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  • Paul's letter to Titus.

  • Titus was a Greek follower of Jesus who was for years a trusted coworker and travelling companion of Paul.

  • He had helped Paul in a number of crisis situations in the past.

  • In this letter we discover that Paul had assigned him the task of going to Crete,

  • a large island off the coast of Greece to restore order to a network of house churches.

  • Cretan culture was notorious in the ancient world.

  • One of the Greek words for being a liar was "kretizo," "to be a Cretan".

  • These people were infamous for treachery and greed.

  • Most of the men on the island had served as mercenary soldiers to the highest bidder.

  • The island cities were known as being unsafe, plagued by violence and sexual corruption.

  • However, the island of Crete had many strategic harbors.

  • They serviced cities all over the ancient Mediterranean Sea.

  • From Paul's point of view, Crete was the perfect place to start a network of churches.

  • We do not know the details,

  • but somehow these churches came under the influence of corrupt Cretan leaders.

  • They said they were Christians but they were ruining the churches.

  • So Paul assigned Titus with the task of going there to set things straight.

  • This letter provided the instructions.

  • It has a pretty straightforward design.

  • After a brief introduction Paul gives Titus clear instructions about his tasks in the church.

  • He then offers guidance about the new kind of household

  • and then about the new kind of humanity that the gospel could create in these Cretan communities.

  • Paul then closes the letter with some final greetings.

  • Paul opens the whole thing by reminding Titus that his message as an apostle is about the hope of eternal life.

  • That is, the life of the new creation that is available starting now through Jesus the Messiah.

  • This hope was promised long ago by the God who does not lie.

  • This little opening comment introduces an important theme underlying the whole letter.

  • One of the problems in the Cretan churches was that they had assimilated their ideas about Jesus, the Christian God,

  • to their ideas about the Greek gods that they grew up with, specifically Zeus, their chief God.

  • Cretan people claimed that Zeus was actually born on their Island.

  • They loved to tell stories and mythologies about Zeus' underhanded character.

  • He would seduce women and lie to get his way.

  • Paul wants to be really clear: the God revealed through Jesus is totally different than Zeus.

  • His basic character traits are faithfulness and truth,

  • which means the Christian way of life will be about truth also, which will be a real change for these Cretans.

  • Paul then addresses Titus with a two-fold task.

  • He says the first one is to appoint new leaders for each church community, a team of what he calls "elders",

  • mature husbands or fathers whose way of life is totally different from Cretan culture.

  • They are to be known for integrity, total devotion to Jesus, for self-control and generosity, both in their families and in the community at large.

  • These new leaders are to teach the good news about Jesus and replace the corrupt leaders who need to be confronted.

  • That is Titus' second task.

  • Paul identifies the teachers as those of the circumcision.

  • In other words, they were ethnically Jewish Cretans who said that they followed Jesus but,

  • similar to the problems in Galatia, these people demanded that non-Jewish Christians be circumsized

  • and follow the laws of the Torah if they really wanted to become followers of the Jewish Messiah.

  • Paul says that they are obsessed with Jewish myths and human commands.

  • To top it off, they are just in the church leadership business to make money.

  • So Paul, in a brilliant move, pulls a quote from an ancient Cretan poet, Epimenides,

  • who was very frank and honest about the character of his own people.

  • He said Cretans are always liars, vicious beasts, and lazy gluttons.

  • They blur the lines between true and false, between good and evil and they are just in it for the money.

  • So while these leaders claim to know God, their Cretan way of life denies him.

  • They have to be dealt with.

  • This leads Paul into the next section.

  • Because of these corrupt leaders, many Christians in these churches now have homes and personal lives that are a total wreck

  • In three different times, Paul highlights the result of all this: the message about Jesus is discredited.

  • Their non-Christian neighbors now have good cause to make evil accusations.

  • All of this makes the teaching about God our Savior totally unattractive and not compelling to anybody.

  • So Paul paints a picture of the ideal Cretan household that is devoted to Jesus.

  • It would be elderly men and women who are full of integrity and self-control,

  • so they can become models of character to the young people.

  • The young women should not be sleeping around and avoiding marriage, as was fashionable on Crete at the time.

  • Rather, they should be looking for faithful partners so they can raise stable, healthy families.

  • The young men are to do the same.

  • They are to be known as productive, healthy citizens.

  • Christian slaves on Crete were in a unique position.

  • We know that, because of the gospel, they were treated as equals in Paul's church communities.

  • However there was a danger that they would use that equality as license to disrespect their masters

  • and then become associated with slave rebellions,

  • which would further discredit the Christian message.

  • You can see Paul negotiating a fine line here.

  • He believes that the gospel about Jesus needs to prove its redemptive power in the public square

  • if it is really going to transform Cretan culture.

  • That is not going to happen through social upheaval or by Christians cloistering away from urban life.

  • The Christian message will be compelling to Cretans when Christians fully participate in public life,

  • when their lives and homes look similar on the surface

  • because after a closer look, their neighbors will discover that Christians live by a totally different value system

  • out of devotion to a totally different God.

  • That is the difference that Paul beautifully summarizes at the end of chapter 2.

  • He says the value system driving the Christian Way of life

  • is God's generous grace which appeared in the person of Jesus and will appear again at his return.

  • This grace was demonstrated when Jesus gave up his honor to die a shameful death on behalf of his enemies

  • so that he could rescue and redeem them.

  • It is that same grace that calls God's people to say, "No!" to corrupt ways of life

  • that are inconsistent with the generous love of God.

  • Paul then zooms out from the Christian household to a vision of Christians living like new humans in Cretan society.

  • Of all people, Christians should be known as the ideal citizens:

  • peaceable, generous, obedient to authorities, known for pursuing the common good.

  • This is really different from how Cretans grew up.

  • How are Christians supposed to sustain this countercultural way of life?

  • Paul believes the power source is the transforming love of the three and one God announced in the gospel.

  • He explores this with a really beautiful poem.

  • He says God's kindness and love are what saved us, despite ourselves,

  • so that through the Holy Spirit, God washed, rebirthed and renewed people.

  • Through Jesus, He has provided a way for people to be declared right before him.

  • All of his opens up eternal life.

  • That is, a new future in the new creation.

  • This living story is so powerful it can produce new kinds of people.

  • Paul is convinced that Spirit-empowered faithfulness to the teachings of Jesus

  • will declare God's grace all over the island of Crete and all over the world.

  • Paul concludes by promising to send backup for Titus, either Artemas or Tychicus

  • Then he says hello to their common friends.

  • And so the letter ends.

  • The letter of Titus shows us Paul's missionary strategy

  • for churches to become agents of transformation within their communities.

  • It will not happen by waging a culture war or by assimilating to the Cretan way of life.

  • Rather, he calls these Christians to wisely participate in Cretan culture.

  • They need to reject what is corrupt but also embrace what is good there.

  • If they can learn to live peaceably and devote themselves to Jesus and to the common good,

  • Christians will, in his words, "Show the beauty of the message about our saving God."

  • That is what the letter to Titus is all about.

Paul's letter to Titus.

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