πŸ’‘πŸ‘‘ What Do You Call A Near-Sighted Dinosaur?

AΒ Doyouthinkhesaurus, of course!

Speaking of things that we are not sure were seen, did you ever wonder why Paul wrote:

β€œFor the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men” (Titus 2:11).

Christians often ask about this verse. They know that God’s saving grace got around to a lot of people in Paul’s day, but they also know that it hadn’t β€œappeared to all men” on earth. So what did Paul mean?

Well, to begin with, we know that

β€œThe heavens declare the glory of God… day unto day uttereth speech, and night unto night sheweth knowledge.Β There is no speech nor language, where their voice is not heard” (Psa. 19:1-3).

The stars can be seen by β€œall men” on earth, and every night theyΒ speakΒ and send out a messageΒ to everyone on the planet, a message that says there is an all-powerful Creator who brought those innumerable stars into existence. But just knowing there is a God isn’t enough to save anyone, for even devils believe that (James 2:19). So how could Paul say thatΒ the grace of God that brings salvationΒ had appeared to all men?

The solution to our puzzle is that the phrase β€œall men” doesn’t always meanΒ every man on the planet. When the Lord told the twelve apostles, β€œye shall be hated ofΒ all menΒ for My name’s sake” (Matt. 10:22), He didn’t mean they’d be hated ofΒ other believers!Β He meant they’d be hated byΒ all unbelievers, a prediction that will come true in the Tribulation that will follow the Rapture.

That tells us that the phrase β€œall men” must always be interpreted by its context. Sometimes it meansΒ all kinds of men, as when Paul said, β€œI am made all thingsΒ to all men” (1 Cor. 9:22), and then spoke of men who were β€œunder the law” andΒ othersΒ who were β€œwithout law.” We see this definition for β€œall men” again when Paul later said that he chose to β€œgive none offence, neither to the Jews, nor to the Gentiles” so as to β€œpleaseΒ all men” (1 Cor. 10:32,33).

And it is differentΒ kinds of men that Paul had in mind in the context of Titus 2:11 as well. Under his ministry, God’s saving grace had evidently appeared to the β€œaged men” (Titus 2:2) in Crete where Titus was stationed (Titus 1:5), as well as to the β€œaged women” (Titus 2:3), the β€œyoung women” (Titus 2:4), the β€œyoung men” (Titus 2:6) and even β€œservants” (Titus 2:9). God’s grace had obviously appeared to allΒ those kinds of men, and saved all who responded to it in faith.

Now that, in and of itself, was nothing new. The men who preached salvation before Paul never had to stop and ask, β€œAre you a master or a servant?” before telling someone how to be saved, and they didn’t exclude men or women of any age. However, before God raised up Paul, theyΒ didΒ have to ask if a man was a Jew or a Gentile, for before Paul was made an apostle, the grace of God that brought salvation could only appear toΒ JewishΒ men. Even the Lord Himself was β€œnot sent but unto the lost sheepΒ of the house of Israel” (Matt. 15:24), and He told the twelve apostles to β€œgo not into the way of the Gentiles” to preach the gospel of salvation because, as He told a Gentile woman, β€œsalvation is of the Jews” (Matt. 10:5; John 4:22). And we know that didn’t change at Pentecost, for Peter declared that God raised Christ from the dead β€œto be… a Saviour… to give repentanceΒ to Israel, and forgiveness of sins” (Acts 5:31).

But when God saved Paul and commissioned him to go β€œuntoΒ all men” (Acts 22:15), we know thatΒ hereΒ the phrase β€œall men” included JewsΒ andΒ Gentiles, for later he said that he obeyed that commission by preaching β€œfirst unto them of Damascus, and at Jerusalem, and throughout all the coasts of Judaea,Β and then to the Gentiles…” (Acts 26:20).

And when we apply this definition of β€œall men” to our text in Titus 2:11, that’s when we are introduced to something thatΒ wasΒ new, for no one before Paul could say,

β€œThere is no difference between the Jew and the Greek: for the same Lord over all is rich unto all that call upon Him” (Rom. 10:12).

And that’s how Paul could say that the grace of God that bringeth salvation had appeared to β€œall men.” Before he was made an apostle, Gentiles who wanted to be saved had to hear about God’s saving grace from the Jews to whom it had appeared.

If you’re thankful it appearedΒ to you, why not thank God for His saving grace, and then tell someone about it. You’ll both be eternally glad you did. source

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