Titus 2:6
Context2:6 Encourage younger men likewise to be self-controlled, 1
Titus 2:2
Context2:2 Older men are to be temperate, dignified, self-controlled, 2 sound in faith, in love, and in endurance. 3
Titus 2:4-5
Context2:4 In this way 4 they will train 5 the younger women to love their husbands, to love their children, 2:5 to be self-controlled, 6 pure, fulfilling their duties at home, 7 kind, being subject to their own husbands, so that the message 8 of God may not be discredited. 9
Titus 1:8
Context1:8 Instead he must be hospitable, devoted to what is good, sensible, upright, devout, and self-controlled.
Titus 2:8
Context2:8 and a sound message that cannot be criticized, so that any opponent will be at a loss, 10 because he has nothing evil to say about us.
Titus 2:12
Context2:12 It trains us 11 to reject godless ways 12 and worldly desires and to live self-controlled, upright, and godly lives in the present age,
[2:2] 3 sn Temperate…in endurance. See the same cluster of virtues in 1 Thess 1:3 and 1 Cor 13:13.
[2:4] 3 tn Grk “that they may train” (continuing the sentence of 2:3).
[2:4] 4 tn This verb, σωφρονίζω (swfronizw), denotes teaching in the sense of bringing people to their senses, showing what sound thinking is.
[2:5] 5 tn Grk “domestic,” “keeping house.”
[2:12] 6 tn Grk “training us” (as a continuation of the previous clause). Because of the length and complexity of the Greek sentence, a new sentence was started at the beginning of v. 12 by translating the participle παιδεύουσα (paideuousa) as a finite verb and supplying the pronoun “it” as subject.





