Originally posted by Salamander:
Scott J, it's the re-marriage to another woman that disqualifies the man, not the divorce.
I don't find that in the text either... unless you adopt an inconsistent interpretation. If a man who remarries is disqualified then why wouldn't a man be who had other sex partners before marriage. And if they, why not those who fantasized about other partners... and on and on.
You implied that all divorces are the result of deviate behaviour on the part of the man. This is not always the case and I don't believe you did that intentionally.
Yes and no. I am not sure that a divorce ever occurs where a man wouldn't bear some responsibility even if it is just lack of carefulness in who he married. All men could be better husbands. All men could be less bad husbands.
OTOH, the offended party usually didn't directly force the offender into abandonment or fornication. Those are personal responsibilities before God that are not situational nor dependent on circumstances.
Divorces are forgivable, just as all sin is forgivable excepting the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost BUT!!! the consequences of all sin still are effectual due to the digressive nature of all sin.
I don't disagree. But as I said before, it is God, not man, that determines whether those consequences include not being able to ever be a pastor or deacon.
The literal reading of the passage in question is "one woman man". As TomVols has pointed out, the language indicates a present condition. A divorced man
can be a "one woman man" in the here and now.
Divorce ends a living institution. It puts to death the marriage covenant, but not the first wife.
Yes.
She is still living, thus the man who re-marries would have two living wives
No. There is no place in scripture where it is denied that divorce ends a marriage. The Bible doesn't say that a divorced man continues to be married to his first wife... in fact, that is a violation of the definition of the word. Divorce for whatever reason literally ends the marriage.
A biblically divorced man who has repented of his sin can demonstrate the qualifications mentioned in the Bible.
and disqualified due to being the husband of such and therefore NOT the "husband of one wife".
Two things to recap.
First, he is no longer the husband of the first woman. The Bible does define divorce implicitly as the end of a marriage though the NT restricts the cases where a believer may use it.
Second, "husband of one wife" is an interpretive translation. It isn't literal. "one woman man" is literal... and significantly broader than just marriage.