canadyjd
Well-Known Member
Paidogogos
You said
"Yes, anytime one applies the man is disqualified until he repents and purges the sin from his life. The catch is that the other qualifications are in the present whereas divorce remains—once divorced, always divorced."
and
"Why should salvation be the dividing line?"
First, you are adding to scripture when you say a man must "purge his sins from his life". The text doesn't say that. You also imply that divorce is the one sin that can't be purged from a man's life. (even though divorce is not mentioned in the text)
So, even if the sin of divorce is nailed to the cross with Christ, it still disqualifies? So, even if the sin of divorce is removed from us as far as the east is from the west, it still disqualifies? So, even if a man is a "new creation in Christ", that divorce that belonged to the old man clings to him, along with the righteousness of our Lord, so as to disqualify for service?
All the rest can be purged? But divorce cannot be purged?
What if a man kills someone during a drunken brawl? (he was pugnacious and addicted to strong drink). Once a murderer, always a murderer. He can never change the fact that he killed someone, can he? Surely he must also be disqualified, isn't he?
peace to you
You said
"Yes, anytime one applies the man is disqualified until he repents and purges the sin from his life. The catch is that the other qualifications are in the present whereas divorce remains—once divorced, always divorced."
and
"Why should salvation be the dividing line?"
First, you are adding to scripture when you say a man must "purge his sins from his life". The text doesn't say that. You also imply that divorce is the one sin that can't be purged from a man's life. (even though divorce is not mentioned in the text)
So, even if the sin of divorce is nailed to the cross with Christ, it still disqualifies? So, even if the sin of divorce is removed from us as far as the east is from the west, it still disqualifies? So, even if a man is a "new creation in Christ", that divorce that belonged to the old man clings to him, along with the righteousness of our Lord, so as to disqualify for service?
All the rest can be purged? But divorce cannot be purged?
What if a man kills someone during a drunken brawl? (he was pugnacious and addicted to strong drink). Once a murderer, always a murderer. He can never change the fact that he killed someone, can he? Surely he must also be disqualified, isn't he?
peace to you
