NT Text: Titus 1:16
OT Source(s):
Source: Theoretical
Reference Type: Echo
Connection Method(s): Analogy
Significance: Paul's description of the Cretan false teachers as "detestable" (bdelyktoi) echoes the LXX of Psalm 14:1, where the fool's corrupt deeds are described with the related term ebdelychthēsan ("they have become abominable"). The verbal link through the bdelyssomai word group connects Paul's moral assessment to the psalmist's portrait of practical atheism. In Psalm 14, the fool denies God not philosophically but functionally — by living as though God does not see. Paul applies the same logic: the false teachers "profess to know God, but they deny him by their works" (Tit 1:16). Both texts identify the fundamental disconnect between verbal confession and lived practice as the essence of godlessness. The echo strengthens Paul's pastoral warning that orthodoxy without orthopraxy is functionally equivalent to the fool's denial.