Restitutio
Restitutio
Sean P Finnegan
547 Read the Bible for Yourself 14: How to Read the Pastoral Epistles
38 minutes Posted May 9, 2024 at 11:00 pm.
-15).
).
), older men (Tit 2:2), younger men (Tit 2:6-8).
-15), older women (Tit 2:3), younger (Tit 2:4-5)
-2, 17-19).
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-8, 16).
-6, 9-10).
; T 2:9-10)
-19)
-8; Tit 2:11-12 (See also 1 Tim 2:1-2; 5:4.)
-7; T 1:7-9)
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-5).
, 6-7; Tit 1:10-11, 14)
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, 16, 23, 25; Tit 3:9)
-11)
), Phygelus & Hermogenes (2 Tim 1:15), Hymenaeus & Philetus (2 Tim 2:17-18), Alexander the coppersmith (2 Tim 4:14)
).
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Show notes
This is part 14 of the Read the Bible For Yourself.
The Pastoral Epistles are letters to church leaders, instructing them how churches should function. Though they are not well read by most Christians today, they remain authoritative for pastors, elders, and deacons. Today we'll cover 1-2 Timothy, Titus, and Philemon. We'll explore the major theme of how the church should be a well-run household where godliness prevails. Additionally, we'll consider qualifications for leadership, warnings against false teachers, and the incredible importance of sound teaching.
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—— Notes ——
The Pastoral Epistles
1 Timothy, 2 Timothy, Titus, Philemon
Philemon is not always included as a pastoral Epistle since it only deals with a specific issue regarding a single person.
Household
Paul employs the metaphor of a household in the pastorals to illustrate the order he’d like to see in the churches (1 Tim
ZIBBC: “In Xenophon’s essay, the husband instructs his fourteen-year-old bride (the average age for marriage among Greek and Roman girls was fourteen to sixteen) on her vital role in managing the household resources, including the care and supervision of household slaves, while he supervised the gathering of produce from the farms. Because of the presence of slaves and freedmen in an average ancient household, management of sometimes large households could be demanding.”[1]
Lynn Cohick: “The family in the Greco-Roman world valued the community over the individual and promoted corporate honor and fortune. Those living in the domus (“home”) included parents and children, and perhaps extended family, such as adult siblings, cousins, and grandparents, as well as slaves, freedmen, and freedwomen. Each individual had a specific status within the home, and each family member deemed the social status of the family, including its wealth and social prestige, as of equal or greater value than their personal happiness.”[2]
Paul is concerned for how outsiders will perceive the churches (1 Tim
Everyone has a place and a role.
Men's role (1 Tim
Women's role (1 Tim
Respect elders (1 Tim
Young widows should marry (1 Tim
Take care of your own family (1 Tim
Support real widows (1 Tim
Slaves obey & submit (1 Tim
Rich be humble/generous (1 Tim
Godliness (Eusebia)
1 Tim
Translated “godliness” but has nothing to do with being like God or imitating God.
Showing expected reverence
Piety (Latin = pietas)
Pious, reverent, dutiful
Shown not just to God (or gods) but also to the city and to one’s household
Church Leadership
Overseer’s qualifications (1 Tim
Elders’ qualifications (Tit
Deacon's qualifications (1 Tim
Standards are high for service in the church.
Overseers must manage their own households well (1 Tim
Warnings Against False Teachers
Some strange Jewish teachings (1 Tim
Asceticism (1 Tim
Proto-gnostics (1 Tim
Unlabeled false teachings (2 Tim
Warn those who cause divisions (twice), then have nothing more to do with them (Tit
Names individuals: Hymenaeus & Alexander (1 Tim
Sound Teaching (Healthy Doctrine)
Sin is when you live contrary to healthy doctrine (ὑγιαινούση διδασκαλία) (1 Tim
Sound teaching nourishes you (1 Tim
Encouraged to hold the standard of sound teaching (2 Tim
“People will not put up with sound teaching” (2 Tim
“Rebuke them sharply, so that they become sound in the faith” (Tit
“Teach what is consistent with sound instruction” (Tit
Reading the Pastoral Epistles
Mostly focused on church leadership
Church leaders NEED to read them.
The pastorals tell us who is qualified and who is disqualified for church leadership.
It’s good for everyone to know what they say so you can hold your leaders accountable.
Philemon
Philemon was a wealthy Christian leader who had a house church.
His slave, Onesimus, ran away and later became a Christian.
Paul sent Onesimus back to Philemon, asking Philemon to treat him as a brother.
This Epistle is a masterful piece of rhetoric, Paul at his finest.
Ben Witherington III calls Philemon the emancipation proclamation of the NT.
Review
Paul wrote the pastoral Epistles toward the end of his life.
The metaphor of a household illustrates how the churches should function.
Everyone should play their role according to their duty, whether men or women or elderly or young.
Godliness is a major concept in the pastoral Epistles. It refers to performing your duty with proper honor. It's important that Christians live respectfully and with proper dignity before a watching and suspicious world.
The pastoral Epistles include clear qualifications for church leaders, including that they manage their own households well.
The churches in Ephesus and Crete were beset with false teachers from both Jewish and Greco-Roman sources.
Paul encourages Timothy and Titus to adhere to sound teaching (healthy doctrine), so that people will escape the dangers of false teachers.
Philemon was a wealthy church leader who managed a household that included slaves.
Paul sent Philemon his runaway slave, instructing him to accept Onesimus as a brother.
Paul told Philemon to charge any debt Onesimus owed him to his account.
Such a request radically reconfigured social norms in a way that undermined the system of slavery.
[1]Baugh, S. M. “1 Timothy” in Romans to Philemon, vol. 3 of ZIBBCNT-5, ed. Clinton E. Arnold (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2002), 444-478.
[2] Lynn H. Cohick, "Women, Children, and Families in the Greco-Roman World," in The World of the New Testament, ed. Lee McDonald Joel Green (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2013), 179.