, had turned [11] away themselves from the Christian faith. (Witham)

===============================

[BIBLIOGRAPHY]

Adversantium se a veritate, Greek: apostrephomenon.

====================

Haydock: Tit 1:15 - -- All things are clean to the clean. That is, no creature is evil of its own nature; and the distinction of animals, clean and unclean, is now out of ...

All things are clean to the clean. That is, no creature is evil of its own nature; and the distinction of animals, clean and unclean, is now out of date, as are the other ceremonies of the Jewish law. And that to these unfaithful, defiled men, nothing is clean, because their consciences are defiled when they make use of them against their conscience. (Witham) ---

St. Paul here tells Titus, to be particularly on his guard against those who wished to introduce among Christians a distinction of meats, and to preach up the necessity of divers purifications prescribed by the Mosaic law. All kinds of meats, he says, are clean to those who preserve their hearts free from sin; it is not what enters into the body defiles a man. But to eat with unwashed hands; to eat swine's flesh, or meat that has been offered to idols: these things in themselves are indifferent actions, though particular circumstances may make them criminal. (1 Corinthians viii. 4, 5, 6, &c.) (Calmet) ---

But to the defiled, &c. On the contrary, the man whose soul is defiled with sin, or who lives in infidelity, never can possess purity of heart; whatever legal washings or purifications, whatever sacrifices or ceremonies of the law he may make use of, all these cannot wash away the stains of the soul. (Estius, Menochius, Tirinus)

Haydock: Tit 1:16 - -- They confess that they know God. He speaks not therefore of those who were properly infidels, without the knowledge of the true God; so that it is f...

They confess that they know God. He speaks not therefore of those who were properly infidels, without the knowledge of the true God; so that it is foolish to pretend from hence, that every action of an infidel must be a sin. (Witham)

Gill: Tit 1:10 - -- For there are many unruly,.... Persons who are not subject to the law of God, or Gospel of Christ; whose spirits are not subject to the prophets; and ...

For there are many unruly,.... Persons who are not subject to the law of God, or Gospel of Christ; whose spirits are not subject to the prophets; and who will not submit themselves to them that have the rule over them, nor attend to the admonitions of the church, nor be brought into any regularity and order; and there were many of this sort, who were not sent forth by Christ, or his churches, but went forth of themselves, and were corrupters of the word; and therefore Christ's ministers ought to hold fast the faithful word, and convince such opposers by sound doctrine;

and vain talkers; who deliver out in their discourses empty, trifling, superficial, and frivolous things; which have no solidity and substance in them, nor do they tend to edification; only great swelling words of vanity, vain jangling and babbling about things to no profit.

And deceivers; both of themselves and others; who lie in wait to deceive, and are deceitful workers; and by their good words, and fair speeches, deceive the hearts of the simple; and so are dangerous persons, and of pernicious consequence:

especially they of the circumcision; or "of the Jews", as the Ethiopic version renders it; that is, not the unbelieving Jews, but such as professed Christianity, judaizing Christians, who joined Moses and Christ and blended the law and Gospel together; who taught that circumcision, and the observance of other ceremonies of the law, were necessary to justification and salvation; and hereby did a great deal of mischief among the churches.

Gill: Tit 1:11 - -- Whose mouths must be stopped,.... Or they be silenced, by reasons and arguments fetched out of the word of God; as were the Sadducees and Pharisees by...

Whose mouths must be stopped,.... Or they be silenced, by reasons and arguments fetched out of the word of God; as were the Sadducees and Pharisees by Christ, so that they durst ask him no more questions; and as the Jews at Damascus were by Saul, who confounded them, proving in the clearest and strongest manner, that Jesus was the very Christ:

who subvert whole houses; into which they creep; that is, whole families, whose principles they corrupt, whose faith they overthrow, and carry them away with their own errors; and therefore, since this was the case not of a single person, or of a few, but of whole families, it was high time to attempt to convince them, and stop their mouths, that they might proceed no further:

teaching things which they ought not; which were not agreeable to the perfections of God, to the Scriptures of truth, to sound doctrine, and which were hurtful and pernicious to the souls of men: and that only

for filthy lucre's sake; having no regard to the glory of God, the honour and interest of Christ, or the good of immortal souls; only seeking to gain popular applause and honour from men, and to gather and increase worldly substance. Covetousness was a sin which the Cretians were remarkably guilty of l.

Gill: Tit 1:12 - -- One of themselves, even a prophet of their own,.... This was Epimenides, in whose poems stand the words here cited; the apostle rightly calls him "one...

One of themselves, even a prophet of their own,.... This was Epimenides, in whose poems stand the words here cited; the apostle rightly calls him "one of themselves", since he was a Cretian by birth, of the city of Gnossus; it is reported of him, that being sent by his father to his sheep in the field, he by the way, at noon, turned aside into a cave, and slept fifty seven years m and he is very properly called a "prophet" of their own; for in Crete Jupiter had his prophets n, and he might be one of them: the priests among the Heathens were called prophets; so Baal's priests are called the prophets of Baal, and the prophets of the groves, 1Ki 18:19. Besides, Epimenides was thought to be inspired by the gods: he is called by Apuleius o, a famous fortune teller; and is said by Laertius p to be very skilful in divination, and to have foretold many things which came to pass; and by the Grecians were supposed to be very dear to the gods; so Balaam, the soothsayer and diviner, is called a prophet, 2Pe 2:16. Add to this, that the passage next cited stands in a poem of this writer, entitled, "Concerning Oracles"; and it is easy to observe, that poets in common were usually called "vates", or prophets; so that the apostle speaks here with great propriety. Now concerning the inhabitants of Crete, Epimenides, a native of the place, and a person of great character and repute among them,

said, the Cretians are always liars: living is a sin common to human nature, and appears in men as early, or earlier than any other; and all men are guilty of it, at one time or another; but all are not habitually liars, as it seems these Cretians were: lying was a governing vice among them; they were not only guilty of it in some particular instances, but always; not only for saying that Jupiter's sepulchre was with them, when it was the sepulchre of Minos his son, which they had fraudulently obliterated; and for which q Callimachus charges them with lying, and uses these very words of Epimenides; though he assigns a different reason from that now given, which is, that Jupiter died not, but always exists, and therefore his sepulchre could not be with them: but this single instance was not sufficient to fasten such a character upon them; it was a sin they were addicted to: some countries are distinguished by their vices; some for pride; some for levity, vanity, and inconstancy; some for boasting and bragging some for covetousness; some for idleness; some for effeminacy; some for hypocrisy and deceit; and others, as the Cretians, it seems, for lying; this was their national sin r; and this is said by others, as well as Epimenides. Crete is, by Ovid s, called "mendax Creta", lying Crete. Hence, with the Grecians, to "cretize", is proverbially used for to lie; this is a sin, than which nothing makes a man more like the devil, or more infamous among men, or more abominable to God. The Ethiopic version, instead of Cretes, or Cretians, reads "hypocrites". Other characters of them, from the same Heathen poet, follow,

evil beasts: slow bellies; by evil beasts are meant beasts of prey, savage and mischievous ones; see Gen 37:20 and are so called, to distinguish them from other beasts, as sheep, and the like, which are not so; and perhaps Crete might abound with such evil beasts; for the Cretians are said t to excel in hunting; and to these they themselves are compared, by one of their own prophets, for their cruelty, and savage disposition: so cruel persecutors are compared to beasts, 1Co 15:30 and the false teachers, the apostle has respect to in citing this passage, were cruel, if not to the bodies, yet to the souls of men, whom they poisoned and destroyed. And the Cretians are called, by the poet, slow bellies partly for their intemperance, their gluttony and drunkenness: which suited with the false teachers, whose god was their belly, and which they served, and not the Lord Jesus; and partly for their sloth and idleness, eating the bread of others without working.

Gill: Tit 1:13 - -- 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 ma...

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, 1Sa 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.

Gill: Tit 1:14 - -- Not giving heed to Jewish fables,.... Concerning God himself, the angels, and the creation of man; concerning the giving of the law at Mount Sinai; co...

Not giving heed to Jewish fables,.... Concerning God himself, the angels, and the creation of man; concerning the giving of the law at Mount Sinai; concerning the Messiah and his earthly kingdom, and the feast that will be made for the righteous in his days, which will consist of flesh, fish, and fowl, Behemoth, Leviathan, and Zuz, and of wine kept in the grape from the foundation of the world; and concerning the rolling of the dead through the caverns of the earth at the resurrection, with a multitude of other things which were traditionally received.

And commandments of men: the traditions of the elders, which the Jews charged the disciples of Christ with the transgression of; and he, on the other hand, very justly reproached them with breaking the commands of God, by attending to them, Mat 15:1. These were the laws and traditions of the fathers, which the Apostle Paul was brought up in, and was zealous of, before his conversion, Act 22:3 and which these judaizing preachers and professors, he here has respect to, were fond of, though they were made by men,

that turn from the truth; or "hate it", as the Syriac version renders it; who were enemies unto it, as Hillell and Shammai, the heads of the traditional doctors, and as the Jews, and their Rabbins in general were; and therefore their commandments, of all men, should not be given heed to, by those that bear the Christian name.

Gill: Tit 1:15 - -- Unto the pure all things are pure,.... The apostle having made mention of Jewish fables, and the traditions of the elders, takes notice of some darlin...

Unto the pure all things are pure,.... The apostle having made mention of Jewish fables, and the traditions of the elders, takes notice of some darling notions, that these judaizing Christians had imbibed or retained; that there were some things, which being touched, or handled, or tasted, occasioned uncleanness, and which the apostle denies to them that are "pure"; by whom are meant, not such who are so in their own eyes, who yet may not be cleansed from their filthiness; nor do any become pure through ceremonial, moral, or evangelical performances, done by them; they are only pure, who are justified from all sin by Christ's righteousness, and are clean through the word or sentence of absolution spoken by him; and who are washed from their sins in his blood, and have that sprinkled upon their consciences, by which they are purged and cleansed from all sin; and who have the clean water of sanctifying grace sprinkled upon them, and have clean hearts, and right spirits created in them; and whose hearts are purified by faith, and have true principles of grace and holiness formed in them; whose graces are pure and genuine, their faith is unfeigned, their love is without dissimulation, and their hope without hypocrisy; and who, in consequence of all this, love pureness of heart, speak the pure language of Canaan, hold the mystery of the faith in a pure conscience, and follow after purity of life and conversation: to these "all things are pure"; whatever they touch, or handle, or eat, nothing can defile them; for it is not what enters into man that can pollute him; nor is any creature unclean of itself, but good, and to be received with thanksgiving; see Mat 15:11.

But unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure; all mankind are defiled with sin; they are altogether become filthy; there is none good, no, not one; and all of them, or that belong to them, are unclean; the members of their body, and the powers and faculties of their soul, their mind and conscience, understanding, will, and affections; there is no place clean: they are originally so, from their first conception and birth; and they are actually defiled by their own evil thoughts, words, and doings: some are openly impure, like the dog and the swine, who wallow in their impieties, such are the profane part of the world; others are more secretly so, as those of a pharisaical complexion, nominal Christians, and formal professors; and such the apostle has here in view: and who, notwithstanding their profession of the Christian religion, were "unbelieving"; they had not true faith in Christ, though they professed it; they were not indeed unbelieving, as the Jews, who rejected Jesus as the Messiah: yet they did not purely and cordially embrace the doctrines of the Gospel, nor yield a spiritual and cheerful subjection to the ordinances of it; but were for mixing the ceremonies of the law with the institutions of Christ: and to these were "nothing pure"; right and lawful to be done, or not done, even in the case supposed, about eating things forbidden by the ceremonial law; to eat them would be to eat with offence, to their own consciences, on their principles, and so be evil, Rom 14:20 and to abstain from them on account of laws not in force, would be superstition and will worship, and so criminal, Col 2:21. There is nothing that defiled persons can do, but what is unclean; as are their persons, so are their offerings and works, Hag 2:14, and being destitute of true faith, whatever they do is sin, and not anything they do can be acceptable and well pleasing to God, Rom 14:23. There were some things among the Jews, which were prohibited to them that were defiled, and were free to them that were pure: thus, for instance u,

"the flesh of the most holy things, and the flesh of those which are lightly holy, boiled with flesh of delight, (or common flesh,) are forbidden לטמאים, "to the defiled", but are free לטהורים, "to the pure".''

Which one of their commentators w thus explains;

"the flesh of the most holy things is forbidden to strangers, though pure; the flesh of things lightly holy is free to strangers that are pure, but forbidden to them that are defiled.''

Whether there may be any allusion to this, may be considered: however, the reason the apostle gives why nothing is pure to the impure, is, because of the pollution of the superior powers and faculties of their soul:

but even their mind and conscience is defiled; there is nothing in them, or that belongs to them, that is pure; their mind or understanding, which conceives and judges of things, and forms notions of them; and the conscience, which draws conclusions from them, are both defiled with sin; and what then must the thoughts, the words and actions of such persons be? it matters not what they do, or abstain from, what they touch, taste, or handle, or if they do not, they sin in all they do.

Gill: Tit 1:16 - -- They profess that they know God,.... That there is a God; that there is but one, only, true, and living God, the God of Israel, as professed by the Je...

They profess that they know God,.... That there is a God; that there is but one, only, true, and living God, the God of Israel, as professed by the Jews; and that this God is Father, Son, and Spirit, as believed by the Christians: for the persons the apostle speaks of were judaizing Christians. Yet this knowledge was but notional; it lay in theory and profession only; they had not a spiritual experimental knowledge of God in Christ, which only has eternal life connected with it:

but in works they deny him. The Syriac, Arabic, and Ethiopic versions read, "in their own works"; they were not professed, but practical atheists; they owned there was a God, and boasted of their knowledge of him; but their lives and conversations showed that they had no true knowledge of him, and that the fear of him was not before their eyes; these gave the lie to their profession; they practically denied that faith they professed to hold, and the power of godliness, of which they had the form.

Being abominable; in the sight of God, however esteemed by men; and notwithstanding the vizor and mask of sanctity and religion they put on, which could not screen them from the omniscience of God, who will one day declare he knows them not, and will bid them depart from him, being workers of iniquity.

And disobedient; to God; to his law, and Gospel; to his ministers and churches; and even to parents and civil magistrates; for of this cast were the false teachers, and their followers, as maybe learned from many passages.

And unto every good work reprobate: or "unaccustomed", unused to them, as the Arabic version renders it; or rather "without judgment", and understanding, concerning them; there was no good in them, nor was it in them to do good; to do good they had no knowledge, nor any inclination; they were unfit for it, and had not a capacity to perform it; they were not good themselves, and therefore could not do good; the tree must first be made good, ere its fruit will be good; they were without Christ, and without his Spirit, and grace, without which no man can do anything that is spiritually good; they had no true faith, and therefore what they did was sinful; they had neither right principles, from which, nor right ends to which they acted, and therefore were not qualified for the performance of good works; which require that men should be good men, created in Christ Jesus, be believers in him, and have principles of truth and love, and views to the glory of God.

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Tit 1:10 Grk “those of the circumcision.” Some translations take this to refer to Jewish converts to Christianity (cf. NAB “Jewish Christians...

NET Notes: Tit 1:12 A saying attributed to the poet Epimenides of Crete (6th century b.c.).

NET Notes: Tit 1:14 Jewish myths were legendary tales characteristic of the false teachers in Ephesus and Crete. See parallels in 1 Tim 1:4; 4:7; and 2 Tim 4:4.

Geneva Bible: Tit 1:10 ( 10 ) For there are many unruly and vain talkers and deceivers, specially they of the ( l ) circumcision: ( 10 ) An applying of the general proposit...

Geneva Bible: Tit 1:12 ( m ) One of themselves, [even] a prophet of their own, said, The Cretians [are] alway liars, evil beasts, slow bellies. ( m ) Epimenides, who was co...

Geneva Bible: Tit 1:13 This witness is true. Wherefore rebuke them ( n ) sharply, that they may be sound in the faith; ( n ) Clearly and plainly, and do not go about the bu...

Geneva Bible: Tit 1:15 ( 11 ) Unto the pure all things [are] pure: but unto them that are defiled and unbelieving [is] nothing pure; but even their ( o ) mind and conscience...

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Tit 1:1-16 - --1 For what end Titus was left in Crete.6 How they that are to be chosen ministers ought to be qualified.11 The mouths of evil teachers to be stopped;1...

Combined Bible: Tit 1:10 - --For there are many unruly and vain talkers and deceivers,

Combined Bible: Tit 1:11 - --Whose mouths must be stopped,

Combined Bible: Tit 1:12 - --One of themselves, [even] a prophet of their own, said,

Combined Bible: Tit 1:13 - --This witness is true.

Combined Bible: Tit 1:14 - --Not giving heed to Jewish fables, and commandments of men, that turn from the truth.

Combined Bible: Tit 1:15 - --Unto the pure all things [are] pure:

Combined Bible: Tit 1:16 - --They profess that they know God; but in works they deny [him], being abominable, and disobedient, and unto every good work reprobate.

MHCC: Tit 1:10-16 - --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 ...

Matthew Henry: Tit 1:6-16 - -- 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 ...

Barclay: Tit 1:10-11 - --Here we have a picture of the false teachers who were troubling Crete. The worst were apparently Jews. They tried to persuade the Cretan converts of...

Barclay: Tit 1:12 - --No people ever had a worse reputation than the Cretans. The ancient world spoke of the three most evil C's--the Cretans, the Cilicians, and the Cap...

Barclay: Tit 1:13-16 - --The great characteristic of the Jewish faith was its thousands of rules and regulations. This, that and the next thing were branded as unclean; thi...

Barclay: Tit 1:13-16 - --When a man gets into this state of impurity, he may know God intellectually but his life is a denial of that knowledge. Three things are singled out...

Constable: Tit 1:5--3:12 - --II. INSTRUCTIONS FOR SETTING THE CHURCH IN ORDER 1:5--3:11 As in 1 Timothy, Paul plunged into the business of hi...

Constable: Tit 1:10-16 - --B. The correction of false teachers 1:10-16 Paul emphasized the need to guard the church against false teaching to inform Titus how to deal with the p...

College: Tit 1:1-16 - --TITUS 1 I. SALUTATION (1:1-4) 1 Paul, a servant of God and an apostle of Jesus Christ for the faith of God's elect and the knowledge of the truth th...

expand all
Commentary -- Other

Critics Ask: Tit 1:12 TITUS 1:12 —Doesn’t Paul involve himself in a paradox or contradiction here? PROBLEM: Paul quoted a Cretan who said that “Cretans are alway...

Evidence: Tit 1:11 The way to " stop the mouth" is to use the Law of God. See Rom 3:19 footnote.

Evidence: Tit 1:15 Those who defile the conscience remove the battery from their own smoke detector.

Evidence: Tit 1:16 For alleged mistakes in the Bible , see Mar 15:26 footnote. There are many who profess to know God , but they lack the things that accompany salvat...

expand all
Introduction / Outline

Robertson: Titus (Book Introduction) The Epistle to Titus Probably 66 or 67 Apparently From Nicopolis

JFB: Titus (Book Introduction) GENUINENESS.--CLEMENT OF ROME quotes it [Epistle to the Corinthians, 2]; IRENÆUS [Against Heresies, 3.3.4] refers to it as Paul's; THEOPHILUS OF ANTI...

JFB: Titus (Outline) ADDRESS: FOR WHAT END TITUS WAS LEFT IN CRETE. QUALIFICATIONS FOR ELDERS: GAINSAYERS IN CRETE NEEDING REPROOF. (Tit. 1:1-16) DIRECTIONS TO TITUS: HOW...

TSK: Titus 1 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Tit 1:1, For what end Titus was left in Crete; Tit 1:6, How they that are to be chosen ministers ought to be qualified; Tit 1:11, The mou...

Poole: Titus 1 (Chapter Introduction) ARGUMENT As a general of an army, who hath a large country to conquer, cannot himself stay long in a conquered city, but leaving it with a garrison...

MHCC: Titus (Book Introduction) This epistle chiefly contains directions to Titus concerning the elders of the Church, and the manner in which he should give instruction; and the lat...

MHCC: Titus 1 (Chapter Introduction) (Tit 1:1-4) The apostle salutes Titus. (Tit 1:5-9) The qualifications of a faithful pastor. (Tit 1:10-16) The evil temper and practices of false tea...

Matthew Henry: Titus (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Epistle of St. Paul to Titus This Epistle of Paul to Titus is much of the same nature with those to...

Matthew Henry: Titus 1 (Chapter Introduction) 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...

Barclay: Titus (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: Titus 1 (Chapter Introduction) The Mainsprings Of Apostleship (Tit_1:1-4) An Apostle's Gospel (Tit_1:1-4 Continued) God's Purpose And God's Good Time (Tit_1:1-4 Continued) A F...

Constable: Titus (Book Introduction) Introduction Historical background Paul may have visited Crete more than once. It seem...

Constable: Titus (Outline) Outline I. Salutation 1:1-4 II. Instructions for setting the church in order 1:5-3:11 ...

Constable: Titus Titus Bibliography Bailey, Mark L. "A Biblical Theology of Paul's Pastoral Epistles." in A Biblical Theology of...

Haydock: Titus (Book Introduction) THE EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL, THE APOSTLE, TO TITUS. INTRODUCTION. The design of this epistle is much the same as in the two former to Timothy. He...

Gill: Titus (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO TITUS Titus, to whom this epistle is inscribed, was a Greek, an uncircumcised Gentile, and so remained; nor did the apostle circumc...

Gill: Titus 1 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO TITUS 1 This chapter contains the inscription of the epistle, the apostle's salutation and preface to it; an account of the qualifi...

College: Titus (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION PLACE OF ORIGIN AND DATE At the time of writing Titus, Paul was in or on his way to Nicopolis where he planned to spend the winter (3:1...

College: Titus (Outline) OUTLINE I. SALUTATION - 1:1-4 II. APPOINTING ELDERS - 1:5-16 A. Qualification of Elders - 1:5-9 B. Elders' Duty to False Teachers - 1:10-...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


TIP #24: Use the Study Dictionary to learn and to research all aspects of 20,000+ terms/words. [ALL]
created in 0.31 seconds
powered by
bible.org - YLSA