Titus: A Summary
Paul's letter to Titus is the third of the Pastoral Epistles, written to a trusted co-worker whom Paul had left on the island of Crete to complete the organization of the churches there and to appoint elders in every town. Shorter than either letter to Timothy, Titus is nonetheless dense with theological and practical instruction. Its governing concern is the relationship between sound doctrine and godly living — the conviction that what is believed shapes how one behaves, and that the grace of God that saves is the same grace that trains its recipients in righteousness. The letter is, in essence, a theology of gospel transformation applied to the life of the church. Salutation and the Foundation of the Ministry (1:1–4) Paul's opening salutation is unusually expansive, functioning almost as a compressed theological statement. He identifies himself as a servant of God and apostle of Jesus Christ, writing in service of the faith of God's elect and their knowledge of t...