Titus
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Lexham Research Commentary

Titus

Douglas Mangum

Author and Series Editor

with E. Tod Twist

Derek R. Brown

Volume Editor

Jim LePage

Graphic Designer

Lexham Press, 2013

Preface

The variety of views in biblical studies presents a maze of complexity. There are often as many interpretations as interpreters. With the Lexham Research Commentaries, we start from the premise that the best solution is to provide a map of the maze. The series is designed to be a research tool. Each guide presents a wide range of interpretive issues raised by Bible scholars. These resources meet the needs of those studying the Bible in academic settings, but the broad scope of coverage also makes them useful for preaching preparation.

The research engages with critical biblical scholarship and explains scholarly interpretations. Undoubtedly you will agree with some interpretations, disagree with others, and encounter some for the first time. Whatever the case, these are issues you will run across. We’re here to guide you through this rough terrain.

Each volume in the series links to standard scholarly works on the Bible. The authors of the Lexham Research Commentaries have made no attempt to identify where particular interpretations fall along the theological or denominational spectrum. This is a mark of the diversity of biblical interpretation, not a mark of implicit endorsement by the guides’ authors. Interpreters from different theological perspectives often have conflicting views on the same texts. As you encounter these views, we urge you to keep the biblical text itself central to your study.

The Lexham Research Commentaries provide the information you need to reach your own conclusions. Our summary will explain the issue and the main options. The annotated links will point you to a variety of resources that engage the issue in more depth. If all you need is an overview, the guide alone will give you easy access to the essential information. If you need to research a passage in depth, we will point you to the most relevant discussions among the thousands of available resources in the Logos library. Research takes time. The Lexham Research Commentaries save time.

Introduction to Titus

Message

Titus 2:1 summarizes the key message of Paul’s letter to Titus: “speak the things which are fitting for sound instruction.” In the letter, Paul expresses the need to organize the church on Crete through the appointment of elders and to correct the damage caused by false teachers’ instruction (Titus 1:11). The antidote to false teaching is sound teaching. Thus, Titus is to promote sound instruction (Titus 2:1) and appoint leaders who are capable of defending “the faithful message” against opponents (Titus 1:9). Sound teaching and godly living are central components of this message and its purpose of countering the false teaching on Crete.

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About Titus

The Logos Research Commentary is your starting point for study and research. It surveys all the relevant literature on a passage and brings the summary back to you.

This guide summarizes a broad range of views on a particular passage—views you may or may not agree with, but in all cases, views you will encounter as you critically study the text. A complete introduction to each literary unit in the Bible, it will bring new thoroughness to your research.

The Logos Research Commentary gives you the tools you need to find fast answers. It summarizes content from your books and organizes it in an easy-to-follow format. It gives you the direction to begin your study.

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