(Continued…)
- there were no known women pastors in New Testament times;
- none of the instructions regarding church order include instructions for women pastors;
- some texts on church order explicitly forbid women to occupy that role. In 1 Timothy 2:12, written with the specific purpose of regulating the office of pastor and the orderly function of the churches, Paul writes, “I do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man” (NIV).
Now let me clarify something here. The above argument against women pastors is not one that I personally formulated. I cut & pasted it from a
statement issued by the Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention. This statement concludes with the remark, “Southern Baptists are not anti-woman; indeed, they affirm the leadership of women in family, business, politics, and a wide array of human endeavors. Furthermore, women are an integral and invaluable part of the Body of Christ, serving in a broad variety of important roles both as volunteers and vocational ministers. We don’t know how to say this more strongly: women and men are of equal value! However, because Scripture speaks specifically to the role of pastor, churches are under a moral imperative to be guided by that teaching, rather than the shifting opinions of human cultures.” (Emphasis added)
Possibly. I haven’t come across a specific attempt to justify same-sex marriage using the Bible in accordance with Sola Scriptura. Nevertheless, I presume that the Association of Welcoming and Affirming Baptists as well as the More Light Presbyterians have made such attempts considering the comments they make concerning
their beliefs (and
here). But that is conjecture on my part.
Here is a true story. A friend of a friend called me one day crying because her husband had moved out and was saying that he wanted a divorce. He admitted that he wanted to start dating a woman he was working with, and claimed that he had not yet been sexually intimate with this woman. This husband and wife attended a Bible church (I forgot which) and were adherents of Sola Scriptura. She told me that she did not want a divorce. As a matter-of-fact, they had four kids at the time, including an infant. So she quoted Matthew 19:9 (and they used the NIV) to her husband:
“I tell you that anyone who divorces his wife, except for marital unfaithfulness, and marries another woman commits adultery."
Her husband then responded with the following biblical argument:
- Matthew 19:9 says that “marital unfaithfulness” is permissible grounds for divorce. “Marital unfaithfulness simply means “adultery” (and many Bibles actually use the word “adultery” in this passage).
- The man claimed that he had not had sex with any other woman.
- But Jesus says that if a man lusts after a woman, he has committed adultery in his heart (Matthew 5:27-28).
- The man confessed that he had, indeed, lusted after other women, and so, based on Matthew 5:27-28, he was guilty of the sin of adultery.
- Therefore, the man concluded that it was morally permissible for them to get a divorce.
As a side note, this woman called me because a mutual friend told her that I was studying theology and wanted to know what I thought of her husband’s Scriptural interpretation, and I gave her a Catholic response which, as one would expect, defended her marriage and rejected her husband’s argument. But this post, of course, is not concerned with the Catholic interpretation, but rather yours.
Regardless of whether or not this man was a dirt-bag for doing what he did, objectively speaking is it biblically permissible for this man to get a divorce? And let me remind you that he believes in following what the Bible teaches, and he believes in Sola Scriptura, and he believes that in his case a divorce would be permitted due to the exception clause of Matthew 19:9.
If you say that a divorce is permissible then clearly explain why Jesus condemned divorce but then gave an exception clause that everyone on the planet could easily use as a loophole. If you say no then is the use of Scripture alone enough for you to prove that your interpretation of the Bible is correct and his is not?
(Continued in my next post)