· Translation: KJV

Titus 3:15All who are with me greet you. Greet those who love us in faith. Grace be with you all. Amen.

The setting

Nicopolis, Greece, ~65 AD. Winter. Paul dictates final words to his scribe, knowing he may never see Titus again...

The emotion here: tender affection knowing this might be farewell

The original word

charis (χάρις) — unmerited divine favor, the signature word Paul uses to end every letter

Why it matters

This is likely Paul's last letter before his final imprisonment and execution

Read with care

What most readers miss in Titus 3:15

Paul mentions 'all who are with me' — he was never alone, always surrounded by ministry partners

Common misconceptionMost people read this as a throwaway greeting, but Paul is invoking God's actual presence and favor on people he loves deeply and may never see again.

Bible Genome reading

Titus 3:15 — Bible Genome reading

SpeakerPaul
Eraearly_church
Primary emotiongrateful
Literary typepoetry
MarkPromise of God
MarkPrayer
MarkCommand

Emotional genome

Comfort power80%
Quotability60%
Memorability60%
Crisis relevance30%
Standalone60%
Themes:fellowshipgrace blessing

In context

No verse stands alone.

Read the conversation around it.

Open Titus 3

Titus 3:15 comes from the book of Titus, written during the early_church period. These words are attributed to Paul. The dominant emotion in this verse is grateful, with a comfort power of 80% and a tone that is tender. It belongs to the poetry genre of biblical literature. Key themes include fellowship, grace blessing. Notable phrases: All who are with me greet you; Grace be with you all. This verse contains a promise of God. This verse is a prayer. This verse contains a command.

Your reflection

What does Titus 3:15 mean to you, today?

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