2 Timothée 3:5

5 ayant l'apparence de la piété, mais reniant ce qui en fait la force. Eloigne-toi de ces hommes-là.

2 Timothée 3:5 Meaning and Commentary

2 Timothy 3:5

Having a form of godliness
Either a mere external show of religion, pretending great piety and holiness, being outwardly righteous before men, having the mask and visor of godliness; or else a plan of doctrine, a form of sound words, a scheme of truths, which men may have without partaking of the grace of God; and which, with respect to the doctrine of the Trinity, the church of Rome has; or else the Scriptures of truth, which the members of that church have, and profess to hold to, maintain and preserve; and which contains doctrines according to godliness, and tend to a godly life and godly edification:

but denying the power thereof;
though in words they profess religion and godliness, the fear of God, and the pure worship of him, yet in works they deny all; and though they may have a set of notions in their heads, yet they feel nothing of the power of them on their hearts; and are strangers to experimental religion, and powerful godliness: or though they profess the Scriptures to be the word of God, yet they deny the use, the power, and efficacy of them; they deny the use of them to the laity, and affirm that they are not a sufficient rule of faith and practice, without their unwritten traditions; and that they are not able to make men wise, or give them a true knowledge of what is to be believed and done, without them; and that the sense of them is not to be understood by private men, but depends upon the infallible judgment of the church or pope:

from such turn away;
have no fellowship with them, depart from their communion, withdraw from them, and come out from among them: this passage sufficiently justifies the reformed churches in their separation from the church of Rome.

2 Timothée 3:5 In-Context

3 insensibles, déloyaux, calomniateurs, intempérants, cruels, ennemis des gens de bien,
4 traîtres, emportés, enflés d'orgueil, aimant le plaisir plus que Dieu,
5 ayant l'apparence de la piété, mais reniant ce qui en fait la force. Eloigne-toi de ces hommes-là.
6 Il en est parmi eux qui s'introduisent dans les maisons, et qui captivent des femmes d'un esprit faible et borné, chargées de péchés, agitées par des passions de toute espèce,
7 apprenant toujours et ne pouvant jamais arriver à la connaissance de la vérité.
The Louis Segond 1910 is in the public domain.