1-5. Then came he to Derbe and Lystra; and, behold, a certain disciple
was there--that is, at Lystra (not Derbe, as some conclude from
Ac 20:4).
named Timotheus--(See on
Ac 14:20).
As Paul styles him "his own son in the faith"
(1Ti 1:2),
he must have been gained to Christ at the apostle's first visit; and as
Paul says he "had fully known his persecutions which came on him at
Lystra"
(2Ti 3:10, 11),
he may have been in that group of disciples that surrounded the
apparently lifeless body of the apostle outside the walls of Lystra,
and that at a time of life when the mind receives its deepest
impressions from the spectacle of innocent suffering and undaunted
courage [HOWSON]. His would be one of "the souls
of the disciples confirmed" at the apostle's second visit, "exhorted to
continue in the faith, and" warned "that we must through much
tribulation enter into the kingdom of God"
(Ac 14:21, 22).
the son of a certain . . . Jewess--"The unfeigned
faith which dwelt first in his grandmother Lois" descended to "his
mother Eunice," and thence it passed to this youth
(2Ti 1:5),
who "from a child knew the Holy Scriptures"
(2Ti 3:15).
His gifts and destination to the ministry of Christ had already been
attested
(1Ti 1:18; 4:14);
and though some ten years after this Paul speaks of him as still young
(1Ti 4:12),
"he was already well reported of by the brethren that were at Lystra
and Iconium"
(Ac 16:2),
and consequently must have been well known through all that quarter.
but his father was a Greek--Such mixed marriages, though little
practiced, and disliked by the stricter Jews in Palestine, must have
been very frequent among the Jews of the dispersion, especially in
remote districts, where but few of the scattered people were settled
[HOWSON].
JFB.
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