HistoricalChristian.Faith

1 Timothy 6:21

21 Which some professing have erred concerning the faith. Grace be with thee. Amen.
Commentaries
John Chrysostomon 1 Timothy 6:21AD 407
"Which some professing have erred concerning the faith."

You see how again he commands Timothy not even to meet them. "Avoiding opposition." There are therefore oppositions to which we ought not to vouchsafe an answer, because they turn men from faith, and do not suffer one to be firmly established or fixed in it. Let us not then pursue this science, but adhere to faith, that unshaken rock. For neither floods nor winds assailing will be able to harm us, since we stand on the rock immovable.
Oecumeniuson 1 Timothy 6:20-21AD 550
O Timothy, guard what has been delivered to you, avoiding profane and vain babblings and oppositions of falsely called knowledge, which some professing have strayed concerning the faith. Grace be with you. Amen.

guard what has been delivered to you. Paul says the commandment of God, which he delivered to you through me; or the grace of the Spirit, which he received through the laying on of hands.

avoiding profane and vain babblings. The impure, the defiled. Vain babblings, however, are pointless words, therefore empty sound is not profane. But Blessed John called the recent admonitions novelties of voices, reading as it seems "vain babblings" [καινοφωνίας], through the diphthong and the written "και," as the first syllable.

and oppositions. Therefore, there is an opposition to which one must not respond, because of its nonsense.

of falsely called knowledge. For when there is no faith, there is no knowledge. And that which seems to be, is false.

which some professing. Paul says that the knowledge is false and forbidden. For perhaps some were claiming knowledge discovered from human reasoning, which was opposed to faith. And it is obvious from this that they have suffered shipwreck concerning the faith.

Grace be with you. Amen. Paul prays for the seal or signet of all things, namely the grace of God, from which all which is good is both given and preserved.

The end, with divine assistance, of the first Epistle to Timothy.

It was written from Laodicea, which is a metropolis of Phrygia and Pacatiana.
Theophylact of Ohridon 1 Timothy 6:21AD 1107
Whoever follows mere human reasonings inevitably misses the harmony and the goal of faith. For faith does not admit of intellectual comprehensions. I think the apostle says all this about the Gnostics known at that time, who were filled with every impurity, which he also called "profane and vain babblings" (1 Tim. 6:20). Among them, the representative of this heresy was Nicolaus, one of the seven deacons.

As a seal upon everything, he wishes him grace, by which every good thing is both given and preserved. May we all be partakers of it, not squandering the blessings received from it, but by it preserving them and glorifying Christ, the Giver of graces, with the Father and the Holy Spirit: to Him be glory unto the ages of ages. Amen.
Thomas Aquinason 1 Timothy 6:21AD 1274
Which some claiming to have, have erred concerning the faith: every man is become a fool for knowledge which is not of God (Jer 10:14), because he who speaks a lie, speaks from his own (John 8:44); the children also of Memphis, and of Taphnes, have deflowered you, even to the crown of the head (Jer 2:16); your wisdom and your knowledge have deceived you (Isa 47:10).

The grace of God be with you. Amen.