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Video of this sermon is also available on YouTube: How Paul Made Decisions – Titus 3:12-15
Summary:
Paul had to decide whether to replace Titus with Tychicus or Artemas (3:12). Since he is our pattern for living in the dispensation of grace, he is our pattern for making decisions.
Christians shouldn’t decide things like the king of Babylon did. He sacrificed an animal to please his god, thinking that his god would be so pleased he’d tell him what to decide to do by the shape or color of the liver (Ezek. 21:20,21). You wouldn’t do that, but it is just as superstitious to make decisions based on horoscopes and fortune tellers, etc.
Abraham’s servant struck a deal with God to get Him to show him which wife to choose for Isaac (Gen. 24:14), and God honored this method of deciding things (v.15). But that’s because He had a specific wife in mind for Isaac. But a woman living in the dispensation of grace is “at liberty to be married to whom she will; only in the Lord” (I Cor. 7:39).
Other Christians put out a fleece to make decisions (Judges 6:36-38). But Gideon wasn’t trying to decide what to do. He knew God wanted him to save Israel, He told him so. He wanted a sign to confirm it. But God’s not giving such signs today, for “the Jews require a sign” (I Cor. 1:22), and God isn’t dealing with the nation of Israel any more.
Some other Christians listen for “a still small voice” (I Ki. 19:12). But that verse comes right after Elijah called fire down from heaven in a stupendous display in the previous chapter. After he was discouraged that the display didn’t make Ahab turn to God, God showed him an earthquake and a fire, and told him that God isn’t in powerful things like that, but in his still small voice. God’s power is always in His Word, no matter how small the voice that speaks it. So listening for voices is no way to help you make a decision!
Still other Christians pray about their decisions and look for a feeling of peace to confirm that they made the right call (Col. 3:15). But Jonah made a bad decision, yet had such peace about it he could sleep in a raging storm (Jonah 1:4,5). No, Paul was telling the Colossians to forgive others as God forgave them (Col. 3:13-15), by making peace with them that He never takes away. That’s the peace he wants to rule your heart when you have a dispute with someone. Forgive them and make peace with them, a peace you’ll never take away.
God sees us as adult sons (Gal. 4:4-6), and expects us to make adult decisions on our own. Paul “determined” to winter in Nicopolis (3:12) after weighing all of the determining factors That’s what adult sons do! Barnabas “determined” to take Mark along on a trip, but Paul “thought not good” to take him (Acts 15:36-38). Both made their decisions based on their previous experience with Mark (Barnabas as his uncle [Col. 4:10]), another thing adult sons do! Paul made the decision to replace Mark with Timothy because he came recommended by men he trusted (Acts 16:1-3), and we should make adult decisions based on recommendations as well.
Good counsel from our brethren in the Lord also helps make decisions (Acts 19:30), and even from savvy unbelievers (v. 31) for “the children of this world are in their generation wiser than the children of light” (Lu. 16:8). If after all that you still don’t know what to decide, take a “wait and see” attitude as Paul did (Phil. 2:19-23 cf. I Cor. 16:6).
“Zenas” (Tit. 3:13) wasn’t a lawyer of the law of Moses, but a lawyer of civil law in Rome. Paul was in and out of prison so much he needed one! It’s okay to hire a lawyer in this dispensation, but not in the Tribulation (Mt. 10:19). Paul picked Apollos to be with Titus in Crete for he was “mighty” in the Old Testament (Acts 18:24), and there were legalizers pressing the Law in Crete (Tit. 1:10).
“Let nothing be wanting unto them” (3:13) means to take care of their financial and material needs. God’s people usually did that for ministers, a good work, but Paul says “let our’s also” (our ministers) learn to provide for their own good works that they “be not unfruitful” in good works for the necessary uses of providing for their own necessities.
Some Christians you can only love “in the faith” (3:15), but with God’s “grace” it can be done. He loves and accepts us by His grace, and expects us to do the same for others.
Summary:
The “foolish questions” Paul is warning Titus about are questions about the Law. You know that because he mentions the law in this verse (v.9) and because of the context. Everyone knows we should maintain good works (v.8), but some in Crete were saying to get believers to do good works that you have to put them under the Law. So they constantly affirmed the Law! Paul says grace (v.7) should be constantly affirmed.
But when grace believers affirm grace, those who teach the Law always question it. We know their questions are “foolish” because that’s what Paul called the Galatians (twice!) who had gone back to the Law (Gal. 3:1-5). Fools are people who don’t obey God (I Sam. 13:13; Mt. 7:24-26; Gal. 3:1), and when you return to the law you’re not obeying the truth (3:1)
“Genealogies” (3:9) were part of the Law, so Paul said to avoid them too. They were needed in time past to determine who could serve God (Neh. 7:64), but you don’t have to be a Levite today to serve God, so genealogies are not needed!
Those who were teaching the Law were causing “contentions,” which should also be avoided (v.9). Those contentions were caused by pride (Pr. 13:10), Jewish pride in the Law (Rom. 2:17,18). This was a problem in Ephesus too (II Tim. 2:14), and the answer in both cities was “rightly dividing the word” (II Tim. 2:15) and realizing we’re not under the law (Rom. 6:15). So strivings about the law are “unprofitable” when it comes to maintaining good works (Tit. 3:9).
The Law used to profit the Jews who were under it, for God blessed them with health and wealth if they were good. Wouldn’t you maintain good works knowing you’d be rewarded like that? Of course, God is not doing that today, but if you think He is, the Law will become unprofitable to you because you’ll think God is letting you down! That’ll make you quit doing good works, or at least discourage you.
Paul says the Law is “vain,” which connects it to idolatry (I Sam. 12:21; Isa. 44:9 cf. Ps. 115:4,5; Jer. 16:19,20). Paul uses the word vain because the Jews had made a god out of the Law. If you think that can’t happen to something God gave, see II Kings 18:1-4.
People still worship the Law today, insisting we are under it, and they are stubborn about it. So Paul says to admonish them twice, then reject them (3:10). Heretics teach heresy, which is a doctrine contrary to established doctrine that has been accepted by God’s people. The Jews accused Paul of it, but he believed their established doctrine of the Law (Acts 24:14). He just taught that Gentiles weren’t under it! But for grace believers to return to the Law was heresy, and Paul says to reject heretics after two admonitions.
Admonitions are primarily the pastor’s job (I Thes. 5:12,13), but all grace believers know we’re not under the Law and so can admonish heretics (Rom. 15:14).
But remember, admonitions should be gentle (II Thes. 3:14, 15), and one of the gentlest ways we admonish one another is in the hymns we sing (Col. 3:16).
Heretics must be rejected after two admonitions because if they don’t show any inkling of being open to the truth, you are wasting the time you should be redeeming (Eph. 5:16).
“Subverted” (3:12) means to turn something upside down. They accused Paul of turning the world upside down (Acts 17:6), but he was not subverting anyone. And once his doctrine of grace was established, to teach contrary to what he taught was subversive! When Paul started preaching grace to Gentiles, some Jews didn’t like it and raised a fuss, so the apostles met with Paul at the Jerusalem council (Acts 15). They recognize Paul’s gospel and so wrote to the Gentiles to say they hadn’t authorized the “subverting” that those Jews were trying to cause in the Gentiles (Acts 15:24).
Paul says those who teach the Law to those under grace “sinneth” and condemn themselves with their words (3:11). They won’t admit that they condemn themselves with their words, but anyone who knows grace will know the Law when they hear it. Do you?
After high school, I worked in a huge plant that employed thousands. Four gals from my high school worked there also, so we began sharing lunch breaks. However, one of them was constantly negative. Nearly everything out of her mouth was a complaint about something or someone, and it had a negative effect on the others in the group. It was depressing just listening to it all. After nearly a week, I decided I simply wouldn’t be around them any more.
God’s children of faith are not immune to a complaining spirit. When Moses was sent back to Egypt to deliver Israel out of cruel slavery, the Israelites repeatedly complained. Even a chance at freedom should have brought appreciation. But after finally being miraculously released, Israel murmured (meaning “to grumble”) against Moses when Pharaoh’s armies pursued them. Later “the people murmured against Moses” over a lack of water (Ex. 15:24). Then while in “the wilderness of Sin,” they murmured over a lack of food (16:1-4). It had become a pattern of life.
When God promised victory over the inhabitants in Canaan, they once again murmured in disbelief that God would give the victory (Num. 14). God’s anger was so kindled that an entire generation, except for Joshua and Caleb, perished without seeing the Promised Land. Paul refers to this in 1 Corinthians 10:10 warning the believers: “Neither murmur ye, as some of them also murmured, and were destroyed of the destroyer.”
Complaining is a dangerous, negative habit. It embitters the soul, sours the spirit, ignores the rich blessings of God, and robs one of the joy of life. It also unnecessarily makes life miserable for those around us, becomes a poor testimony to the lost, and poisons our outlook on life. Perhaps, worst of all, it spreads like an outbreak of the flu to others, who, in turn, mirror this negativity.
Simply put, God hates a complaining spirit. Paul warns the saints at Philippi saying, “Do all things without murmurings and disputings: that ye may be blameless and harmless, the sons of God, without rebuke, in the midst of a crooked…nation, among whom ye shine as lights in the world” (Phil. 2:14-15). It is not possible for us to be blameless before the Lord nor man if we have a complaining spirit. Ask someone today to hold you accountable any time you are being negative, then purposely practice being positive in your speech and outlook.
Some of our Two Minutes articles were written many years ago by Pastor C. R. Stam for publication in newspapers. When many of these articles were later compiled in book form, Pastor Stam wrote this word of explanation in the Preface:
"It should be borne in mind that the newspaper column, Two Minutes With the Bible, has now been published for many years, so that local, national and international events are discussed as if they occurred only recently. Rather than rewrite or date such articles, we have left them just as they were when first published. This, we felt, would add to the interest, especially since our readers understand that they first appeared as newspaper articles."
To this we would add that the same is true for the articles written by others that we continue to add, on a regular basis, to the Two Minutes library. We hope that you'll agree that while some of the references in these articles are dated, the spiritual truths taught therein are timeless.
Two Minutes with the Bible is now available on Alexa devices. Full instructions here.
Summary:
When Paul says something was “shed” on us (3:6), he means the grace of God exhibited in the kindness and love He showed (v.4) in saving us by His mercy and grace (v.5). We know this because about the only other time Paul used the word shed was to say that “the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost” (Rom. 5:5). God the Father planned our salvation, God the Son accomplished it on the cross, and God the Holy Ghost sheds God’s love on us and “renew”s us (Tit. 3:5) when we believe the gospel.
When the Spirit renewed you, He made you a new man (Col. 3:10a). But as you live your life and sin and fail to serve God as you should, you fall back into living like your old man. When that happens, you must renew yourself “in knowledge” (Col. 3:10b), a knowledge of God’s rightly divided Word, until you reflect “the image of Him that created him”—Christ, the maker of your new man.
When Paul says God shed His love on us “abundantly,” that’s the adverb form of the verb abound. “Abound” means overflowing (Phil. 4:18), and just as the Philippians met all Paul’s needs and then some, God’s grace meets all our spiritual needs and then some!
To be “justified” (Tit. 3:7) means to be made just. The word “just” speaks of exactness, as when God insisted His people use “just” weights when buying and selling (Lev. 19:35,36). In the same way, God demands that we have exactly no sins to let us into heaven. That’s a problem since we’re not sinless, and so cannot be just with God (Job 25:4-6; Ps. 143:1,2). But God the Father’s “righteous servant” Jesus Christ justifies us when we come to know Him (Isa. 53:11).
Paul says that God justifies us, “that being justified by His grace, we should be made heirs” (Tit. 3:7). We’d all like to be Bill Gates’ heir, but only his children are his heirs. But “we are the children of God. And if children, then heirs; heirs of God” (Rom. 8:17). But what do we inherit from God?
Well, in the beginning God created two things, heaven and earth, which worked out nice because He has two heirs, Israel and the Body of Christ. God promised the father of Israel he’d inherit the earth (Rom. 4:13), specifically the kingdom of heaven on earth (James 1:1 cf. 2:5), from which they will rule the earth as kings in the kingdom (Rev. 5:9, 10)
But God also owns the kingdom of heaven in heaven, the one we can’t go to without being “changed” because it is beyond the stars (I Cor. 15:50-52). That’s our inheritance, but that’s not the best part of our inheritance! The best part of Israel’s inheritance is that Abraham and his seed will have to live forever to possess the earth forever (Gen. 13:15), and the best part of our inheritance is that we’ll have to live forever to possess ours! That’s why Paul says we are heirs “according to the hope of eternal life” (Tit. 3:7).
Now if you’re not saved and are thinking that it is too good to be true that we can have eternal life by grace and not by any works of righteousness of our own (Tit. 3:5), Paul knew you’d think that, so says that it is “a faithful saying” (Tit. 3:8). That means you can depend on it, unlike the “faithless” apostles upon whom the man with the demon-possessed son could not depend (Mark 9:17-19). It was also a faithful saying that Christ came to save sinners (I Tim. 1:15), and with this faithful saying here in Titus 3:9, we learn how He planned to save them—by grace without works.
That’s why Paul says these things should be “affirmed,” a word that is the opposite of deny (Lu. 22:56-59; Acts 12:13-15; 25:18,19). Paul knew that many would deny salvation by grace so he says to affirm it “constantly.”
The reason it should be affirmed constantly is “that” they which have believed might be careful to maintain good works (Eph. 3:8). The way to get believers to do good works is to constantly remind them that they are saved without good works. Grace puts you on spot, saying, “God did this for you, what will you do for Him?” We should be “careful” to maintain good works (Tit. 3:8), or full of care about it. Paul says this is “profitable”—and he knew about profit and loss (Gal. 1:14 cf. Phil. 3:7). He lived for eternity. Do you?
When we say that God is holy, what does that mean to you? Pure, yes. But the definition of holiness is not exhausted by purity. When the angels around the throne of God constantly say, “Holy, Holy, Holy” (Isa. 6:3; Rev. 4:8), they aren’t just saying “Purity, Purity, Purity,” but more than that. The word “holy” means to be set apart. When the Scriptures declare that God is holy (Psa. 99:9), it means that He is not like any other. There is no one like Him. He is matchless and incomparable. No one is His equal. He is unique in Himself and His Person, unsurpassed in beauty, worth, and perfection. He is set apart unto Himself. As it’s been said, “God is always the greatest thing in existence.”
When the Bible refers to “the holy Scriptures” (2 Tim. 3:15), “holy” means much the same thing. The Bible is not like any other thing. There is no other book like it. It has no equal. It is incomparable, unsurpassed in its beauty, worth, and perfection. The Bible is set apart from all other books. It is the Word of God.
Some of our Two Minutes articles were written many years ago by Pastor C. R. Stam for publication in newspapers. When many of these articles were later compiled in book form, Pastor Stam wrote this word of explanation in the Preface:
"It should be borne in mind that the newspaper column, Two Minutes With the Bible, has now been published for many years, so that local, national and international events are discussed as if they occurred only recently. Rather than rewrite or date such articles, we have left them just as they were when first published. This, we felt, would add to the interest, especially since our readers understand that they first appeared as newspaper articles."
To this we would add that the same is true for the articles written by others that we continue to add, on a regular basis, to the Two Minutes library. We hope that you'll agree that while some of the references in these articles are dated, the spiritual truths taught therein are timeless.
Two Minutes with the Bible is now available on Alexa devices. Full instructions here.