Thursday, July 9, 2026

Titus


 

Titus

Paul advises Titus on how to lead orderly, counter-cultural churches on the island of Crete.

Who is Titus?
Titus was a Greek, a Gentile Christian (Gal. 2:3), who was one of Paul’s closest coworkers. Paul calls him his “true child in our common faith” (Titus 1:4), which likely means Titus came to faith through his ministry. He was probably connected to Antioch, one of Paul’s early mission bases. Interestingly, Titus is never mentioned in the Acts, so everything we know about him comes from Paul’s letters.

Why does he matter?
Titus was one of Paul’s go-to men for difficult situations. He accompanied Paul to Jerusalem, where he was an example that Gentiles did not need to be circumcised (Gal. 2:1–3). Later, Paul sent him to Corinth to help repair a strained relationship with the church, which he handled well (2 Cor. 7:6–7). He also helped organize the collection for believers in Jerusalem (2 Cor. 8:6). Paul calls him a “brother,” “partner,” and “fellow worker.” Clearly, Titus had earned Paul’s trust.

What’s going on in the letter?
Paul left Titus in Crete “to put what remained into order” and appoint elders (Titus 1:5). The churches there were young and being harassed with false teaching, especially from those pushing Jewish practices (1:10–11). The letter, although personal, is also Paul publicly backing Titus and giving him authority to lead and correct.

Anything outside the New Testament?
Later tradition, especially from Eusebius of Caesarea, says Titus became a bishop of the churches on the island of Crete. Paul also mentions him later working in Dalmatia (2 Tim. 4:10).

Sources:
• Ryan Lokkesmoe, “Titus,” The Lexham Bible Dictionary
• John Gillman, “Titus (Person),” The Anchor Yale Bible Dictionary
• Craig S. Keener, The IVP Bible Background Commentary: New Testament
• Philip Towner, 1–2 Timothy & Titus, IVP New Testament Commentary Series

Titus 1 consists of three main parts: Paul’s greeting and divine purpose (Verses 1-4,) his instructions for appointing elders in Crete with specific qualifications for their character and family life (Verses 5-9) and a strong warning and rebuke against false teachers who are subverting truth with false teaching and seeking dishonest gain (Verses 110-16).

Titus 2 instructs believers on how to live godly lives in various stages of life and social roles, grounding in sound doctrine, to reflect Christ’s redemptive grace. It calls for self-controlled, reverent, and responsible conduct among older and younger men and women, emphasizing qualities like kindness, faithfulness, and respect. The passage explains that Go’s grace teaches us to deny ungodliness and live righteously, eagerly anticipating Christ’s return, and to be a purified people zealous for good works.

 

Titus 3 teaches that true faith is demonstrated through good works and peaceful conduct, contrasting believers’ formal sinful lives with their new, transformed identity in Christ through God’s grace and the Holy Spirit. This was demonstrated in the believer through Baptism.  Key instructions include submitting to authorities, being peaceable and gentle, and devoting oneself to good works as a natural outflow of salvation. The chapter also calls for avoiding division, quarrels and addressing divisive people firmly.[1]


[1] Chapter summaries:

Bible in One Year, Chad Bird © 2006 1517.org
The Lutheran Study Bible © 2009 Concordia Publishing House, St. Louis
Enduring Word Commentary by David Guzik © 1996-present -enduringword.com
Note: Some of this overview was generated with the help of AI. It’s supported by information from across the web and Google’s Knowledge Graph, a collection of information about people, places, and things.
Google. (2026). Gemini [Large language model]. https://gemini.google.com/
 

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