1 & 2 Timothy and Titus Quick Study Commentary by Chad Sychtysz
If you preach, teach, or lead in any capacity in a local church, these three letters belong on your short list. First and Second Timothy and Titus—what scholars call the "pastoral epistles"—are Paul at his most practical. He's writing to two men he personally trained, in the middle of real ministry situations, dealing with false teaching, church organization, and the kind of everyday chaos that congregations have always faced. Sound familiar?
Chad Sychtysz's Quick Study Commentary works through all three letters in serious depth—208 pages covering everything from elder qualifications to the role of women in the assembly to Paul's haunting final words from death row in 2 Timothy 4. This isn't a devotional read. It's a commentary built for people who actually need to understand these texts and teach them well.
What separates this from a lot of commentaries in this space is the historical grounding. You'll get a full introduction to each letter—the city of Ephesus, the island of Crete, the political climate, the specific heresies Paul was fighting—before a single verse is opened. That context changes how you read everything that follows.
And Sychtysz doesn't skip the hard passages. He tackles them directly.
Topics covered include:
- Paul's warnings about false teaching and "speculative intellectualism" in the church
- Instructions for women in the assembly (1 Tim. 2:9–15) — handled carefully and thoroughly
- Qualifications for elders and deacons (1 Tim. 3 and Titus 1) — with an appendix on the debated "believing children" phrase in Titus 1:6
- The role of widows, older men, older women, and younger women in the body
- The "coming apostasy" in 2 Timothy 3 and how to stand firm in it
- Paul's charge to preach the Word—in season and out of season—in his final letter before execution
- Responsible Christian living from Titus 2, including the famous "grace of God has appeared" passage
Two appendices address passages that churches actually argue about: who the "women" are in 1 Timothy 3:11, and what "believing children" means in the elder qualifications of Titus 1:6. These aren't throwaway additions—they're substantive treatments that will serve anyone teaching through these texts.
Uses the New American Standard Bible (NASB). Includes a full bibliography of sources.
Who Is This For?
Preachers, elders, Bible class teachers, and serious students who want a trustworthy, readable commentary that doesn't water things down. Especially useful for anyone teaching a class or sermon series on 1 & 2 Timothy or Titus, or any congregation working through questions about church leadership and organization. The "Quick Study" label means it's accessible—not that it's shallow.
About the Author
Chad Sychtysz is a Bible teacher and author whose writing reflects both careful scholarship and genuine pastoral concern. Contact him directly at chad@booksbychad.com or visit booksbychad.com.
Product Details
- Title: Quick Study Commentary: 1 & 2 Timothy and Titus
- Author: Chad Sychtysz
- Publisher: Spiritbuilding Publishers Website: spiritbuilding.com
- ISBN: 978–1–964–80561–0
- Page Count: 208 pages
- Bible Translation: New American Standard Bible (NASB)
- Cover Design: Larissa Lynch
- Copyright Year: 2025
- Format: Paperback (print)
- Series: Quick Study Commentary
- Contact (Author): chad@booksbychad.com
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