As a challenge to myself, I decided to put together a post on the above subject even though I feared in advance that I might find myself with nothing to write about. The Dictionary of Biblical Imagery states that the “Hebrew and Aramaic of the OT uses about 180 words, the Greek NT about 50 words, to name a total of about 70 types (not species) of animals.” And Avalos adds: “Biblical authors often use animal imagery to express aspects of their culture.”
As expected, a great deal of these references appear in a literal sense in the OT sacrificial laws, as metaphors and similies in the Poetic Writings, and in the context of Jesus' teachings. But what about the letters to Timothy and Titus? Fortunately, I managed to come up with the verses below, mostly in metaphorical contexts, buried in the Pastoral Epistles as well. I say “buried” because these references seldom come out and hit you in the face the way the more obvious similies do with their use of “like” or “as.” But just as it is necessary in a simile to determine exactly which characteristic of A is being compared to B in order to understand that figure of speech, the same applies to metaphorical language. Just a word of caution here: If you are relying solely on a Bible paraphrase, there is a very good chance you will not have the slightest idea what I am talking about here. That iswhy it is often preferable to rely instead on a good fairly literal rendering of the Greek original in order to help you catch such subtlteties which may be present in the original text.
I Timothy 3:7
Vine: “Pagis, a trap, a snare (akin to pegnumi, to fix, and pagineuo, to ensnare...) is used metaphorically of (a) the allurements to evil by which the Devil ensnares one, I Tim. 3:7; 2 Tim. 2:26; (b) seductions to evil, which ensnare those who 'desire to be rich,' I Tim. 6:9...”
As Lea says, “If the overseer has an unsavory reputation with the unsaved world, he and the entire church will fall into disgrace. Paul stated that such a disgrace is a trap set by the devil. When church leaders live in such a way that unsaved outsiders refuse to listen to their message, the devil has clearly lured believers into a trap...In this verse Paul presented Satan as a hunter who lays out traps into which the careless, shortsighted Christian can fall.”
I Timothy 5:18
“This quotation from Dt. 25:4 is used by Paul in I C. 9:9 to support his argument that those who preach the gospel have a right to be supported by those whom they evangelize. It was a favorite text with the rabbis, who, like Paul, did not hesitate to use it it an allegorical sense...By the time the author of the Pastorals came to use it, it had become a stock proof-text to show that the ordained ministy is entitled to some financial reward.” (Hanson)
Lea says that Paul “quoted Deut 25:4 to justify proper treatment for the pastor. Paul reasoned that if God could show concern for the laboring ox, the congregation needed to show proper concern for its pastor. The original intention of refusing to muzzle the ox was to allow the animal an occcasional bite as it moved about the threshing floor. Paul saw expressed in this command a principle that is broader than a mere statement about care for animals.”
“It is too cruel to make an ox work with grain while withholding it (Deut 25:4), and similar courtesy applies to people (1 Cor 9:9; 1 Tim 5:18).” (Dictionary of Biblical Imagery)
I Timothy 6:1
“Servants...under the yoke...draws attention to the non-Christian approach to slaves who were regarded as little more than cattle. The expression strongly brings into focus the servile social conditions of the contemporary world.” (Guthrie)
“The...description, 'under the yoke' (cf. Gal 5:1), is traditional and stresses the harsh social and existential reality of the person who existed as the property of another (whether of an unbeliever or a believer).” (Towner)
Lea agrees the above assertions: “The phrase 'under the yoke' describes the galling, humiliating result of slavery. However, Paul was not suggesting that only those who were more oppressed than usual needed to respond to his words. The contrast in v. 2 suggests that Paul was thinking in this verse particularly of those slaves who had unbelieving masters. Paul insisted that Christian slaves have a genuine respect for their owners.”
I Timothy 6:9
Nute quotes Way as saying, “The metaphor...may be taken from the wild beast which, leaping at the bait hung over a pit, falls in, and is impaled on the stake below.”
“The weakness of the flesh is...described as desire (epithymia), which entices men into temptation (Jas. 1:14), so that the power of the evil one closes over him like a trap (pagis, 1 Tim. 6:9).” (Haarbeck)
As Towner puts it, “The desire for wealth makes one susceptible to corrupt suggestions and unscrupulous opportunities to advance. Second, the next term 'trap' (or 'snare'; see 3:7) moves the sequence from enticement to actual entrapment in a predicament.”
Lea also sees a progression here: “Paul painted three progressive pitfalls in which the willful wealth-seeker becomes entangled. First wealth tempts like a lure and causes people to covet the wrong objects. Second, individuals become entangled like animals dangling in a trap...Third, the trapped ones drown in an almost personified wealth that becomes 'a personal monster, which plunges its victim into an ocean of completee destruction [to quote Guthrie].”
II Timothy 2:26
There is possibly a subtle reference to animals here in that Paul expressed the desire that his opponents might escape the snare that Satan has set for them. This is the second time in the letter where this sort of metaphor is used (see on 3:7 above).
Lea adds, “Paul wanted the false teachers to return to sober thinking and win release from Satan's stranglehold. To think soberly in the spiritual realm demands clear, sound insight about spiritual realities. Some had muddled thinking because they had been taken captive in the snare of the devil. The verb for taking them captive (zogreo) means literally to capture alive...”
However, Towner notes that in this particular verse there is a little ambiguity as to exactly who is doing the capturing, Satan or God. He concludes that “there seems little reason to shift back at this point to the theme of God's activity.”
II Timothy 3:3
Lea says, “The two terms with which v. 3 begins describe people who are inhuman because of their lack of family love and who are 'unforgivng'...in their resistance to all overtures of reconciliation. The first term suggests that the evildoers have become almost beastlike in the breakdown of love for their kin, especially parents.”
Knight: “Anameroi, literally 'untamed,' designates those who are brutal or fierce.” He cites Epictetus 1:3.7, where those who forget their divine origin are likened to lions.”
“The...adjective, 'brutal,' typically described wild animals and people who behave like them. Titus 1:12 (cf. Jude 10) employs the same metaphor with more explicit language. There is no way to identify specifics of behavior here; the category, however, smears those so described as belonging to the category of uncivilized barbarians.” (Towner)
II Timothy 4:6
Towner asks, “But what is the event in Paul's mind, and how does he concepualize it? Both parts of the sentence allude to Paul's death. The first indication of this comes in the first half of the sentence and the passive verb 'to be poured out as a drink offering,' which refers to the libation that was poured out (often) to accopmany and complete a (grain, animal) sacrifice. As such, it does not refer to sacrificial death [such as Christ's on the cross], but the metaphor with its allusion to wine may well intend to evoke the imagery of Paul's blood (i.e., his life) being poured out. And the language clearly places Paul's upcoming death into the sacrificial context as an offering...that accomnpanies another, perhaps more fundamental offering. In the present context he possibly sees his death as complementing the ultimate bloody sacrifice of the Messiah (Col 1:24). Above all, the passive voice and the sacrificial imagery underline that this death is not a meaningless but rather a necessary event in the furtherance of the work of the gospel.”
Thus, from Towner's explanation we see that, at best, there is an indirect correlation between the predicted death of Paul and Christ's atoning death, which in itself is a type of the animal sacrifices of the Old Testament.
Lea adds that Paul “compared the pouring out of his energy in ministry to the pouring out of the wine of an Old Testament drink offering. Such offerings (see Num 15:1-10) were probably a substitute for the blood used in heathen sacrifices (Ps 16:4).” This confirms Towner's very indirect correlation of Paul's sacrifice with animal sacrifices.
Titus 1:12
Knight explains that “therion means 'animal,' often 'wild animal' or 'beast' and is used figuratively, as here, of persons with a 'bestial' nature.”
Quinn asks, “Where didt the author of Titus find this testimony? He submits it as an emanation from a native Cretan with indisputable prophetic credentials. As early as Clement of Alexandria...this hexameter was attributed to Epimenides of Crete, who lived about the sixth century B.C.E....In the case of the devastating caricature in Titus 1:12, no small part of its effectiveness derives from the known nationality of the author. 'This is how Cretans appear to the wise man who was their countryman' is certainly what the author of Titus wished to say...”Crete was proverbial among the ancients for having no dangerous wild animals...The poet asserts that the human beings here give the lie to that belief. They are beasts of prey, not working for their food but idly prowling about for something to satisfy their hunger...”