{
  "kind": "commentary_unit",
  "branch": "new-testament-lite",
  "custom_id": "TIT_001",
  "book": "Titus",
  "title": "Greeting and purpose of the letter",
  "reference": "Titus 1:1 - Titus 1:4",
  "canonical_url": "https://ai-bible-commentary.com/commentary/new-testament-lite/titus/greeting-and-purpose-of-the-letter/",
  "full_url": "https://ai-bible-commentary.com/commentary/new-testament/titus/greeting-and-purpose-of-the-letter/",
  "overview_url": "https://ai-bible-commentary.com/commentary/book-overviews/titus/",
  "main_point": "Paul begins by showing that his apostleship comes from God and serves a clear purpose: to bring God’s people to faith, strengthen them in the truth, and promote godly living. This ministry stands on the certain hope of eternal life, promised before the ages by the God who never lies and now revealed through the gospel entrusted to Paul.",
  "commentary": "Paul’s greeting is longer than usual because it introduces the main themes that run through the whole letter. He describes himself as both a slave of God and an apostle of Jesus Christ. The first title expresses humility and submission: Paul belongs to God and lives under His authority. The second expresses commissioned authority: Paul speaks as one sent by Jesus Christ. So his authority is real, but it is not self-made or independent.\n\nPaul then explains the purpose of his apostleship. It is for the faith of God’s chosen people and for their knowledge of the truth. The point here is not to turn the greeting into a full discussion of election. In this context, Paul’s emphasis is that his ministry serves God’s people by bringing them to faith and strengthening them in it.\n\nThis faith is joined to the knowledge of the truth. Paul also makes clear what kind of truth he has in view: truth that accords with godliness. It is not mere religious information or correct ideas with no moral effect. It fits godly living and leads to it. Throughout Titus, sound doctrine and sound living belong together.\n\nPaul says this ministry is carried out in hope of eternal life. Here, hope does not mean a weak wish or uncertain optimism. It means confident expectation. That confidence rests on God Himself, on the fact that He does not lie. The main force of that statement is to ground the certainty of the promise of eternal life. Paul says this promise was made before the ages began, pointing most naturally to God’s saving purpose before history unfolded.\n\nPaul then marks the great turn in salvation history: what God promised beforehand has now been revealed in time. God has made His message known through the preaching entrusted to Paul. There is a clear movement from promise to proclamation. The message was not discovered by Paul, invented by him, or taken up through personal ambition. He was entrusted with it according to the command of God our Savior. That gives divine weight to his ministry and to the instructions in this letter.\n\nPaul addresses Titus as his true son in a common faith. This is not a biological statement, but family language expressing a real spiritual relationship. It shows both affection and delegated legitimacy. Titus is not acting as an independent religious figure. He stands in a shared faith and in an authorized relationship to the apostle.\n\nFinally, Paul offers grace and peace from God the Father and Christ Jesus our Savior. This wording matters theologically. Both God the Father and Christ Jesus are named in saving language. Without pressing the text beyond its own wording, this contributes to the letter’s high view of Christ. The greeting as a whole lays the foundation for everything that follows: apostolic authority, the truth of the gospel, the moral shape of sound doctrine, the certainty of eternal life, and Titus’s role in serving the churches.",
  "key_truths": [
    "Paul’s authority is commissioned authority under God, not self-appointed power.",
    "The aim of apostolic ministry is to awaken and strengthen faith and the knowledge of the truth among God’s people.",
    "The truth Paul preaches accords with godliness and produces godly living.",
    "Christian hope is certain because it rests on God’s truthful promise.",
    "The gospel makes known in history what God purposed and promised before the ages.",
    "Titus serves within a real apostolic relationship and a shared Christian faith."
  ],
  "warnings": [
    "Do not make the word 'elect' the main point of the passage; Paul’s focus is the purpose of his ministry in relation to faith, truth, and godliness.",
    "Do not treat 'knowledge of the truth' as mere intellectual agreement without moral transformation.",
    "Do not reduce 'hope' to uncertainty or personal optimism; it is grounded confidence in God’s promise.",
    "Do not overlook the authority behind Paul’s preaching; it is a trust given by divine command.",
    "Do not make 'God who does not lie' chiefly a side remark about Cretan falsehood; its primary purpose here is to ground the certainty of eternal life."
  ],
  "application": [
    "Test teaching not only by whether it sounds correct, but by whether it accords with and promotes godliness.",
    "Anchor confidence about eternal life in God’s character and promise, not in changing feelings.",
    "Those who preach and teach should see themselves as stewards of a trust from God, not as self-promoters.",
    "Value pastoral relationships that combine genuine affection with shared fidelity to the common faith.",
    "Read the instructions about church leadership in Titus in light of this opening link between truth, proclamation, and godly living."
  ]
}