
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us Fan Mail
Titus 2 can sound like a list of rules until you realize what Paul is really doing: he’s showing how sound doctrine becomes visible. We talk through the chapter the way we try to live it, moving from observation to interpretation to application, and we keep coming back to one big idea: belief and behavior belong together. When our lives contradict what we confess, we don’t just hurt ourselves, we make God’s Word look untrustworthy to the people watching us.
We also dig into the parts that collide with modern instincts, especially the commands aimed at specific groups like older men, older women, younger women, and younger men. Why does discipleship in Titus 2 sound so “not generic”? What does “working at home” mean if you stop reading it through an Industrial Revolution lens and recover the older idea of a productive household? We connect this to how families form children, how the home trains character, and why the church needs older women who teach what is good and help younger women build stable, godly lives.
From there, we zoom out to grace. God doesn’t only save us, he trains us. Jesus redeems us from lawlessness and purifies a people who are zealous for good works, which means Christian growth is not drifting into maturity but choosing repentance, order, and self-control. We finish with practical takeaways, including workplace integrity, pastoral authority, and the call for older men to carry real gravitas.
Subscribe for more chapter-by-chapter conversations, share this with a friend who wants faith to shape real life, and leave a review so others can find the show. What line from Titus 2 do you find hardest to live out right now?
Text us at 737-231-0605 with any questions.
By Pastor Plek5
1010 ratings
Send us Fan Mail
Titus 2 can sound like a list of rules until you realize what Paul is really doing: he’s showing how sound doctrine becomes visible. We talk through the chapter the way we try to live it, moving from observation to interpretation to application, and we keep coming back to one big idea: belief and behavior belong together. When our lives contradict what we confess, we don’t just hurt ourselves, we make God’s Word look untrustworthy to the people watching us.
We also dig into the parts that collide with modern instincts, especially the commands aimed at specific groups like older men, older women, younger women, and younger men. Why does discipleship in Titus 2 sound so “not generic”? What does “working at home” mean if you stop reading it through an Industrial Revolution lens and recover the older idea of a productive household? We connect this to how families form children, how the home trains character, and why the church needs older women who teach what is good and help younger women build stable, godly lives.
From there, we zoom out to grace. God doesn’t only save us, he trains us. Jesus redeems us from lawlessness and purifies a people who are zealous for good works, which means Christian growth is not drifting into maturity but choosing repentance, order, and self-control. We finish with practical takeaways, including workplace integrity, pastoral authority, and the call for older men to carry real gravitas.
Subscribe for more chapter-by-chapter conversations, share this with a friend who wants faith to shape real life, and leave a review so others can find the show. What line from Titus 2 do you find hardest to live out right now?
Text us at 737-231-0605 with any questions.