Day 182, Titus 1 
It is thought that
this letter was written some time after Paul's trial before Nero and his
subsequent acquittal, perhaps around AD 66, which would place it after the
final chapter of Acts. Paul obviously continued traveling and ministering just
as before his imprisonment, and after planting churches in Crete with Titus'
help, Paul left him behind to set things in order (1:5). Titus was a
long-time, trusted co-worker of Paul's, a Greek man, first mentioned as being
with Paul when he journeyed to Jerusalem to submit his gospel to the scrutiny
of Peter, James and John (Gal. 2:1-3).
In his very first
sentence, Paul declared himself to be "an apostle of Jesus Christ, for the
faith of those chosen of God" (1:1). God has chosen to save people who
repent and believe in Jesus, yet some would have us believe that He chooses to
save people who would never, under any circumstances, repent or believe in
Jesus, but whom He zaps against their wills and changes. They go from hating
Him to loving Him, not because of yielding their free will under the influence
of His drawing (a universal drawing which others resist), but solely because of
His sovereign action that is directed only at the few whom He has pre-selected.
As you realize by now, this is not what Scripture teaches. If it were true, it
would make God unjust. If ten men were on death row for the same crimes, and
the state chose to forgive and release one but not the others, they would
rightfully accuse the state of injustice. That is what Calvinists claim God
does.
Is there anything
God cannot do? Yes!
He cannot lie (1:2). He also cannot be tempted with evil, change, or deny
Himself (Jas. 1:13; Mal. 3:6; 2 Tim. 2:13). I would be willing to bet that
there are other things that He can't do as well. Can He create another God
equal to Himself? No, any created God could not be equal to Him, since He is
not created! Can He foreknow the future final scores of football games that are
never played? No, because there is nothing to foreknow.
Similarly to what he
wrote in 1 Timothy, Paul lists the requirements for elders in today's reading.
Note that Paul uses the words elder (Greek: presbuteros) and overseer (Greek: episkopos) synonymously (1:5, 7). They identify the same
ministry. Paul never mentioned pastors in either Titus or 1 Timothy, yet he
told the elders (Acts
20:17) of Ephesus, whom he also called overseers (20:28) to "shepherd the church of God" (20:28). The Greek
word translated "shepherd" there is poimaino, which is the verb form of the noun poimen, which is translated "pastor" only in
Ephesians 4:11 and "shepherd" everywhere else it is found in the New
Testament. For this reason, among others, it is safe to assume that pastors,
elders and overseers are all the same. Thus we could say that Paul listed the
requirements to be a pastor in Titus 1:6-9.
One requirement is
that an elder/overseer/pastor not be "accused of dissipation," which
is defined as "a descent into drunkenness and sexual immorality."
Dissipation not only disqualifies one from being a leader of Christians, but
also from being a Christian.
Elders/overseers/pastors
must also not be "pugnacious," which is defined as "being eager
to argue, quarrel or fight." Being pugnacious does not mean, however, that
one is not eager to discuss true doctrine and expose what is false, as another
requirement for church leaders is that they be able to "refute those who
contradict" sound doctrine (1:9). Paul also instructed Titus to
"severely reprove" those who accept false teaching (1:13).
False teachers were
definitely making inroads into the young church in Crete. Paul refers to
them as "rebellious men, empty talkers and deceivers...who must be silenced
because they are upsetting whole families, teaching things they should not
teach for the sake of sordid gain" (1:10-11). One false teacher, however,
Paul agreed with at least in part, whom he quoted as saying, "Cretans are
always liars, evil beasts, lazy gluttons." Paul elevated a well-known
Cretan named Epimenides from poet to prophet for his accurate assessment of
Cretan character!
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