The “godly man” thing is also pretty close to a “no true Scotsman” argument.
If you say, “I think contemporary American men prefer to marry college educated women even with debt over non-college women” and lay out the statistics demonstrating that, then what you get back is probably going to be, “but no godly man would do that.”
Or if I say, “I see a lot of young men on campus with religious tattoos and I see religious homeschooling moms with tattoos,” then the answer is going to be, “But no godly people would do that.”
Once the person gets to define what is and isn’t “godly,” they’re going to win the argument each and every time.
The thing is, people have preferences about a lot of things. For example, before I met my future husband, he was hankering to meet a female doctoral student in his field so they could collaborate together. Sadly, I was not in his field, so that did not happen, but I’m fairly sure that (everything being equal) he would have preferred a woman like that with student loan debt over a woman with no higher education and no student loans.
Different people like different things. Which is good, because otherwise, we’d all want to marry the same person…