The Bible Recap - Day 353 (Titus 1-3) - Year 4
Episode Date: December 19, 2022SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! - Join our PATREON family for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Video: 1 Peter Overview... - The Bible Recap Study Guide and Journal SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
We finished the 18th book in our New Testament plan and the 57th book in our whole Bible
plan.
Paul wrote this letter today to his friend and coworker who had been assigned to do ministry
on a Greek island.
Turf job. But for real, it wasn't exactly a cakewalk.
The people on the island of Crete have a challenging culture that goes against the grain of
Christ teachings, and all of this is being reinforced by some local leaders who are
apparently on a power trip. So it's not all sunsets and suvlockey for our friend Titus.
Let's see how Paul encourages him to handle things.
In chapter one, Paul reminds Titus that he's positioned him over the church in Crete,
so that he can get things running in ship shape.
But when you're dropped down at a relatively new church in the middle of a bunch of bad leaders and false teachers,
it's not exactly an easy task.
This is a lot like the problems Timothy was facing yesterday, so we'll see some overlap in Paul's advice.
It's interesting to know what advice makes both books,
because that gives us an idea of what things are situational and what things are universal.
First, Paul gives Titus guidelines for how to choose elders, the people who will be the
governing board of leaders over the church and its decisions. It's vital that they reflect
Christ not just in their doctrine, but in their lives as well, because people are going
to be looking for guidance and truth. In addition to that, an elder not only has to know the truth and teach it, but he has to be willing to correct
those in the church who teach it wrongly. This is a big problem in the church at Crete.
There are lots of false teachers, especially among the Jews who are in the church, the circumcision
party, as Paul calls them. And some of the local Cretans, and yes, that's where we got the slang
term, are acting like, well, Cretans, they're debatuous and foolish and vulgar.
Their lives prove that they don't actually love God.
So Paul tells Titus to rebuke the people in the church who act like that,
because if and when a person actually receives a rebuke,
their faith increases and their doctrine is refined.
Then Paul spends all of chapter 2,
unpacking what it looks like to demonstrate godliness
and good doctrine in a culture that doesn't get it at all.
He gives some broad counsel to different groups of people in the church, primarily addressing
the areas where they might struggle.
Even though he's sectioned people off by age and gender, he's not making a division so
much as a distinction.
What I mean by that is, he tells the younger women to love their husbands and children,
but this doesn't mean older women are free to hate their families, and he tells young
men to be self-controlled, but this doesn't give the older guys a free pass at doing whatever
they want.
His counsel here is general in nature, because the greater purpose is to point them all
toward what it looks like to honor God in the most basic institute, the family.
He wants them to live lives that are set apart in the eyes of outsiders, kind of like he
did himself when he took the Nazareth out in Corinth.
He tells them to adorn the doctrine of Christ to present their faith as beautiful to the
world.
Why?
Because God has poured out grace on them and grace changes everything.
Grace is a change agent.
God's grace brought them salvation, trained them to renounce sin and worldly passion, trained
them to be upright and godly even in the midst of a wicked culture.
God's grace reminds them to wait for the hope of Christ's return, because Christ is in
the process of purifying them for himself.
In chapter 3, Paul takes his message outside the home in the immediate culture and into
the larger realm of politics and leaders.
He says this is another area where the church needs to stand out.
We should demonstrate humble submission.
Our humility has its greatest opportunity to show up
when we disagree with someone.
It doesn't have much of a landing pad
if everyone is on the same page.
But when we disagree with someone,
that's where it has the opportunity to show up in the gaps.
And in those circumstances,
Paul says we should aim to speak evil of no one,
to avoid quarreling, to be gentle, and to show perfect courtesy toward all people.
Then he goes on to say how we can do that. By remembering, like verse 3 says,
that we ourselves were once foolish, disobedient, let astray, slaves to various passions and
pleasures, passing our days in malice and envy,
hated by others and hating one another.
Humility is remembering that we haven't always known at all like we currently do.
Right.
And Paul enriches our humility by reminding us that we weren't the ones who got ourselves to where we are today anyway.
We didn't bootstrap this one.
It was entirely 100% all the goodness and loving kindness of God our Savior.
Paul says, if you believe that, then be careful to live what you believe.
Aim for humility, aim for peace, and rebuke those who don't aim for peace.
He ends by reminding them to help others and be generous like God has been generous to them.
My God shot was in Paul's introduction today.
It's one of those phrases that's so easy to pass over that I'm sure I've missed it every
other time I've read this book.
It's in verses 2 through 3 where Paul is talking about eternal life and says, God who never
lies promised eternal life before the ages began and at the proper time manifested in
his word.
The gospel of our salvation has been on the lips of an eternal God before the ages
began. Nothing has thrown his plan off or set it back. Gospel of our salvation has been on the lips of an eternal God before the ages begin.
Nothing has thrown his plan off or set it back.
And at the right time, he said it all in motion, he catalyzed his plan.
Created the world, carried us through the fall, sent his son to earth to live as a divine
human who would die for the sins of a fallen humanity, so that we could be rescued and resurrected
into a perfection and a position we never would have had on our own.
We could be not just his creation, but his children, his heirs. There is one thing
I know, and I will plant my flag in it for all eternity. He's where the joy is.
Tomorrow we'll be reading the short book of First Peter. We've linked to a video overview
in the show notes, and it's a great way to spend the next seven minutes.
Our friends at chrysternbook.com are having a special promotion just for you, our TBR notes and it's a great wayslash the Bible Recap. Again, that's Recap 22 at Christianbook.com,
Boredslash the Bible Recap.
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