Author: The apostle Paul
Audience: Timothy, one of Paul’s closest associates, but no doubt intended also to be read to the whole church in Ephesus
Date: Probably c. ad 64 but possibly c. ad 56
Theme: Paul instructs Timothy to oppose false teachers, to appoint godly leaders, and to otherwise strengthen the church at Ephesus.
Introduction
Author
Both early tradition and the greetings of the Pastoral Letters (1,2 Timothy; Titus) themselves claim Paul as their author (1:1; 2Ti 1:1; Titus 1:1). Some objections have been raised in recent years on the basis of an alleged uncharacteristic vocabulary and style (see, e.g., notes on 1:15; 2:2), but other evidence still convincingly supports Paul’s authorship. See article.
Background and Purpose
During his fourth missionary journey (see map), Paul had instructed Timothy to care for the church at Ephesus (1:3) while he went on to Macedonia. When he realized that he might not return to Ephesus in the near future (3:14–15), he wrote this first letter to Timothy to develop the charge he had given his young assistant (1:3,18), to refute false teachings (1:3–7; 4:1–8; 6:3–5,20–21) and even remove certain elders who had begun to promulgate these false teachings (5:17–21). This problem accounts for much of the rest of the instruction of the letter (church worship, ch. 2, and the appointment of qualified church leaders, 3:1–13; 5:17–25).
A major problem in the Ephesian church was a heresy that combined an early form of Gnosticism (see Introduction to 1 John: Gnosticism), a form of Jewish mysticism (1:3–7) and false asceticism (4:1–5).
Date
1 Timothy was probably written sometime after the events of Ac 28 (c. ad 63–65; see chart), at least eight years after Paul’s three-year stay in Ephesus (see Ac 19:10 and note). But it could possibly have been written in c. ad 56 (see article).
Recipient
As the greeting indicates (1:2), Paul is writing to Timothy, a native of Lystra (in modern Turkey). Timothy’s father was Greek, while his mother was a Jewish Christian (Ac 16:1). From childhood he had been taught the OT (2Ti 1:5; 3:15). Paul called him “my true son in the faith” (1:2; see note there), perhaps having led him to faith in Christ during his first visit to Lystra (see photo). At the time of his second visit Paul invited Timothy to join him on his missionary travels, circumcising him so that his Greek ancestry would not be a liability in working with the Jews (Ac 16:3). Timothy helped Paul evangelize Macedonia and Achaia (Ac 17:14–15; 18:5) and was with him during much of his long preaching ministry at Ephesus (Ac 19:22). He traveled with him from Ephesus to Macedonia to Corinth (see Ac 20:3 and note), back to Macedonia, and to Asia Minor (Ac 20:1–6). He may even have accompanied him all the way to Jerusalem. He was with Paul during the apostle’s first Roman imprisonment (Php 1:1; Col 1:1; Phm 1).
Following Paul’s release from his first Roman imprisonment (after Ac 28), he left Timothy in Ephesus to deal with the problems there while Paul went on to Macedonia. Paul’s closeness to and admiration of Timothy are seen in Paul’s naming him as the co-sender of six of his letters (2 Corinthians, Philippians, Colossians, 1,2 Thessalonians and Philemon) and in his speaking highly of him to the Philippians (Php 2:19–22). At the end of Paul’s life he requested that Timothy join him in Rome (2Ti 4:9,21). According to Heb 13:23, Timothy himself was imprisoned and subsequently released—whether at Rome or elsewhere, we do not know.
Timothy was not an apostle. It may be best to regard him as an apostolic representative, delegated to carry out special work (cf. Titus 1:5).
Paul wrote this first letter to Timothy to develop the charge he had given his young assistant and to refute false teachings. This problem accounts for much of the rest of the instruction of the letter.
Outline
I. Greetings (1:1–2)
II. Warning Against False Teachers (1:3–11)
A. The Nature of the Heresy (1:3–7)
B. The Purpose of the Law (1:8–11)
III. The Lord’s Grace to Paul (1:12–17)
IV. The Purpose of Paul’s Instructions to Timothy (1:18–20)
V. Instructions Concerning Church Administration (chs. 2–3)
A. Public Worship (ch. 2)
1. Prayer in public worship (2:1–7)
2. Men and women in public worship (2:8–15)
B. Qualifications for Church Officers (3:1–13)
1. Overseers (3:1–7)
2. Deacons (3:8–13)
C. Purpose of These Instructions (3:14–16)
VI. Instructions Concerning False Teaching (ch. 4)
A. False Teaching Described (4:1–5)
B. Methods of Dealing With It Explained (4:6–16)
VII. Instructions Concerning Different Groups in the Church (5:1—6:2)
A. The Older and the Younger (5:1–2)
B. Widows (5:3–16)
C. Elders (5:17–25)
D. Slaves (6:1–2)
VIII. Matters Related to Wealth (6:3–19)
A. False Teachers (6:3–5)
B. Love of Money (6:6–10)
C. Charge to Timothy (6:11–16)
D. The Rich (6:17–19)
IX. Concluding Appeal and Benediction (6:20–21)