Best Resources on Titus
As Titus struggles to help the church on the island of Crete, his experienced mentor, Paul, writes to give him advice. Paul had left Titus in Crete to appoint church leaders and to oppose false teachers (Titus 1:5, 10, 16). In this letter, Paul shows the connection between right belief and right action, emphasizing that God’s graciousness should prompt us to be godly people (2:11–15).
—Faithlife Study Bible, Lexham Press
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Best Commentaries on Titus
William D. Mounce, Word Biblical Commentary (WBC), Thomas Nelson, 2000, 786 pp.
Engage some of the hottest issues in contemporary society with this exhaustive treatment of 1 Timothy, 2 Timothy, and Titus. Defending traditional interpretations on multiple issues, Robert Mounce provides an intense examination of the text and presents multiple excursus on topics such as qualifications for leadership and authorship.
- Level: Advanced
- Type: Technical
Philip H. Towner, New International Commentary on the New Testament (NICNT), Eerdmans, 2006, 934 pp.
Towner sets out the rationale for his historical approach, questions certain assumptions of recent critical scholarship, and establishes the uniqueness and individuality of each letter. Significantly, Towner’s work displays unprecedented interaction with four recent major commentaries on these Pauline letters. Centered on an outstanding translation of the Greek text and including thorough footnotes, bibliographical citations, and indexes, Towner’s commentary on Timothy and Titus is sure to become a standard reference for busy pastors, students, and scholars.
- Level: Intermediate
- Type: Expository
George W. Knight III, New International Greek Testament Commentary (NIGTC), Eerdmans, 1992, 548 pp.
This is a thorough, full-scale English commentary on the Greek text of 1 & 2 Timothy and Titus. While author George W. Knight gives careful attention to the comments of previous interpreters of the text, both ancient and modern, his emphasis is on exegesis of the Greek text itself and on the flow of the argument in each of these three epistles.
- Level: Advanced
- Type: Technical
I. Howard Marshall, International Critical Commentary (ICC)
For over one hundred years, the International Critical Commentary series has held a special place among works on the Bible. It has sought to bring together all the relevant aids to exegesis—linguistic and textual no less than archaeological, historical, literary, and theological—with a level of comprehension and quality of scholarship unmatched by any other series.
- Level: Advanced
- Type: Technical
Gordon D. Fee, Understanding the Bible (UtB), Baker, 2011, 352 pp.
1 & 2 Timothy, Titus explores Paul’s heartfelt concern for the newly planted churches and the leaders who served in them. These letters of compassion, instruction, and admonition were meant to instruct and strengthen the leaders and the members of these churches. Filled with great insight taken from the original language, this volume will help you understand more deeply the pastoral love of Paul.
- Level: Basic
- Type: Expository
Best Books on Titus
Cohesion and Structure in the Pastoral Epistles
Van Neste examines 1 & 2 Timothy and Titus to determine the boundaries of each discourse unit using cohesion shift analysis. The cohesion of each unit is then analyzed, noting common devices from the ancient epistolary genre, rhetorical devices, lexical and semantic repetition and symmetrical patterns. Van Neste also focuses on connections between the units in the letter—connections between contiguous units, semantic chains, and the grouping of units into larger sections. Thus the variety of connections across and throughout the letter are highlighted. Van Neste concludes that there is a high degree of cohesion in each of the Pastoral Epistles at both the micro and macro levels.
Learn moreSheffield New Testament Guides: The Pastoral Epistles
1 & 2 Timothy and Titus were once read as individual collections of traditional material—liturgical formulae, lists of virtues and vices, household codes, and codes for Church order—but more recent studies have elucidated the coherence of each epistle. This volume exhorts readers through explicit and implicit, positive and negative examples, and through arguments that seek to ground ethics theologically and christologically. The author also highlights a question posed by contemporary scholars about the general philosophy of these epistles: Do they seek to adapt a faith that opposes the wisdom of the world into one that conforms to the world’s wisdom about good citizenship? This guide provides a critical introduction to the insights of recent scholarship and to the Epistles themselves.
Learn moreLexham Research Commentary: Titus
Paul’s instructions throughout the letter to Titus focus on the importance of sound teaching, which promotes right belief and, consequently, good deeds. 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. The antidote to false teaching is sound teaching.
Learn morePaul, the Pastoral Epistles, and the Early Church
Paul’s influence on the history of Christian life and theology is as profound as it is pervasive. A brief survey of almost 20 centuries of Christian thought and practice will confirm the enduring importance of Paul for the life of the church in the Roman and Protestant traditions of the West as well as the Orthodox traditions of the East. Even as Christianity, at the dawn of its third millennium, has become increasingly global and traditions have come to develop and intersect in new and complex ways, Paul’s place in the story of Christianity remains deeply rooted in the church’s theology, worship, and pastoral life. In both past and present, Paul’s influence on the Christian church can hardly be overestimated.
Learn moreInterpreting the Pauline Epistles, 2nd ed.
Leading Pauline studies expert Thomas Schreiner provides an updated guide to the exegesis of the New Testament epistles traditionally assigned to Paul. The first edition helped thousands of students dig deeper into studying the New Testament Epistles. This new edition is revised throughout to account for changes in the field and to incorporate the author’s maturing judgments. The book helps readers understand the nature of first-century letters, do textual criticism, investigate historical and introductory issues, probe theological context, and much more.
Learn moreBest courses on Titus
Mobile Ed: NT225 Survey of the Pastoral Epistles (5 hour course)
Explore the content and major themes of 1 & 2 Timothy and Titus with New Testament Professor Kenneth Waters Sr. You’ll examine the doctrine of salvation, learn the difference between “imminent” and “immanent” eschatology, gain background information on Timothy and Titus, and see the bigger picture of where and how these letters fit in with the rest of Paul’s journeys and our own spiritual formation.
Learn moreMobile Ed: NT222 Introducing the Epistles and Revelation: Their Setting and Message (12 hour course)
This course explores the books of Romans through Revelation with particular attention to their historical setting and culture. In addition to providing an overview of each book, topics such as authorship, audience, theology, major themes, presenting problems and pastoral strategies are discussed in depth.
Learn moreMobile Ed: NT276 Pauline Theology (11 hour course)
In NT276 Pauline Theology, Dr. Douglas J. Moo organizes Paul’s theology within the new realm of the gospel of Jesus Christ and the lives of Jesus’ followers. After comparing the new realm to the old realm of the law, Dr. Moo takes you on a journey from the inauguration of the new realm to its culmination, stopping to discuss the people of the new realm and how Jesus’ followers enter into, live within, and enjoy this new realm. This course provides you with a foundation to read, study, teach, and preach the message of the apostle Paul.
Learn moreMobile Ed: NT101 Introducing New Testament: Its Structure and Story (6 hour course)
Gain a better understanding of the New Testament's structure and themes with New Testament scholar Dr. Lynn Cohick. You'll examine elements such as historical context, writing techniques of the Gospels' authors, developments in the early Church, the settings of the Epistles, the genre of the book of Revelation, and the life of Jesus.
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