Titus in Smiths Bible Dictionary
Our materials for the biography of this companion of St.
Paul must be drawn entirely from the notices of him in the
Second Epistle to the Corinthians, the Galatians, and to
Titus himself, combined with the Second Epistle to Timothy.
He is not mentioned in the Acts at all. Taking the passages
in the epistles in the chronological order of the events
referred to, we turn first to Ga 2:1,3 We conceive the
journey mentioned here to be identical with that (recorded
in Acts 15) in which Paul and Barnabas went from Antioch to
Jerusalem to the conference which was to decide the question
of the necessity of circumcision to the Gentiles. Here we
see Titus in close association with Paul and Barnabas at
Antioch. He goes with them to Jerusalem. His circumcision
was either not insisted on at Jerusalem, or, if demanded,
was firmly resisted. He is very emphatically spoken of as a
Gentile by which is most probably meant that both his
parents were Gentiles. Titus would seem on the occasion of
the council to have been specially a representative of the
church of the uncircumcision. It is to our purpose to remark
that, in the passage cited above, Titus is so mentioned as
apparently to imply that he had become personally known to
the Galatian Christians. After leaving Galatia., Ac 18:23
and spending a long time at Ephesus, Ac 19:1; 20:1 the
apostle proceeded to Macedonia by way of Troas. Here he
expected to meet Titus, 2Co 2:13 who had been sent on a
mission to Corinth. In this hope he was disappointed, but in
Macedonia Titus joined him. 2Co 7:6,7,13-15 The mission to
Corinth had reference to the immoralities rebuked in the
First Epistle, and to the collection at that time in
progress, for the poor Christians of Judea. 2Co 8:6 Thus we
are prepared for what the apostle now proceeds to do after
his encouraging conversations with Titus regarding the
Corinthian church. He sends him back from Macedonia to
Corinth, in company with two other trustworthy Christians,
bearing the Second Epistle, and with an earnest request,
ibid. 2Co 8:6,17 that he would see to the completion of the
collection. ch. 2Co 8:6 A considerable interval now elapses
before we come upon the next notices of this disciple. St.
Paul's first imprisonment is concluded, and his last trial
is impending. In the interval between the two, he and Titus
were together in Crete. Tit 1:5 We see Titus remaining in
the island when St. Paul left it and receiving there a
letter written to him by the apostle. From this letter we
gather the following biographical details. In the first
place we learn that he was originally converted through St.
Paul's instrumentality. Tit 1:4 Next we learn the various
particulars of the responsible duties which he had to
discharge. In Crete, he is to complete what St. Paul had
been obliged to leave unfinished, ch. Tit 1:5 and he is to
organize the church throughout the island by appointing
presbytery in every city. Next he is to control and bridle,
ver. 11, the restless and mischievous Judaizers. He is also
to look for the arrival in Crete of Artemas and Tychicus,
ch. Tit 3:12 and then is to hasten to join St. Paul at
Nicopolis, where the apostle purposes to pass the winter.
Zenas and Apollos are in Crete, or expected there; for Titus
is to send them on their journey, and to supply them with
whatever they need for it. Whether Titus did join the
apostle at Nicopolis we cannot tell; but we naturally
connect the mention of this place with what St. Paul wrote,
at no great interval of time afterward, in the last of the
Pastoral Epistles, 2Ti 4:10 for Dalmatia lay to the north of
Nicopolis, at no great distance from it. From the form of
the whole sentence, it seems probable that this disciple had
been with St. Paul in Rome during his final imprisonment;
but this cannot be asserted confidently. The traditional
connection of Titus with Crete is much more specific and
constant, though here again we cannot be certain of the
facts. He said to have been permanent bishop in the island,
and to have died there at an advanced age. The modern
capital, Candia, appears to claim the honor of being his
burial-place. In the fragment by the lawyer Zenas, Titus is
called bishop of Gortyna. Lastly, the name of Titus was the
watchword of the Cretans when they were invaded by the
Venetians.
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