| Chapter 2 |
|
But as for you, you must speak in a manner that befits wholesome teaching. |
|
Exhort aged men to be temperate, grave, sober-minded, robust in their faith, their love and their patience. |
|
In the same way exhort aged women to let their conduct be such as becomes consecrated persons. They must not be slanderers nor enslaved to wine-drinking. They must be teachers of what is right. |
|
They should school the young women to be affectionate to their husbands and to their children, to be sober-minded, pure in their lives, |
|
industrious in their homes, kind, submissive to their husbands, so that the Christian teaching may not be exposed to reproach. |
|
In the same way exhort the younger men to be discreet, |
|
and above all make your own life a pattern of right conduct, having in your teaching no taint of insincerity, but a serious tone, |
|
and healthy language which no one can censure, so that our opponents may feel ashamed at having nothing evil to say against us. |
|
Exhort slaves to be always obedient to their owners, and to give them satisfaction in everything, not contradicting and not pilfering, |
|
but manifesting perfect fidelity and kind feeling, in order to bring honour to the teaching of our Saviour, God, in all things. |
|
For the grace of God has displayed itself with healing power to all mankind, |
|
training us to renounce ungodliness and all the pleasures of this world, and to live sober, upright, and pious lives at the present time, |
|
in expectation of the fulfilment of our blessed hope--the Appearing in glory of our great God and Saviour Jesus Christ; |
|
who gave Himself for us to purchase our freedom from all iniquity, and purify for Himself a people who should be specially His own, zealous for doing good works. |
|
Thus speak, exhort, reprove, with all impressiveness. Let no one make light of your authority. |