Timothy 1:16Charge to Timothy
Without controversy, the mystery of godliness is great: God was revealed in the flesh, justified in the spirit, seen by angels, preached among the nations, believed on in the world, and received up in glory.
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Interpretation

Timothy 1:16 shows a mystery godliness that is lived within family life—see "without" and "controversy". Choose mystery godliness by steady, quiet faithfulness—anchor courage in promise.

Context

Timothy speaks here as biblical literature writing, highlighting mystery godliness. Within ch. 1, a small unit frames the emphasis. Watch the terms “without” and “controversy”.

Authorship & Historical Background

Long‑standing tradition credits 1 Timothy to Paul. Introductions to 1 Timothy often note: Pastoral; widely viewed as pseudonymous.. Date: AD 80–100. Genre and setting: epistle/letter, in the Charge to Timothy. This verse leans into apostolic community.

More details
Traditional:Paul
Modern scholarship:Pastoral; widely viewed as pseudonymous.
Date:AD 80–100
Manuscripts & Textual Witnesses
The Greek text is preserved in 5,800+ manuscripts, surpassing other ancient works in manuscript count. Early papyri from the 2nd-3rd centuries like P46, P66, P75 provide text within about 100-150 years of its writing. Major uncial codices (Sinaiticus, Vaticanus, 4th century) contain complete or near-complete texts. The Byzantine text family represents the majority of later manuscripts. Textual variants exist but are mostly minor: word order, articles, spelling. No central Christian doctrine depends on any disputed text. Modern critical editions compare all manuscript families to determine the best reflects the earliest recoverable text reading.
Sources & witness notes
SinaiticusVaticanusP46