Introduction
In this session, Titus Chap 1:10-16, we will focus on understanding how to identify the stronghold of place and how to rebuke those who fail to do good, what makes fellowship rebellious, and what the dangers of rebellion in the church are.
Objectives
By the end of this session, the learner will have:
- Understood the principles Paul used for investing himself in Titus, his son, and the church in Crete.
- Discovered the dangers of rebellious and disloyal leaders and how Titus was supposed to engage them
- Appreciated the place of rebuking the rebellious fellowship leaders, elders in a local Church
Outline
- Stronghold of Crete
- Silence rebellious people, rebuke, reprimand
- Motivations of Greed
- False teaching
- Integrity test at Crete
Group Study Time
Titus 1:10-16
Connecting
- Gather with two or more people for a community discovery bible study session.
- Start with a heartfelt prayer, inviting God to guide and bless your understanding.
- Explore the passage by reading it at least twice, using different Bible versions if available, then retell the story together as a group.
- Reflect and share the challenges and blessings you experienced from the previous study.
Comprehending
- What is rebellion? What is rebuking? What does this verse say about rebuking? Titus 1: 13-14.
- What is revealed as the stronghold against the church of Crete? Titus 1: 10-13
- Read Titus 1: 10-16. What is revealed about rebellious people in the church of Crete? (Who they are, what do they do to affect the faith of the members). Why should they be silenced?
Committing
- Engage with the Bible—read, study, memorize, meditate, pray, listen, and live it out.
- List three lessons you have learnt as an agent of change that you would like to put into practice and teach others about.
- Take time and worship Jesus with the attributes revealed about Christ.
- Use the SPACEPETS model, to assist you in putting God’s word into practice. Look for:
- Sin to confess
- Promise to claim
- Attitude to change
- Command to keep
- Error to change
- Prayer to make
- Example to copy
- Truth to obey and
- Something praiseworthy
Communicating
- Identify one person you can connect with and share the valuable insights and lessons you gained from this session.
- Reach out to a new believer—either in person or by phone—and pray with them to support them through their challenges, including any concerns about attending church.
- Create a new group and guide others through this study to help them grow in their understanding.
Post Lesson Teaching Summary
Great job completing the study! Take a moment to listen to this summary to reinforce your group’s understanding of the text and ensure you’re all on the same page. We’re here to support your learning journey!
Rebuke those who fail to do good
Titus 1:10-16
Audio Summary
Titus 1:10-16
Context
- Paul instructs Titus on confronting strongholds in Crete—a dominant spirit of lies, brutality, and laziness that pollutes the church and must be rebuked to protect the truth.
- Three groups exist in any people group: 10% committed to good and God, 10% hardened in rebellion and deception, and 80% undecided in the middle.
- The rebellious 10% (especially circumcision party insisting on Jewish practices for salvation) must be silenced to prevent them from corrupting the 80% and turning whole families from the truth for personal gain.
- Crete’s reputation, even noted by one of their own prophets, confirms the stronghold: Cretans are liars, evil beasts (cruel, savage), and lazy gluttons.
Identifying and Rebuking the Stronghold (Titus 1:10-16)
- Rebellious Deceivers: Many are insubordinate, full of meaningless talk and deception—especially those of the circumcision group who teach salvation requires Jewish customs; they must be silenced as they upset whole families with false teaching for dishonest gain.
- Crete’s Stronghold: Confirmed by a Cretan prophet: “Cretans are always liars, evil beasts, lazy gluttons”—a triangle of deception, brutality (no sanctity of life), and idleness/party-loving excess.
- Rebuke Sharply: Sternly correct them to restore sound faith and stop attention to Jewish myths and human commands that turn people from truth.
- Corrupted Worldview:
- To the pure, all things are pure; but to the defiled and unbelieving, nothing is pure—their minds and consciences are corrupted.
- They profess to know God but deny Him by actions: detestable, disobedient, unfit for any good work.
- Purpose of Rebuke: Confront the unbelieving lens (corrupt mindset) that twists perception; change the “glasses” through which people view truth to prevent syncretism and restore purity of faith.
Application
- Identify and sharply rebuke rebellious deceivers and cultural strongholds (lies, brutality, laziness) to protect the undecided majority; correct corrupt worldviews with truth so faith is strengthened and families preserved for good works.