I Timothy
I Timothy may have been written just after Paul's first Roman imprisonment.
He had met Timothy in Lystra, and Timothy had travelled with Paul on Paul's second missionary journey. At the time of I Timothy, Timothy was probably in his late 20s or early 30s. He was working in Ephesus as a pastor. Thus, I Timothy is the first of Paul's "Pastoral Epistles."
In Acts 19:23 and following, we read of Paul's experience in Ephesus and of the powerful cult of Artemis there. Artemis was the goddess of the hunt, and in Ephesus, she was a major deity and a fertility goddess. Many young girls may have been apprentices in Artemis's temple in Ephesus which was one of the seven wonders of the ancient world.
In I Timothy, Paul reminds the church that its basic way of being is to be love. He warns them of false teachers who wanted to replace Christian love with meticulous obedience to the Law of Moses. It seems that Paul is indicating that the actions of a loving Christian will not be unlawful and that the law is there to speak to the consciences of the unconverted.
2:1-7 stress the important and range of prayer in which we ought ought to be engaged.
2:8-13 contains some words that often get taken out of context and create controversy regarding women in the church today. Knowing what we do of the Artemis cult in Ephesus, it seems likely that many women in Ephesus had been thoroughly indoctrinated in the worship of Artemis and may have been bringing their practices into the church. In that unique situation, Paul may have found it necessary to forbid women to teach and then drawn the parallel with Eve and Adam. Paul's relationships with women leaders are attested to in other parts of the New Testament and don't seem to suggest that he really believes all women should be in a subservient role.
Other passages in the letter detail the seriousness with which the qualifications for various offices were to be considered. Paul also interweaves many moments of pure worship into his otherwise instructive discourse. (Ex. 3:14-16, 6:16)
He had met Timothy in Lystra, and Timothy had travelled with Paul on Paul's second missionary journey. At the time of I Timothy, Timothy was probably in his late 20s or early 30s. He was working in Ephesus as a pastor. Thus, I Timothy is the first of Paul's "Pastoral Epistles."
In Acts 19:23 and following, we read of Paul's experience in Ephesus and of the powerful cult of Artemis there. Artemis was the goddess of the hunt, and in Ephesus, she was a major deity and a fertility goddess. Many young girls may have been apprentices in Artemis's temple in Ephesus which was one of the seven wonders of the ancient world.
In I Timothy, Paul reminds the church that its basic way of being is to be love. He warns them of false teachers who wanted to replace Christian love with meticulous obedience to the Law of Moses. It seems that Paul is indicating that the actions of a loving Christian will not be unlawful and that the law is there to speak to the consciences of the unconverted.
2:1-7 stress the important and range of prayer in which we ought ought to be engaged.
2:8-13 contains some words that often get taken out of context and create controversy regarding women in the church today. Knowing what we do of the Artemis cult in Ephesus, it seems likely that many women in Ephesus had been thoroughly indoctrinated in the worship of Artemis and may have been bringing their practices into the church. In that unique situation, Paul may have found it necessary to forbid women to teach and then drawn the parallel with Eve and Adam. Paul's relationships with women leaders are attested to in other parts of the New Testament and don't seem to suggest that he really believes all women should be in a subservient role.
Other passages in the letter detail the seriousness with which the qualifications for various offices were to be considered. Paul also interweaves many moments of pure worship into his otherwise instructive discourse. (Ex. 3:14-16, 6:16)
