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Every other character trait in the list is a quality that the man has consistently exhibited over a period of (recent) time. How is the man living? Not a single one refers to his distant past. None of that matters, unless you believe that Christ doesn't change men. (I don't think you believe that BTW.)Originally posted by Lacy Evans:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Biblicist:
So...What do you guys think the verse means?
One woman man at the time of the vote?
Just curious.
I know brother. I'm not trying to pick on him, but he does tend to set himself up as the expert.Originally posted by El_Guero:
Biblicist ...
I am trying not to answer ...
But, Scott still has not answered the question ...
OK, what if the 80 year old man's ex-wife remarried? Does he still have to remain true to her to be considered? Does he have a moral obligation before God and his local body to remain true (And married ) to someone else's wife? Is he obligated to stay single now since Deut 24 expressly states that to EVER remarry her would be an abomination? Or can he remarry but only if he doesn't want to be a deacon when he is 81?Originally posted by Biblicist:
If they were divorced and not remarried they may be considered disqualified based on not ruling their own houses well. If they were divorced at 18 and being considered for a deacon at 80 it MAY be a different story, but again, that would be a local church decision. I personally would not recommend that man to that office.
OK, what if the 80 year old man's ex-wife remarried? Does he still have to remain true to her to be considered? Does he have a moral obligation before God and his local body to remain true (And married ) to someone else's wife? Is he obligated to stay single now since Deut 24 expressly states that to EVER remarry her would be an abomination? Or can he remarry but only if he doesn't want to be a deacon when he is 81?Originally posted by Lacy Evans:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />
Of course... but that is not the question. The question is whether those who deny that this is a matter of a man's current character will present an alternative interpretation that is coherent and can be applied consistently.Originally posted by El_Guero:
Scott,
The question was:
Do you hate divorce ... ?
Originally posted by Lacy Evans:
Fair enough. Let the interested readers of this post decide for themselves.PS When I refer to your position as inconsistent, I am not making a moral judgment about you. I simply mean that my opinion is that the "no divorce" position is not consistent with the rest of the passage. Scott and I have both given the reasons why we feel that way.
Thanks for your amicable spirit by the way.
Now, how about that verse I keep mentioning? (6x now) haha
No seriously. I'm not trying to be sarcastic or rude to you. I just don't want it to be forgotten.
Now, answer a question for me:Originally posted by El_Guero:
Scott,
The question was:
Do you hate divorce ... ?
Now, answer a question for me:Originally posted by Scott J:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by El_Guero:
Scott,
The question was:
Do you hate divorce ... ?
Is it easier to be funny than to answer his argument?Originally posted by Biblicist:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Lacy Evans:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Biblicist:
Everyone may now bow to the wisdom of THE SCOTT!
The final word on the subject has been given.
Now, answer a question for me:Originally posted by Biblicist:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Scott J:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by El_Guero:
Scott,
The question was:
Do you hate divorce ... ?
Wow. I would never call them a poor slob, but you can do whatever you think is right.Originally posted by Biblicist:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by just-want-peace:
You're playing accuser, judge, jury and executioner to this poor slob! God made no such demands!
They do mean something... I am just asking you and others to prove that it means "no divorce" when the text doesn't say "no divorce" or else to give some other consistent interpretation.Also, what's the point of qualifications if they don't mean anything?
I am sorry about that. I for some reason thought I had.MOST IMPORTANTLY, when is someone going to deal with that verse I've mentioned 4x now.
Verse 16 isn't a statement about verse 15. It is a statement about the previous verses. It declares why the Christian spouse shouldn't leave the unbelieving spouse.1 Corinthians 7:12But to the rest speak I, not the Lord: If any brother hath a wife that believeth not, and she be pleased to dwell with him, let him not put her away.
13And the woman which hath an husband that believeth not, and if he be pleased to dwell with her, let her not leave him.
14For the unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife, and the unbelieving wife is sanctified by the husband: else were your children unclean; but now are they holy.
15But if the unbelieving depart, let him depart. A brother or a sister is not under bondage in such cases: but God hath called us to peace.
16For what knowest thou, O wife, whether thou shalt save thy husband? or how knowest thou, O man, whether thou shalt save thy wife?
Really? I think it might be more to the tune that I disagree with you on things that you have self-annointed yourself as expert on.Originally posted by Biblicist:
I'm not trying to pick on him, but he does tend to set himself up as the expert.
I looked through my messages and didn't find where I had sent you a PM. If I did and was incorrect why didn't you handle it privately... so that you could see what kind of person you were dealing with?What put me over the top is when he sent me a private message and then misquoted my response on this board. Even worse, he said it was a private response as if I was being dishonest in public.
I could care less really, but that gave me an indication of the type of person I was dealing with.
I am not particularly interested in what is historic or "conservative" unless it agrees with what God intended when He inspired the scripture.Originally posted by El_Guero:
Scott,
I disagree. You have been evasive. You have disagreed with the historic, and conservative, interpretation of the passage.
Nope. I am asking others to be consistent. God said "one woman man". That can mean a few different things but I see no way you can limit it to "no divorce".You ask others to re-interpret scripture in a new context.
I guess that would be a matter of which end of the cattle prod you were on.Sounds to me like Biblicist is just trying to difuse this issue with humor. Maybe he is a bit wry.
Thanks Lacy. I appreciate that... I can be stubborn and obstinate sometimes but I try not to be.Originally posted by Lacy Evans:
Biblicist,
I don't always agree with Scott but I haven't found him to be stubborn or obstinate when considering other's arguments. IMHO, Scott is generally very reasonable.
Originally posted by just-want-peace:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Actually my point was that it doesn't matter if you answer his argument at all, he refuses to accept anything other than his position.
After 11 pages of posts, he responds:
Seems to me the question of "CONSISTENT APPLICATION" has NOT been answered! That's the only question I've seen Scott raise."No matter what anyone believes or doesn't believe....."
"No one has established..."
"No one has come up with......"
"I have asked repeatedly....."
I will go one better than that. Select any deacon you know and if the "one woman man" requirement is lifetime virtually none of them could qualify under a literal interpretation.Select ANY deacon you know, and he has failed at least one of the qualifing characteristics in the past before becoming a deacon. I feel perfectly safe in making that statement because every deacon is nothing more/less than a simple human being!
Originally posted by Scott J:
[QB]Originally posted by Biblicist:
[qb]Are you serious? You are I guess. That's whats so scary.The key is context... which you have stripped the text out of in order to make your point:......
Verse 16 isn't a statement about verse 15. It is a statement about the previous verses. It declares why the Christian spouse shouldn't leave the unbelieving spouse.
Really? I'm sorry, I thought this was the "Serving as a deacon after divorce" thread...lolNow, I hope you are satisfied... though somehow I doubt it. If you want to discuss this then you should either make a direct link to the passages covering deacon qualifications or start another thread.... because this has nothing to do with who can be a deacon.
Silly me.