Commentary
After recalling Timothy's sincere faith, Paul tells him to fan into flame his ministry gift, refuse shame, and share in gospel suffering through God's power. The appeal is grounded in God's grace given before the ages and now revealed in Christ, who has abolished death and brought life and immortality to light. Paul then presents his own imprisonment as unashamed fidelity, charges Timothy to retain the pattern of sound words and guard the entrusted deposit by the Holy Spirit, and ends with a sharp contrast between deserters in Asia and the loyal Onesiphorus.
Paul summons Timothy to renew his ministry courage, reject shame over the gospel and Paul's chains, preserve the apostolic message, and accept suffering as part of faithful service, because God's saving purpose has been revealed in Christ and confirmed in Paul's own unashamed endurance.
1:6 Because of this I remind you to rekindle God's gift that you possess through the laying on of my hands. 1:7 For God did not give us a Spirit of fear but of power and love and self-control. 1:8 So do not be ashamed of the testimony about our Lord or of me, a prisoner for his sake, but by God's power accept your share of suffering for the gospel. 1:9 He is the one who saved us and called us with a holy calling, not based on our works but on his own purpose and grace, granted to us in Christ Jesus before time began, 1:10 but now made visible through the appearing of our Savior Christ Jesus. He has broken the power of death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel! 1:11 For this gospel I was appointed a preacher and apostle and teacher. 1:12 Because of this, in fact, I suffer as I do. But I am not ashamed, because I know the one in whom my faith is set and I am convinced that he is able to protect what has been entrusted to me until that day. 1:13 Hold to the standard of sound words that you heard from me and do so with the faith and love that are in Christ Jesus. 1:14 Protect that good thing entrusted to you, through the Holy Spirit who lives within us. 1:15 You know that everyone in the province of Asia deserted me, including Phygelus and Hermogenes. 1:16 May the Lord grant mercy to the family of Onesiphorus, because he often refreshed me and was not ashamed of my imprisonment. 1:17 But when he arrived in Rome, he eagerly searched for me and found me. 1:18 May the Lord grant him to find mercy from the Lord on that day! And you know very well all the ways he served me in Ephesus.
Observation notes
- Because of this' in 1:6 reaches back most naturally to Timothy's sincere faith in 1:5, so the exhortation arises from recognized grace, not suspicion that Timothy is unconverted.
- The paragraph repeatedly contrasts shame and bold fidelity: 'do not be ashamed' (1:8), 'I am not ashamed' (1:12), Onesiphorus 'was not ashamed' (1:16), against deserters in 1:15.
- Suffering is not treated as accidental. It is tied to the gospel (1:8), to Paul's divine appointment (1:11-12), and to the coming evaluation 'on that day' (1:12, 18).
- The theological center of the unit is 1:9-10, where exhortation is anchored in God's saving action, eternal purpose, grace in Christ, and Christ's historical appearing.
- The movement from 'gift' (1:6) to 'sound words' and 'good deposit' (1:13-14) shows that Timothy's ministry involves both empowered service and faithful preservation of apostolic teaching.
- The contrast between 'everyone in Asia deserted me' and Onesiphorus's persistent search in Rome gives the exhortation a concrete social setting of costly loyalty under pressure.
- Paul's confidence in 1:12 is relational ('I know whom I have believed') rather than merely conceptual; doctrinal preservation and personal trust are held together.
- The repeated entrustment language in 1:12 and 1:14 prepares for 2:2, where Timothy must in turn entrust the apostolic message to faithful men.
Structure
- 1:6-7 renewed charge: rekindle the gift because God's given Spirit is not characterized by cowardice but by power, love, and self-control.
- 1:8 practical implication: Timothy must not be ashamed of the gospel or Paul, but must share in suffering by God's power.
- 1:9-10 theological grounding: the gospel rests in God's pretemporal purpose and grace, now manifested in Christ's appearing, death's defeat, and the disclosure of life and immortality.
- 1:11-12 Pauline embodiment: Paul's appointment to gospel ministry explains his suffering, yet he remains unashamed because of his confidence in Christ's keeping power.
- 1:13-14 custodial charge: Timothy must retain the pattern of sound words and guard the good deposit through the indwelling Holy Spirit.
- 1:15-18 concrete contrasts: widespread desertion in Asia is set against Onesiphorus's loyal, unashamed service and mercy-worthy conduct.
Key terms
anazopyrein
Strong's: G329
Gloss: fan into flame, stir up afresh
The term implies not creating a gift ex nihilo but reviving and exercising what God has already given; Timothy's problem is timidity or neglect, not absence of calling.
charisma
Strong's: G5486
Gloss: gracious gift
It frames ministry as grace-bestowed responsibility, so Timothy must steward rather than invent his role.
deilia
Strong's: G1167
Gloss: cowardice, timidity
The negative term sharpens the moral issue: retreat from witness under pressure is not spiritual prudence when the gospel itself is at stake.
dynamis
Strong's: G1411
Gloss: power, capability
The term grounds endurance not in temperament but in divine enablement.
sophronismos
Strong's: G4995
Gloss: sound judgment, disciplined self-mastery
Boldness in this unit is not bravado; it is disciplined fidelity governed by clear-mindedness.
epaischynomai
Strong's: G1870
Gloss: be ashamed, shrink back in disgrace
It identifies the social pressure at work in the passage: public disgrace can lead to doctrinal and relational abandonment.
Syntactical features
Grounding causal chain
Textual signal: the sequence 'because of this' (1:6), 'for' (1:7), 'so'/'therefore' (1:8), and further explanatory clauses in 1:9-12
Interpretive effect: The exhortations are tightly reasoned, not loosely associated. Timothy's duty to suffer and guard the gospel is explicitly grounded in God's prior action and in Paul's example.
Adversative contrast
Textual signal: 'not ... but ...' in 1:7 and 1:9-10, and 'but I am not ashamed' in 1:12
Interpretive effect: These contrasts sharpen the alternatives: cowardice versus Spirit-enabled courage, works versus divine purpose and grace, suffering with shame versus suffering with confidence.
Participial and relative elaboration of salvation
Textual signal: 'who saved us and called us' followed by qualifying phrases in 1:9-10
Interpretive effect: Paul expands the content of the gospel before returning to exhortation, showing that the commands must be read through the lens of God's saving initiative and Christ's accomplished work.
Imperative cluster
Textual signal: 'rekindle' (1:6), 'do not be ashamed ... share in suffering' (1:8), 'hold' (1:13), 'guard' (1:14)
Interpretive effect: The repeated commands define Timothy's ministry obligation in four linked areas: inner renewal, public courage, doctrinal retention, and custodial protection.
Dative/instrumental dependence on divine means
Textual signal: 'by God's power' in 1:8 and 'through the Holy Spirit who dwells in us' in 1:14
Interpretive effect: The syntax prevents reading the charge as self-generated heroism; both suffering and guarding the deposit are possible only through divine enablement.
Textual critical issues
Object entrusted in 1:12
Variants: Some understand the phrase as 'my deposit' in the sense of what Paul has entrusted to Christ; others construe it as the deposit entrusted to Paul.
Preferred reading: The wording is retained as referring most naturally to what Paul has entrusted to Christ.
Interpretive effect: The difference affects nuance rather than doctrine: either Christ preserves Paul's life/work or Christ preserves the gospel trust associated with Paul. In either case the emphasis falls on Christ's faithful keeping.
Rationale: The relational statement 'I know whom I have believed' favors Paul's personal confidence in Christ as keeper of what he has committed to Him, while the wider context of entrusted-gospel language allows resonance with ministry stewardship.
Christ Jesus or Jesus Christ in 1:10
Variants: Witnesses differ in word order for the Savior's name.
Preferred reading: Either order yields the same referent; 'Christ Jesus' is suitable for the analysis.
Interpretive effect: No substantial interpretive difference results.
Rationale: This is a common variation in Pauline tradition and does not alter the unit's meaning.
Old Testament background
Isaiah 25:8
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The statement that Christ abolished death resonates with prophetic hopes of death's defeat, now said to be manifested through Christ's appearing.
Isaiah 52:7; 61:1
Connection type: pattern
Note: Paul's appointment as herald of the gospel fits the prophetic pattern of commissioned proclamation of God's saving reign.
Daniel 12:2
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The language of life and immortality brought to light through the gospel echoes Jewish expectation of eschatological life beyond death, now clarified in Christ.
Interpretive options
What is 'the gift of God' in 1:6?
- A specific ministerial gift or commissioning grace associated with Timothy's ordination.
- The Holy Spirit Himself given in a special sense through the laying on of hands.
- A broader reference to Timothy's salvation life and calling.
Preferred option: A specific ministerial gift or commissioning grace associated with Timothy's ordination.
Rationale: The link to laying on of hands, the surrounding ministry charges, and the shift to preaching, guarding teaching, and enduring hardship all point to ministry endowment rather than conversion itself.
What does 'Spirit' refer to in 1:7?
- The Holy Spirit given by God.
- A human disposition produced by God.
- A deliberately overlapping reference in which the Holy Spirit shapes the believer's disposition.
Preferred option: A deliberately overlapping reference in which the Holy Spirit shapes the believer's disposition.
Rationale: The immediate context of divine gift and the later reference to the indwelling Holy Spirit favor the Holy Spirit, yet the listed qualities describe the practical moral effect of His work in believers.
What is the 'deposit' in 1:12 and 1:14?
- In 1:12 Paul's own life, destiny, or ministry entrusted to Christ, and in 1:14 the gospel entrusted to Timothy.
- In both verses the gospel tradition as a sacred trust.
- In 1:12 God's deposit entrusted to Paul, and in 1:14 the same deposit entrusted onward to Timothy.
Preferred option: In 1:12 Paul's own life, destiny, or ministry entrusted to Christ, and in 1:14 the gospel entrusted to Timothy.
Rationale: The personal confidence language in 1:12 points toward Paul's committed trust in Christ, while 1:13-14 clearly concerns preserving apostolic teaching. The repeated deposit language intentionally links personal trust and ministerial stewardship without collapsing them.
Does 'everyone in Asia deserted me' in 1:15 mean literally every believer there?
- A literal statement covering all Christians in the province.
- A rhetorical generalization referring to the broad pattern of abandonment among Paul's Asian associates.
- A technical reference only to a small delegation from Asia present in Rome.
Preferred option: A rhetorical generalization referring to the broad pattern of abandonment among Paul's Asian associates.
Rationale: The naming of Phygelus and Hermogenes as examples, together with normal epistolary compression, suggests a sweeping but situational statement rather than a mathematically exhaustive census.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The unit must be read as flowing from Timothy's sincere inherited-and-personal faith in 1:5 and leading into the transmission mandate of 2:1-2. This keeps the exhortation tied to ministry perseverance, not to doubts about Timothy's regeneration.
mention_principles
Relevance: medium
Note: Paul's mention of 'all in Asia' and named deserters is situational, not a universal doctrinal statement about every Asian believer. The interpreter must not absolutize passing references beyond their rhetorical scope.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: Christ's appearing, abolition of death, and preservation of the entrusted deposit govern the paragraph. The exhortations are not bare moral demands but responses to Christ's decisive saving work.
moral
Relevance: high
Note: The text presents shame, loyalty, suffering, and guarding truth as morally charged responses to divine grace. This prevents readings that reduce the paragraph to abstract doctrine without ethical summons.
prophetic
Relevance: low
Note: Future-oriented references to 'that day' matter for accountability and mercy, but the unit is not primarily a prophecy passage. The phrase should inform perseverance and judgment awareness without speculative timetable building.
Theological significance
- God's saving call arises from His own purpose and grace, not from human works; yet that grace commissions Timothy to suffer, hold fast, and guard what has been entrusted to him.
- Christ's appearing makes visible what God purposed before the ages: the defeat of death and the disclosure of life and immortality through the gospel.
- Faithful ministry includes both bold witness and careful preservation of apostolic teaching; zeal and doctrinal custody are not alternatives here.
- Gospel fidelity may bring imprisonment, social disgrace, and abandonment, but such suffering does not signal defeat or divine neglect.
- The repeated reference to 'that day' places present endurance under the horizon of the Lord's final vindication and mercy.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The paragraph moves with unusual tightness from command to ground to example: rekindle, do not be ashamed, hold, guard; then Paul anchors those imperatives in God's saving action and in his own imprisonment without shame. The repeated shame language and the deposit imagery keep the passage concrete: the issue is public allegiance to a costly gospel and faithful custody of what has been received.
Biblical theological: Paul ties together pretemporal grace, Christ's historical appearing, death's overthrow, apostolic appointment, suffering, and the guarded transmission of teaching. The result is not a detached doctrine of salvation but a pastoral theology of endurance under pressure.
Metaphysical: The passage presents reality as governed by God's purpose rather than by human achievement or public verdicts. Death does not have the final word, and imprisonment does not define the truth of the gospel. Christ's appearing has altered the horizon within which ministry, suffering, and hope are to be understood.
Psychological Spiritual: Timothy's danger is not mere lack of confidence but the shrinking impulse produced by shame and pressure. Against that, the Spirit forms power, love, and disciplined steadiness. Courage in this paragraph is neither aggression nor bravado; it is lucid, loyal endurance.
Divine Perspective: God gives the gift, calls with holy purpose, reveals salvation in Christ, supplies power for suffering, and will judge on 'that day.' The prayer for Onesiphorus shows that the Lord sees and remembers costly acts of loyalty to a suffering servant.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: God's purpose and grace precede time and govern the saving work now disclosed in Christ.
Category: attributes
Note: God's power is seen in sustaining endurance and in Christ's conquest of death.
Category: character
Note: Grace and mercy frame the passage from salvation's origin to the prayer for mercy on that day.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: Christ's appearing brings into view what God's purpose had long held hidden.
Category: personhood
Note: Paul's confidence is directed toward the Lord he knows, not toward an impersonal principle.
- God's grace precedes works, yet Timothy is still commanded to rekindle, suffer, hold fast, and guard.
- Christ has broken death's power, yet His servants still suffer chains and desertion.
- The Spirit produces both power and love, so courage must avoid both cowardice and harshness.
- Personal trust in Christ and careful preservation of teaching are mutually reinforcing, not competing concerns.
Enrichment summary
The pressure in this passage is public and relational: Timothy may be tempted to distance himself from the gospel because it is bound to a chained apostle and a stigmatized mission. Paul's language of pattern, deposit, and guarding shows that ministry is stewardship of received apostolic truth, not self-invented religious leadership. The promise of life and immortality, set beside Christ's abolition of death, gives the whole exhortation an eschatological horizon: present disgrace is answered by the Lord's verdict on that day.
Traditions of men check
The assumption that loving ministry avoids conflict, stigma, or costly association with disgraced servants.
Why it conflicts: Paul explicitly joins love with power and self-control, then commands Timothy not to be ashamed of the gospel or of Paul the prisoner but to share in suffering.
Textual pressure point: 1:7-8 and 1:16-18 tie genuine love to loyal identification under pressure, not to image management.
Caution: This should not be used to sanctify needless offensiveness; the issue is shame over the gospel and faithful servants, not pride in abrasive behavior.
The slogan that grace eliminates obligation because salvation is not based on works.
Why it conflicts: Paul grounds Timothy's demanding responsibilities in the very grace that saved and called him.
Textual pressure point: 1:9-14 moves directly from grace-not-works to commands to hold and guard the apostolic deposit.
Caution: The text rejects works-righteousness, not Spirit-enabled obedience flowing from grace.
The habit of treating doctrine as secondary to relational sincerity or ministry charisma.
Why it conflicts: Timothy must retain the pattern of sound words and guard the good deposit, not merely remain personally devout.
Textual pressure point: 1:13-14 places doctrinal form and preservation at the center of faithful ministry.
Caution: This should not harden into sterile traditionalism; the sound words are to be held 'with the faith and love that are in Christ Jesus.'
The assumption that widespread abandonment proves the original message or messenger was mistaken.
Why it conflicts: Paul can say many deserted him while still presenting his suffering as the consequence of divine appointment and gospel fidelity.
Textual pressure point: 1:11-15 juxtaposes appointment, suffering, confidence, and desertion.
Caution: Numerical decline does not automatically validate one's cause either; the text commends faithfulness, not contrarianism for its own sake.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: honor_shame
Why It Matters: 'Do not be ashamed,' 'I am not ashamed,' and Onesiphorus 'was not ashamed' show that the crisis is social and relational as much as emotional. Paul's imprisonment made him publicly vulnerable, and Timothy was tempted to distance himself from a stigmatized apostle and message.
Western Misread: Reading shame as merely an inward feeling of embarrassment misses the public dissociation and loss-of-status pressure operating in the passage.
Interpretive Difference: The exhortation becomes a call to visible loyalty under disgrace, not just a call to feel braver inside.
Dynamic: covenantal_identity
Why It Matters: The 'deposit,' 'pattern of sound words,' and coming chain of entrustment in 2:2 place Timothy inside a received apostolic trust. He is not authoring a message but preserving and transmitting what belongs to the gospel community under Christ.
Western Misread: A modern expressive reading can treat ministry as originality, platform skill, or private sincerity rather than faithful custody of handed-down truth.
Interpretive Difference: Guarding doctrine here is not traditionalism for its own sake; it is covenantal stewardship of the gospel entrusted to the church's servants.
Idioms and figures
Expression: rekindle God's gift
Category: metaphor
Explanation: The image is of fanning a fire back into active flame, not creating a gift that was absent. It implies neglected or threatened exercise of an already-given ministry endowment.
Interpretive effect: The command addresses renewal of faithful use under pressure, not Timothy's lack of conversion or lack of calling.
Expression: not ashamed of the testimony ... or of me, a prisoner
Category: metonymy
Explanation: Being 'ashamed' names the broader act of shrinking back from public identification with the gospel and with its suffering apostle. The shame language carries social stigma, not mere private discomfort.
Interpretive effect: The passage confronts disloyal distancing from costly gospel association, especially when faithful witness becomes publicly degrading.
Expression: hold to the pattern of sound words ... guard the good deposit
Category: metaphor
Explanation: Both expressions use custodial imagery. 'Pattern' suggests a norming model to be retained; 'deposit' evokes something valuable entrusted for safekeeping rather than altered at will.
Interpretive effect: Paul's concern is not only zeal but accurate preservation of apostolic teaching.
Expression: brought life and immortality to light
Category: metaphor
Explanation: The gospel does not manufacture life at the moment of preaching; it reveals and discloses decisively what Christ has accomplished in defeating death.
Interpretive effect: The line stresses revelation and manifestation in history through Christ's appearing, not a merely abstract claim about the soul.
Application implications
- Ministry gifts must be actively stirred up; neglect should not be baptized as temperament or caution.
- When allegiance to Christ or to faithful servants becomes embarrassing or costly, shame must be resisted rather than obeyed.
- Enduring hardship for the gospel is possible only by God's power, not by stoic resolve or performative toughness.
- Church leaders are custodians, not owners, of apostolic teaching; faithfulness requires preserving both its content and its pattern.
- Confidence for ministry rests in Christ's ability to keep what is entrusted to Him, even when present circumstances suggest weakness or loss.
Enrichment applications
- Churches should evaluate ministry courage not only by bold speech but by willingness to stay identified with faithful believers when that association carries stigma.
- Teachers serve the gospel best by transmitting it faithfully before innovating on it; originality is not the primary virtue in this paragraph.
- Believers facing public disgrace for Christian allegiance should read present shame in light of 'that day,' where the Lord's verdict outweighs current loss of status.
Warnings
- Do not treat 1:6 as evidence that Timothy lacked genuine faith; verse 5 has just affirmed it.
- Do not turn the laying on of hands into the paragraph's controlling issue; its function here is to mark recognized ministry entrustment.
- Do not read 'not according to works' as if it canceled the imperatives that immediately follow; grace grounds obedience in this passage.
- Do not force 'everyone in Asia' into mathematical precision; the line is best read as a sweeping description of real desertion in Paul's situation.
- Do not make Onesiphorus carry more doctrinal weight than the context supports; Paul's point is chiefly his loyal, unashamed service.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not import later debates about ordination mechanics into the laying on of hands beyond what the paragraph requires.
- Do not present disputed conclusions about Onesiphorus as certain; the passage supports exemplary loyalty more clearly than broader doctrinal constructions.
- Do not let honor-shame or Second Temple background eclipse the local flow of exhortation, gospel grounding, and personal example.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Treating 1:7 as a free-floating slogan about self-confidence.
Why It Happens: The verse is often quoted apart from the references to shame, imprisonment, and suffering for the gospel.
Correction: In context, power, love, and self-control equip Timothy to remain publicly loyal to the gospel and to Paul's chains.
Misreading: Reading 'life and immortality' as a purely philosophical statement about an immortal soul.
Why It Happens: The word 'immortality' can sound abstract when detached from verse 10.
Correction: Paul ties it to Christ's appearing and to the abolition of death, so the emphasis is on gospel-disclosed victory over death, not on a generic doctrine of the soul.
Misreading: Using the deposit language either to defend rigid traditionalism or to dismiss doctrine in favor of sincerity.
Why It Happens: Readers often separate relational trust from doctrinal preservation.
Correction: Paul binds them together: Timothy must hold the pattern of sound words with faith and love, while guarding what has been entrusted to him.
Misreading: Making Onesiphorus the main evidence for a larger doctrine of the dead.
Why It Happens: The prayer for mercy on 'that day' invites theological extrapolation.
Correction: His primary role in the paragraph is to embody unashamed loyalty in contrast to those who deserted Paul.