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Text -- Titus 1:14-16 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
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
Present middle (direct) participle of
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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...
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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...
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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 (
Present active indicative of
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By their works (
Instrumental case.
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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).
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Robertson: Tit 1:16 - -- Abominable ( bdeluktoi ).
Verbal adjective from bdelussomai . Only in lxx and here.
Abominable (
Verbal adjective from
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 (
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.
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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 (
See on 1Ti 1:4. Note Jewish . The nature of these we do not know.
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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 (
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 .
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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 (
Comp. 2Ti 4:4, where the truth and fables appear in contrast.
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Vincent: Tit 1:15 - -- Unto the pure ( τοῖς καθαροῖς )
The pure in heart and conscience. See 2Ti 1:3.
Unto the pure (
The pure in heart and conscience. See 2Ti 1:3.
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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...
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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 ...
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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.
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Vincent: Tit 1:15 - -- Mind and conscience ( ὁ νοῦς καὶ ἡ συνείδησις )
For νοῦς see on Rom 7:23 : for συνείδησις , see o...
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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...
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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...
The Jewish or other teachers, whoever they were that turned from the truth.
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Those whose hearts are purified by faith this we allow.
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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.
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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 1:14 - -- (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...
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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).
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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...
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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.
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JFB: Tit 1:16 - -- The opposite of the previous "profess" or "confess" Him (1Ti 5:8; 2Ti 2:12; 2Ti 3:5).
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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).
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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
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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
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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)
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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,
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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
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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:
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Being abominable -
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Clarke: Tit 1:16 - -- And disobedient - Απειθεις· Unpersuadable, unbelieving, and consequently disobedient. Characters remarkably applicable to the Jews throug...
And disobedient -
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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 -
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 1:14 - -- 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.
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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.
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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
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."
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
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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:...
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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...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
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.
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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.
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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 -
And disobedient, and unto every good work reprobate - Margin, "void of judgment."On the word here used -
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.
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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.
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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,
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)
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[BIBLIOGRAPHY]
Adversantium se a veritate, Greek: apostrephomenon.
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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)
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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 1:14 - -- 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.
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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
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.
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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.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Tit 1:14
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 1:15
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...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Tit 1:1-16
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 1:14 - --Not giving heed to Jewish fables, and commandments of men, that turn from the truth.
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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
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
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 1:13-16; Tit 1:13-16
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...
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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; Tit 1:10-16
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...
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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
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...
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