Add parallel Print Page Options

12 and so incur judgment for breaking their former pledge.[a] 13 And besides that, going around[b] from house to house they learn to be lazy,[c] and they are not only lazy, but also gossips and busybodies, talking about things they should not.[d] 14 So I want younger women to marry, raise children, and manage a household, in order to give the adversary no opportunity to vilify us.[e]

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. 1 Timothy 5:12 tn Grk “incurring judgment because they reject their first faith.”sn The pledge refers most likely to a vow not to remarry undertaken when a widow is put on the list (cf. 1 Tim 5:9).
  2. 1 Timothy 5:13 tn L&N 15.23 suggests the meaning, “to move about from place to place, with significant changes in direction—‘to travel about, to wander about.’”
  3. 1 Timothy 5:13 tn Or “idle.” The whole clause (“going around from house to house, they learn to be lazy”) reverses the order of the Greek. The present participle περιερχόμεναι (perierchomenai) may be taken as temporal (“while going around”), instrumental (“by going around”) or result (“with the result that they go around”).
  4. 1 Timothy 5:13 tn Grk “saying the things that are unnecessary.” Or perhaps “talking about things that are none of their business.”
  5. 1 Timothy 5:14 tn Grk “for the sake of reviling.”