Paidagogos wrote:
There's no exegetical meat to sink one's teeth into. It's all presuppositional reasoning based on a historical-cultural interpretation. IHMO, the theological aspect is the deciding factor.
Check your teeth, brother

It's exegesis to note that the character qualifications in 1 Tim 3 and Titus 1 are all in present tense (Present Infinitive, to be exact, which does not denote time but continual action/character) to denote the sexual purity of a people living amongst a culture filled with sexual debauchery. (I can't get the Greek font to appear. How do you do that?) As you said, it would take pages to explain in a full way how this interpretation is anchored, but I'll try the Cliff Notes.

There seem to be four interpretations regarding this requirement: </font>
- He must be married</font>
- He must not be a polygamist</font>
- He must be faithful to his wife</font>
- He must not ever be divorced</font>
- He must not ever have remarried after the death of his wife</font>
View 1 is unlikely becaue Paul praises the single state (Cf 1 Cor 7) for service. View 2 is the historical consensus position, but I don't see overwhelming evidence that polygamy was an accepted practice among believers. View 4 is impotent for several factors: construction of mias gunaikos, lack of the word apoloyo, pres inf construct, context of character rather than status, etc. View 5 dies at 1 Tim 5:14; Rom 7:2-3; 1 Cor 7:39, etc., where remarriage after spousal death is not condemned, and may even be encouraged.
These points are primarily from a historical-cultural without due consideration to theolgoical implications.
I beg to differ. Verbal plenary inspiration of Scripture and literal interpretation demands we consider historical-grammatical matters in order to properly exegete the text. Yet you say:
Good hermeneutics include the historical-cultural, linguistic, context and theological components in varying degrees.
Not sure what you mean by varying degrees, but I can go with this. Problem is, the interpretation you hold doesn't. It is eisegetical because it reads an intepretation back into the text that is birthed from at best, a noble desire to uphold the Bible and its teaching of the sanctity of marriage, and at worst a modern standard of character that is born out of emotional tradition. Or both
While I admire that the holders of this position desire to maintain the sanctity of marriage, one need not wrestle the text of Scripture from proper literal interpretation to do so.
You contended that the "no divorce" interpretation for elder/deacon is partially derived from a covenental argument reflecting the Redeemer and the redeemed as picturing the elder and the church. I'd briefly say (1) I have not seen you validate this from clear teaching of Scripture. (2) If plural eldership was the norm for church leadership, couldn't your covenental argument break down since there is but one Redeemer? Yes, in three persons, but an elder is not a trinity
He is one person. (3) Wouldn't context require that the covenental Redeemer-redeemed template be applied to the other character requirements? Other covenental Redeemer-redeemed imagery/language is used throughout Scripture. Must the candidate fulfill all these?
I look forward to reading your response. I know you and I are constrained by time, so a lengthy back-and-forth is probably not possible. Besides, as you alluded, we've hashed and rehashed this a lot before. (Not you and me as "We", just the Board in general)