1 and 2 Timothy: Encouragement for Church Leaders
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About this ebook
Pastor John MacArthur will take you through the two short letters to Timothy, passage by passage, so that you can better understand Paul's instructions to church leaders and the cultural context that makes these letters so relevant today.
Timothy was a close associate of Paul who was facing problems within the church that he was leading in Ephesus. In these personal letters, Paul gives practical pastoral instruction to his protégé, highlighting godliness and holy living to help Timothy fulfill his calling and effectively carry out his important tasks in the church.
Paul's gentle encouragement in these letters challenges Timothy to persevere in his faith—a faith that might have been weakening under the pressure of the church and the persecution of the world. Paul's godly counsel was helpful not only to Timothy, a first-century Christian leader, but is also helpful to each of us as believers today.
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John F. MacArthur
Widely known for his thorough, candid approach to teaching God's Word, John MacArthur is a popular author and conference speaker. He has served as pastor-teacher of Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, California, since 1969. John and his wife, Patricia, have four married children and fifteen grandchildren. John's pulpit ministry has been extended around the globe through his media ministry, Grace to You, and its satellite offices in seven countries. In addition to producing daily radio programs for nearly two thousand English and Spanish radio outlets worldwide, Grace to You distributes books, software, and digital recordings by John MacArthur. John is chancellor of The Master's University and Seminary and has written hundreds of books and study guides, each one biblical and practical. Bestselling titles include The Gospel According to Jesus, Twelve Ordinary Men, Twelve Extraordinary Women, Slave, and The MacArthur Study Bible, a 1998 ECPA Gold Medallion recipient.
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1 and 2 Timothy - John F. MacArthur
1 & 2 TIMOTHY
MACARTHUR BIBLE STUDIES
© 2007 John F. MacArthur, Jr.
All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other—except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher.
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Produced with the assistance of the Livingstone Corporation. Project staff include Jake Barton, Betsy Todt Schmitt, and Andy Culbertson. Project editors: Mary Horner Collins, Amber Rae, and Len Woods.
Scripture quotations marked NKJV are taken from the The New King James Version®. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Unleashing God’s Truth, One Verse at a Time
is a trademark of Grace to You. All rights reserved.
Keys to the Text
material taken from the following sources:
1 Corinthians. MacArthur New Testament Commentary Series. Copyright © 1984, 1996 by John MacArthur. Published by Moody Press, Chicago, Illinois. Used by permission.
The MacArthur Study Bible (electronic ed.). John MacArthur, General Editor. Copyright © 1997 by Word Publishing. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
Nelson’s New Illustrated Bible Dictionary, Rev. ed. R. F. Youngblood, F. F. Bruce, R. K. Harrison, editors. Copyright © 1995 by Thomas Nelson Publishers. Used by permission.
Our Sufficiency in Christ (electronic ed.) Copyright © 1997 by John F. MacArthur. Published by Word Publishing: Dallas, Texas. Use by permission.
Cover Art by Holly Sharp Design
Interior Design and Composition by Joel Bartlett, Livingstone Corporation
ISBN-13: 978-0-7180-3514-3
ISBN-13: 978-0-7180-3533-4 (eBook)
Information about External Hyperlinks in this ebook
Please note that footnotes in this ebook may contain hyperlinks to external websites as part of bibliographic citations. These hyperlinks have not been activated by the publisher, who cannot verify the accuracy of these links beyond the date of publication.
EBOOK INSTRUCTIONS
In this ebook edition, please use your device’s note-taking function to record your thoughts wherever you see the bracketed instructions [Your Notes] or [Your Response Here]. Use your device’s highlighting function to record your response whenever you are asked to checkmark, circle, underline, or otherwise indicate your answer(s).
CONTENTS
Ebook Instructions
Introduction to 1 Timothy
1 Beware of False Doctrine!
1 Timothy 1:1–20
2 The Importance of Prayer
1 Timothy 2:1–8
3 The Role of Women
1 Timothy 2:9–15
4 Qualifications for Leadership
1 Timothy 3:1–16
5 False Teaching versus Truth
1 Timothy 4:1–16
6 Pastoral Responsibilities
1 Timothy 5:1–6:2
7 The Man of God
1 Timothy 6:3–21
Introduction to 2 Timothy
8 Not Ashamed
2 Timothy 1:1–18
9 Be Diligent
2 Timothy 2:1–26
10 Equipped for Good Works
2 Timothy 3:1–17
11 Preaching with Integrity
2 Timothy 4:1–5
12 Last Words
2 Timothy 4:6–22
INTRODUCTION TO 1 TIMOTHY
This is the first of two inspired letters Paul wrote to his beloved son in the faith. Timothy received his name, which means one who honors God,
from his mother (Eunice) and grandmother (Lois), devout Jews who became believers in the Lord Jesus Christ (2 Tim. 1:5). They taught Timothy the Old Testament Scriptures from his childhood (2 Tim. 3:15). His father was a Greek (Acts 16:1) who may have died before Timothy met Paul.
Timothy was from Lystra (Acts 16:1–3), a city in the Roman province of Galatia (part of modern Turkey). Paul led Timothy to Christ (1:2, 18; 1 Cor. 4:17; 2 Tim. 1:2), undoubtedly during his ministry in Lystra on his first missionary journey (Acts 14:6–23). When he revisited Lystra on his second missionary journey, Paul chose Timothy to accompany him (Acts 16:1–3). Although Timothy was very young (probably in his late teens or early twenties, since about fifteen years later Paul referred to him as a young man, 4:12), he had a reputation for godliness (Acts 16:2). Timothy was to be Paul’s disciple, friend, and co-laborer for the rest of the apostle’s life, ministering with him in Berea (Acts 17:14), Athens (Acts 17:15), and Corinth (Acts 18:5; 2 Cor. 1:19), and accompanying him on his trip to Jerusalem (Acts 20:4). He was with Paul in his first Roman imprisonment and went to Philippi (2:19–23) after Paul’s release. In addition, Paul frequently mentions Timothy in his epistles (Rom. 16:21; 2 Cor. 1:1; Phil. 1:1; Col. 1:1; 1 Thess. 1:1; 2 Thess. 1:1; Philem. 1). Paul often sent Timothy to churches as his representative (1 Cor. 4:17; 16:10; Phil. 2:19; 1 Thess. 3:2), and 1 Timothy finds him on another assignment, serving as pastor of the church at Ephesus (1:3). According to Hebrews 13:23, Timothy was imprisoned somewhere and released.
AUTHOR AND DATE
Many modernist critics delight in attacking the plain statements of Scripture and, for no good reason, deny that Paul wrote the Pastoral Epistles (1, 2 Tim., Titus). Ignoring the testimony of the letters themselves (1:1; 2 Tim. 1:1; Titus 1:1) and that of the early church (which is as strong for the Pastoral Epistles as for any of Paul’s epistles, except Romans and 1 Corinthians), these critics maintain that a devout follower of Paul wrote the Pastoral Epistles in the second century. As proof, they offer five lines of supposed evidence: (1) the historical references in the Pastoral Epistles cannot be harmonized with the chronology of Paul’s life given in Acts; (2) the false teaching described in the Pastoral Epistles is the fully developed Gnosticism of the second century; (3) the church organizational structure in the Pastoral Epistles is that of the second century and is too well developed for Paul’s day; (4) the Pastoral Epistles do not contain the great themes of Paul’s theology; and (5) the Greek vocabulary of the Pastoral Epistles contains many words not found in Paul’s other letters, nor in the rest of the New Testament.
While it is unnecessary to dignify such unwarranted attacks by unbelievers with an answer, occasionally such an answer does enlighten. Thus, in reply to the critics’ arguments, the following points are given: (1) This contention of historical incompatibility is valid only if Paul was never released from his Roman imprisonment mentioned in Acts. But he was released, since Acts does not record Paul’s execution, and Paul himself expected to be released (Phil. 1:19, 25–26; 2:24; Philem. 22). The historical events in the Pastoral Epistles do not fit into the chronology of Acts because they happened after the close of the Acts narrative, which ends with Paul’s first imprisonment in Rome. (2) While there are similarities between the heresy of the Pastoral Epistles and second-century Gnosticism, there are also important differences. Unlike second-century Gnosticism, the false teachers of the Pastoral Epistles were still within the church (see 1:3–7), and their teaching was based on Judaistic legalism (1:7; Titus 1:10, 14; 3:9). (3) The church organizational structure mentioned in the Pastoral Epistles is, in fact, consistent with that established by Paul (Acts 14:23; Phil. 1:1). (4) The Pastoral Epistles do mention the central themes of Paul’s theology, including the inspiration of Scripture (2 Tim. 3:15–17); election (2 Tim. 1:9; Titus 1:1–2); salvation (Titus 3:5–7); the deity of Christ (Titus 2:13); His mediatory work (1 Tim. 2:5); and substitutionary atonement (2:6). (5) The different subject matter in the Pastoral Epistles required a different vocabulary from that in Paul’s other epistles. Certainly a pastor today would use a different vocabulary in a personal letter to a fellow pastor than he would in a work of systematic theology.
The idea that a pious forger
wrote the Pastoral Epistles faces several further difficulties: (1) The early church did not approve of such practices and surely would have exposed this as a ruse, if there had actually been one (see 2 Thess. 2:1–2; 3:17). (2) Why forge three letters that include similar material and no deviant doctrine? (3) If a counterfeit, why not invent an itinerary for Paul that would have harmonized with Acts? (4) Would a later, devoted follower of Paul have put the words of 1 Timothy 1:13, 15 into his master’s mouth? (5) Why would he include warnings against deceivers (2 Tim. 3:13; Titus 1:10), if he himself were one?
The evidence seems clear that Paul wrote 1 Timothy and Titus shortly after his release from his first Roman imprisonment (about AD 62–64), and then wrote 2 Timothy from prison during his second Roman imprisonment (about AD 66–67), shortly before his death.
BACKGROUND AND SETTING
After being released from his first Roman imprisonment (see Acts 28:30), Paul revisited several of the cities in which he had ministered, including Ephesus. Leaving Timothy behind there to deal with problems that had arisen in the Ephesian church, such as false doctrine (1:3–7; 4:1–3; 6:3–5), disorder in worship (2:1–15), the need for qualified leaders (3:1–14), and materialism (6:6–19), Paul went on to Macedonia, from where he wrote Timothy this letter to help him carry out his task in the church (see 3:14–15).
HISTORICAL AND THEOLOGICAL THEMES
First Timothy is a practical letter containing pastoral instruction from Paul to Timothy (see 3:14–15). Since Timothy was well versed in Paul’s theology, the apostle had no need to give him extensive doctrinal instruction. This epistle does, however, express many important theological truths, such as the proper function of the law (1:5–11), salvation (1:14–16; 2:4–6); the attributes of God (1:17); the Fall (2:13–14); the person of Christ (3:16; 6:15–16); election (6:12); and the second coming of Christ (6:14–15).
INTERPRETIVE CHALLENGES
Scholars disagree over the identity of the false teachers (1:3) and the genealogies (1:4) involved in their teaching. What it means to be delivered to Satan
(1:20) has also been a source of debate. The letter contains key passages in the debate over the extent of the atonement (2:4–6; 4:10). Paul’s teaching on the role of women (2:9–15) has generated much discussion, particularly his declaration that they are not to assume leadership roles in the church (2:11–12). How women can be saved by bearing children (2:15) has also confused many. Whether the fact that an elder must be the husband of one wife
excludes divorced or unmarried men has been disputed, as well as whether Paul refers to deacons’ wives or deaconesses (3:11). Those who believe Christians can lose their salvation cite 4:1 as support for their view. There is a question about the identity of the widows in 5:3–16—are they needy women ministered to by the church, or an order of older women ministering to the church? Does double honor
accorded to elders who rule well (5:17–18) refer to respect or money? These will all be dealt with in the notes provided by the passages.
NOTES
[Your Response Here]
1
BEWARE OF FALSE DOCTRINE!
1 Timothy 1:1–20
DRAWING NEAR
Paul had a miraculous encounter with Christ that turned his life around. He calls himself an insolent man
who had received God’s mercy and grace. What person do you know (or have heard about) who has an amazing before-and-after
testimony of how God transformed his or her life? What about that person’s story encourages you?
[Your Response Here]
Why is it important to know what you believe, and why you believe it?
[Your Response Here]
As you begin this study, ask God to show you more about His mercy and grace.
[Your Response Here]
THE CONTEXT
In two brief verses