CHAPTER 8 PART 3: STANDARDS
FOR CHURCH SERVICE
MEN PLEASERS, FLATTERING
TITLES, AND DOCTORS OF THE LAW
The biggest problem in the issue
before us is pride. We are not going to give up on what we
have been taught because we would have to admit we are
wrong. All the wimpy men followers would have to took their
tails under and run from their doctrinal dictators and
taskmasters like scalded dogs. God forbid they should study
this issue through for themselves! We have also seen pastors
that not only reject counsel, but also openly rebuke
counsel. A man that will not
take counsel is a fool that is right in his own eyes
(Proverbs 12:15). Most men openly reject the whole
counsel of God on the issue before us choosing instead to
take the counsel of great men. The fear of men bringeth a
snare. Great men are not always wise. In many of our
Independent Baptist churches, we have become promoters of
men instead of promoters of the Lord Jesus Christ. Many
Independent Baptist pastors have taken a peacock’s stroll
down lover’s lane walking hand-in-hand with themselves. We
have put unholy and wicked Doctors into our pulpits who are
into self exaltation and consider themselves to be above
rebuke and all the while forgetting the warning and counsel
of Job and Jeremiah:
Job
32:21-22
21 Let me not, I pray you, accept any man’s person, neither
let me give flattering titles unto man. 22 For I know not to
give flattering titles; in so doing my maker would
soon take me away.
Jeremiah 9:23-24
23 Thus saith the LORD, Let not the wise man glory in
his wisdom, neither let the mighty man glory in his
might, let not the rich man glory in his riches: 24
But let him that glorieth glory in this, that he
understandeth and knoweth me, that I am the LORD
which exercise lovingkindness, judgment, and righteousness,
in the earth: for in these things I delight, saith
the LORD.
What that tells us is that we are to neither give flattering
titles or receive flattering titles. To do either is SIN.
Many of these doctors have become the priest class in our
Baptist churches who seek the highest seats and honours in
the synagogues. A case in point is the following
advertisement quoted verbatim from the back page of the
August 31, 2012 edition of that Independent Baptist bastion
of humility, the “Sword Of The Lord”:
There is not a man alive who
has personally won more souls to Christ than
DOCTOR Bob
Gray, Sr. He has been in the ministry for 39 years and daily
wins souls. Last year he personally led 404 souls to Christ,
with 107 of those following the Lord in baptism. He has been
used of God to see 1,116,887 souls come to Christ while
pastoring the Longview Baptist Temple of Longview, Texas. It
grew from a low of 159 to averaging 2,046 the last year he
was pastor, with high days over 10,000. They ran 40 bus
routes and had a large Sunday School program. He led the
church to give $9,328,835.69 to missions. I want you to come
hear this man of God who can help you.
DOCTOR
Russell Anderson
Wow, what vainglory! There is
nothing like a vain attempt to steal the glory from God!
That is enough to make us want to puke! Bob Gray has
received his reward in the praise of men. We would be
ashamed to have such unadulterated worship published
concerning us. Not only would we be ashamed, we would not
allow it. Shame on the “Sword Of The Lord”. We cannot
believe that the “conservative, fundamentalist” “Sword Of
The Lord” would publish such vainglory! Uh, uh, uh we
retract that statement. A search of the August 2012 issue of
“The Sword” reveals that Independent Baptists are very fond
of the title DOCTOR. It appears no less than 105 times in
the 24 pages of “The Sword”. Just in case you have forgotten
the sinner’s prayer they also include it with a copy of a
decision form that may put your converts on the road to
confirmation. There is also an equally effusive trip down
glory road in the endorsement given to “Pastor” Terrell
Hopkins on the back page. This whole paper reeks of the
filthiness of the flesh and the vileness of self-esteem and
self-exaltation. There is definitely no glory left there for
the Lord Jesus Christ. Maybe they need to rename their
newspaper “The Independent Baptist Glory Corner”. It is
definitely not the sword of the Lord because in its pages
man is high and lifted up.
God forbid that we should glory, save in the cross of our
Lord Jesus Christ. Hallelujah!
Hallelujah!
DIVORCE COMMANDED UPON THE
PRIESTHOOD
The next to the last issue we will deal
with in this chapter is the situation where God commanded
the Levitical priests to put away their pagan wives. This
drives to the issue of whether divorce disqualifies men from
ministering in the service of God. In Ezra 10 and Nehemiah
13 we have the record of the cleansing of the priesthood
that included putting away their strange (pagan) wives.
These events are recorded in Ezra 10:2-3, Ezra 10:10-11,
Ezra 10:18-19, and Nehemiah 13:27-30. These Scriptures
state:
Ezra
10:2-3
2 And
Shechaniah the son of Jehiel, one of the sons of
Elam, answered and said unto Ezra, We have trespassed
against our God, and have taken strange wives of the people
of the land: yet now there is hope in Israel concerning this
thing. 3 Now therefore let us make a covenant with our God
to put away all the wives, and such as are born of them,
according to the counsel of my lord, and of those that
tremble at the commandment of our God; and let it be done
according to the law.
Ezra
10:10-11
10 And
Ezra the priest stood up, and said unto them, Ye have
transgressed, and have taken strange wives, to increase the
trespass of Israel. 11 Now therefore make confession unto
the LORD God of your fathers, and do his pleasure: and
separate yourselves from the people of the land, and from
the strange wives.
Ezra
10:18-19
18 And
among the sons of the priests there were found that had
taken strange wives: namely, of the sons of Jeshua
the son of Jozadak, and his brethren; Maaseiah, and Eliezer,
and Jarib, and Gedaliah. 19 And they gave their hands that
they would put away their wives; and being guilty,
they offered a ram of the flock for their trespass.
Nehemiah
13:27-30
27 Shall we then hearken unto you to do all this
great evil, to transgress against our God in marrying
strange wives? 28 And one of the sons of Joiada,
the son of Eliashib the high priest, was son in law to
Sanballat the Horonite: therefore I chased him from me.
29 Remember them, O my God, because they have defiled
the priesthood, and the covenant of the priesthood, and of
the Levites. 30 Thus cleansed I them from all
strangers, and appointed the wards of the priests and the
Levites, every one in his business;
What about that?! A
commandment from God to the people and the priesthood to
divorce (put away) their pagan, unbelieving wives.
If you study all of Ezra chapter 10, you will find that not
only had the people corrupted themselves with pagan wives
but that priesthood had also. When the priests
defiled themselves by taking profane (strange or pagan)
wives they disqualified themselves from the priesthood
according to Leviticus 21:7 which says:
Leviticus 21:7
7 They [the priests] shall not take a wife that
is a whore, or profane; neither shall they take a woman put
away from her husband: for he is holy unto his God.
It was therefore necessary that they put away (divorce)
their pagan wives so that they might be ceremonially clean
for service in offering up sacrifices unto the LORD.
Nehemiah makes it plain that the priests were cleansed
“from
all strangers” before they were appointed into
wards. This cleansing was the subject of all of Ezra chapter
10 where the divorces were commanded and carried out. So, if
divorce disqualifies a man from service unto God, then why
did God command the divorces of the priests and then return
them unto service in the Temple?
If you teach that divorce disqualifies a man from the
ministry, then you are going to have a hard time reconciling
that doctrine with Ezra 10 and Nehemiah 13. You cannot
explain it away dispensationally. You cannot explain it away
as being a difference between law and grace. We close this
section with a statement that we quoted earlier:
A
divorced and remarried priest can serve - the only
restriction we find is that he may not marry a divorcee. A
priest does not have to be married except for the High
Priest on the Yom Kippur service. This is derived from
Leviticus 16:6: "He shall atone for himself and his home" -
where 'home' implies he has a family (see Mishna Yoma 1;1).
They also could have multiple wives since this is forbidden
only rabinically. Ezekiel 44 contains more of the basic laws
of priests - prophetically described in the Third Temple,
but Leviticus 21 is the main source. [From Rabbi Dovid
Rosenfeld
aishrabbi@aish.edu
]
Note
that the priests in this quote were allowed to have multiple
wives. Could that give us some insight into the necessity
for the use of the phrase “husband of one wife” by the Holy
Ghost in 1 Timothy 3:2?
DIVORCED HUSBANDS AS PASTORS
OF THEIR HOMES
Our final question is: Is a divorced and
remarried man disqualified from being the pastor of his
home? While on the surface this might seem to be a
ridiculous question, it really is not because many men have
been put in situations where they are in remote locations
where there is no established church and they must pastor
their families. Are you going to try to tell us that they
should forego any assembly for the purpose of worship,
preaching, and teaching because the father in the family has
been divorced. The Lord Jesus Christ said in Matthew 18:20:
“For where two or three are gathered together in my name,
there am I in the midst of them”. That is given in the
context of a church. As a reminder, a church is an organized
assembly of baptized believers. That assembly does not have
to take place in a church building. That is a definition
that applies to families in locations where there are no
churches or no scriptural churches. Are you going to tell us
that a family cannot meet the commandment “not forsaking the
assembling of ourselves together”? The charge has been given
to the husband to be the spiritual leader in the home
regardless of whether he is divorced. Are you going to tell
us that that divorced man cannot preach to and teach the
members of his family? Are the family members any less
church members because they are not assembled in a church
building? The rate at which the wicked, apostate, heretical
church is falling away there will come a time when people
will have to hold church in their homes. In many locations,
that is already an absolute necessity. We would remind you
that many of the early churches were organized in homes. We
are not here advocating families pulling out of good Bible
believing churches. This paragraph is yet another
illustration of how utterly unscriptural the doctrine is
that permanently disqualifies a divorced man from being a
preacher, pastor, evangelist, missionary, or deacon. That
doctrine is an affront to “rightly dividing the word of
truth”. Put bluntly, it is heresy.
APPENDIX I
QUOTES FROM VARIOUS AUTHORS
AND COMMENTARIES
We strongly state the
following disclaimer on the quotes that follow: We in no way
endorse the doctrine or theology of most of the individuals
we quote below. Many of them are Calvinists and Roman
Catholics. In fact, most of them we would disagree with on
some major point of doctrine. They are only quoted here to
show the breadth of opinion and interpretation of the phrase
“husband of one wife”.
QUOTES FROM VARIOUS AUTHORS
Albert Barnes:
(Presbyterian; born 1798): Polygamy: (1) It is the
most obvious meaning of the language, and it would doubtless
be thus understood by those to whom it was addressed. At a
time when polygamy was not uncommon, to say that a man
should “have but one wife” would be naturally understood as
prohibiting polygamy. [Albert Barnes, Notes, Explanatory and
Practical, on the Epistles of Paul: To the Thessalonians, To
Timothy, To Titus, and to Philemon, Harper & Brothers, 1845,
Page 162]
Ambrose:
And the Apostle has established a law, saying: “If any man
be without reproach the husband of one wife.” So then he who
is without blame the husband of one wife comes within the
rule for undertaking the priestly office; he, however, who
has married again has no guilt of pollution, but is
disqualified for the priestly prerogative. [Philip
Schaff, Henry Wace, A Select Library of Nicene and
Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church: St. Ambrose:
Select Works And Letters. Christian Literature Company,
1896, Page 466]
Joseph Benson:
(Methodist; born 1748): Polygamy: The apostle’s
meaning, therefore, in these canons, is, that such persons
only were to be intrusted with sacred offices who in their
married state had contented themselves with one wife, and
with one husband at a time; because thereby they had showed
themselves temperate in the use of sensual pleasures;
through the immoderate love of which the Asiatic nations
universally practised polygamy. [No Locate On Reference]
William Burkitt:
(Anglican; born 1650): Polygamy And Divorce: The
husband of one wife; that is, one at a time; not guilty of
the sin of having many wives, or of putting away the wife by
divorce, as the Jews frequently did for frivolous causes.
[William Burkitt, Expository notes, with practical
observations, on the New Testament, Volume 2 ,1832, Page
522]
John Calvin:
(Calvinist; born 1509 ): Polygamy: The only true
exposition, therefore, is that of Chrysostom, that in a
bishop he expressly condemns polygamy, (50) which at that
time the Jews almost reckoned to be lawful. [John Calvin,
Commentaries on the Epistles to Timothy, Titus and Philemon,
Calvin Translation Society, 1856, Page 77]
John Chrysostom:
“A
Bishop then,” he says, “must be blameless, the husband of
one wife.” This he does not lay down as a rule, as if he
must not be without one, but as prohibiting his having more
than one. For even the Jews were allowed to contract second
marriages, and even to have two wives at one time.
[John Chrysostom, A Select
Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of the
Christian Church: Christian literature Company, 1889, Page
438]
Adam Clarke:
(Methodist; born 1760): Polygamy: Second - must be
the husband of one wife. He should be a married man, but he
should be no polygamist; and have only one wife, i.e. one at
a time. [Adam Clarke, The New Testament of Our Lord and
Saviour Jesus Christ: Volume 2, Peter C. Smith, 1831, Page
612]
Thomas Coke:
(Methodist; born 1747):Polygamy And Causeless
Divorce) the husband of one wife; that is, “one who has not
causelessly divorced his wife, and married another;” much
less ought he to have more than one wife at a time. [No
Locate On Reference]
Stanley L. Derickson:
A Divorced Man Is Disqualified:
One
other possibility has been taught in recent years. “Not a
loose type man,” or “a one woman at a time man,” which of
course allows for divorce and remarriage of elders. This is
a recent addition to the menu of excuses to skirt Scripture
and allow people the freedom to do as they please rather
than as the Lord directs. [Stanley
L. Derickson, Derickson’s Notes On Theology, Copyright 1992,
Page 1061]
Jameson, Fausett,
and Brown: (published 1871): No Divorced Men:
Though the Jews practiced polygamy, yet as he is writing as
to a Gentile Church, and as polygamy was never allowed among
even laymen in the Church, the ancient interpretation that
the prohibition here is against polygamy in a candidate
bishop is not correct. It must, therefore, mean that, though
laymen might lawfully marry again, candidates for the
episcopate or presbytery were better to have been married
only once. [Robert Jamieson, Andrew Robert Fausset, David
Brown J. B. A Commentary, Critical, Practical and
Explanatory, on the Old and New Testaments, Volume 2, Names
& Company, 1882, Page 434]
Arno C. Gaebelein:
(Methodist; born 1861) Polygamy: “He must be the
husband of one wife.” This has been explained as excluding
all who had been married twice. This is incorrect. It may
refer to those who were as pagans married to more than one
woman, for polygamy was practiced among the heathen in that
day, as it is still. [Arno C. Gaeblein, The Annotated Bible,
Publication Office “Our Hope”, 1917, Page 162]
John Gill:
(Baptist; born 1697): Polygamy And Unscriptural
Divorce: The husband of one wife; which is not to be
understood in a mystical and allegorical sense of his being
the pastor of one church, since the apostle afterwards
speaks of his house and children, that are to be ruled and
kept in good order by him, in distinction from the church of
God; but in a literal sense of his conjugal estate; though
this rule does not make it necessary that he should have a
wife; or that he should not marry, or not have married a
second wife, after the death of the first; only if he
marries or is married, that he should have but one wife at a
time; so that this rule excludes all such persons from being
elders, or pastors, or overseers of churches, that were
“polygamists”; who had more wives than one at a time, or had
divorced their wives, and not for adultery, and had married
others. [John Gill, Exposition of the Old and New Testament]
W. B. Godbey:
“The husband of one wife;” i.e., polygamy prohibited.
[W. B.
Godbey, Commentary
On The New Testament, Volume 3,
Ephesians-Philemon, Page 190]
Matthew Henry:
(Presbyterian; born 1662): No Polygamy And No
Divorce: He must be the husband of one wife; not having
given a bill of divorce to one, and then taken another, or
not having many wives at once, as at that time was too
common both among Jews and Gentiles, especially among the
Gentiles. [Matthew Henry, An Exposition of the Old and New
Testament, Volume 6, Bell and Bradfute, J. Dickson, and J.
McCliesh, 1791, Page 674]
Jerome:
(Roman
Catholic): To what does all this tend, you ask. I reply; you
remember the question that you proposed. It was this. A
Spanish bishop named Carterius, old in years and in the
priesthood has married two wives, one before he was
baptized, and, she having died, another since he has passed
through the laver; and you are of opinion that he has
violated the precept of the apostle, who in his list of
episcopal qualifications commands that a bishop shall be
“the husband of one wife.” I am surprised that you have
pilloried an individual when the whole world is filled with
persons ordained in similar circumstances; I do not mean
presbyters or clergy of lower rank, but speak only of
bishops of whom if I were to enumerate them all one by one I
should gather a sufficient number to surpass the crowd which
attended the synod of Ariminum. [Philip Schaff, Henry
Wace, A Select Library of Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of
the Christian Church: St. Jerome, Christian Literature
Company, 1893, Page 142]
Jerome:
(Roman Catholic): The text quoted by the objector, “a bishop
must be the husband of one wife,” admits of quite another
explanation. The apostle came of the Jews and the primitive
Christian church was gathered out of the remnants of Israel.
Paul knew that the Law allowed men to have children by
several wives, and was aware that the example of the
patriarchs had made polygamy familiar to the people. Even
the very priests might at their own discretion enjoy the
same license. He gave commandment therefore that the priests
of the church should not claim this liberty, that they
should not take two wives or three together, but that they
should each have but one wife at one time. [Philip
Schaff, Henry Wace, A Select Library of Nicene and
Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church: St. Jerome,
Christian Literature Company, 1893, Page 144]
Jerome:
(Roman Catholic): “The husband of one wife.” Concerning this
requirement I have spoken above. I will now only warn you
that If monogamy is insisted on before baptism the other
conditions laid down must be insisted on before baptism too.
For it is impossible to regard the remaining obligations as
binding only on the baptized and this alone as binding also
on the unbaptized. [Philip Schaff, Henry Wace, A
Select Library of Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of the
Christian Church: St. Jerome, Christian Literature Company,
1893, Page 147]
Leo The Great:
[Caution: this was the first Roman Pope!]: A man who
has married twice or a widow is not eligible as a priest....For
it is well known that the husbands of widows have attained
to the priesthood: certain, too, who have had several wives,
and have led a life given up to all licentiousness, have had
all facilities put in their way, and been admitted to the
Sacred Order, contrary to that utterance of the blessed
Apostle, in which he proclaims and says to such, “the
husband of one wife,” and contrary to that precept of the
ancient law which says by way of caution: “Let the priest
take a virgin to wife, not a widow, not a divorced woman.”
All such persons, therefore, who have been admitted we order
to be put out of their offices in the church and from the
title of priest by the authority of the Apostolic See....But
if all the requirements of the holy Fathers are found in
them, and if they have observed all that we read the blessed
Apostle Paul to have enjoined on such, viz., that he be the
husband of one wife, and that she was a virgin when he
married her, as the authority of GOD’s law requires, [then
ordain them]. [Philip Schaff, Nicene and Post-Nicene
Fathers: Second Series, Volume XII Leo the Great, Cosimo,
Inc., Jun 1, 2007, Page 3]
Frederick B. Meyer
: (Baptist; first pastorate 1870): Polygamy And
Unscriptural Divorce: Such was the facility of divorce among
the Jews that it was a common thing for a man to have more
than one woman living who had been his wife: but by Paul’s
ruling this would debar him from holding office, unless his
divorce be for cause as provided in Matthew 19:9. [Meyer,
Frederick Brotherton, Commentary on 1 Timothy 3, Through the
Bible Commentary, 1914]
Matthew Poole:
(Presbyterian; born 1624): Polygamy: The husband of
one wife; none who at the same time hath more wives than
one, as many of the Jews had; nor was polygamy only common
amongst the Jews, but amongst the other Eastern nations; but
this was contrary to the institution of marriage. [Matthew
Poole, Annotations Upon the Holy Bible, R. Carter and
Brothers, 1852, Page 779]
Pulpit Commentary:
(Published 1890): Polygamy And No Divorce: It seems,
then, to mean that the pastor was to be “the husband of one
wife,” avoiding the polygamy that was then so common among
the Jews, and the system of divorce still so common in that
age, and remaining faithful to the wife of his choice. [
H.D.M. Spence and J.S. Exell, Henry Donald M. The Pulpit
Commentary, 1 Timothy, ed. by Spence- Jones 1887, Page 58]
A. T. Robertson:
(Southern Baptist, born 1863): Polygamy: Of one wife
[mias gunaikos]. One at a time, clearly. [A. T. Robertson,
Word Pictures in the New Testament, Volume 4, CCEL, 1930,
Page 659]
Charles C. Ryrie:
Interprets No Divorced Pastors: “husband of one wife
(may mean only one wife ever, since the Greek is the same as
in 1 Ti 5:9 and since polygamy was unknown among the Greeks
and Romans, or it may bar those who remarry after divorce)”.
[Charles C. Ryrie, A Survey of Bible Doctrine, Moody
Publishers, June 8, 1989, Page 88]
C.I. Scofield:
(Congregationalist; Published The Scofield Bible in 1909):
He avoids the issue of “the husband of one wife” entirely in
his notes. It is important to note that he was a divorced
pastor and that he was Dwight L Moody’s pastor and Moody
knew he was divorced.
Charles Spurgeon:
(Baptist; born 1834): Seemed To Interpret of
Polygamy: “For there were many converts there who had two or
three wives. Whatever position they might be permitted to
occupy in the church, they could not become officers, they
must keep in the rear rank”. [Charles Spurgeon, Tabernacle
Pulpit Volume 41, Page 728, Exposition of Titus 1 and 2) The
phrase “husband of one wife” occurs but twice in all of
Spurgeon’s published works: the one in Volume 41 and the one
Sword And Trowel, Volume 5, Page 138].
John Trapp:
(Anglican; born 1601): Polygamy: The husband of one
wife] sc. At once. The Egyptian priests were forbidden also
polygamy. [John Trapp, Commentary on 1 Timothy 3, Trapp
Complete Commentary,1865-1868]
John Wesley:
(Methodist): Polygamy And Divorce: This neither means
that a bishop must be married, nor that he may not marry a
second wife; which it is just as lawful for him to do as to
marry a first, and may in some cases be his bounden duty.
But whereas polygamy and divorce on slight occasions were
common both among the Jews and heathens, it teaches us that
ministers, of all others, ought to stand clear of those
sins. [John Wesley,
Notes On The Whole Bible, The New Testament, Page 693]
Daniel Whedon:
(Methodist; born 1808): Polygamy: Polygamy, in St.
Paul’s time, was usual with both Jews and Gentiles. It was
demoralizing both races. Rabbis had four and five wives.
Converts to Christianity involved in polygamy would often
present themselves for admission to the Church, and the
peculiarities of their case might be considered in the
instance of private Christians; but Paul forbids any such
entanglement for an elder. Alford admits that the early
commentators, Theodoret, Chrysostom, Theophylact, each made
the text forbid only polygamy. [Daniel Denison Whedon,
Commentary on the New Testament, Volume 4, Hunt & Eaton,
1903, Page 423]
Wayne Gruden:
However, the following reasons cause most
interpreters to reject this view. First, this view ignores
the over all context of 1 Tim 3, which emphasizes post
conversion character rather than preconversion sins. “All
the other qualifications listed by Paul refer to a man’s
present status, not his entire past life. For example, 1
Timothy 3:1-7 does not mean ‘one who has never been violent’
but ‘one who is not now violent, but gentle.’ It does not
mean ‘one who has never been a lover of money’ but ‘one who
is not now a lover of money.’ It does not mean ‘one who has
been above reproach his whole life’ but one who is now above
reproach.’” If we made these qualifications apply to one’s
entire past life, then we would exclude from office almost
everyone who became a Christian as an adult, for it is
doubtful that any non-Christian could meet these
qualifications.” [Wayne A. Grudem, Systematic Theology: An
Introduction to Biblical Doctrine Zondervan, 1994, Page 917]
John Rice
says in his Book, DR. RICE HERE ARE MORE QUESTIONS,
pgs. 339-340;
“I believe that any of these major sins (wrong divorce,
drunkenness, murder, etc.) can be forgiven and are forgiven
when there is honest repentance. Then when God has forgiven
and when one has done all he can do to repudiate and undo
the sins of the past (which of course, can never be undone
entirely and sometimes not at all), and when he has taken
time to live it down and proved himself a dependable,
trustworthy Christian so that his usefulness is not hindered
by the past, then he might do whatever God calls him to do
and whatever God’s people trust him to do....I do not
believe in passing a rule that one who has ever been drunk
can never be a deacon or preacher; likewise, I do not
believe in passing a rule that one who has ever been
divorced cannot be a deacon or preacher. And my reason is
very simple; there is no such rule in the Bible.” [John R.
Rice, Dr. Rice, Here are More Questions ..., Sword of the
Lord Publishers, 1973, Pages 339-340]
Stanley A. Ellisen
gives a few good thoughts from his book DIVORCE AND
REMARRIAGE:
“..One’s past history may not necessarily portray his
present character. It is possible to have a good marital
history of single marriage and have a ‘cat-calling’
character of wandering affections at the same time...On the
other hand, it is also possible to have a sorrowful marital
history of a broken marriage while having a personal
character that is above reproach. The tragedy may not have
been of his own making, as noted with the prophet
Hosea...The passage in 1 Timothy 3:2....puts the emphasis
where Jesus put it, on the heart and present character,
rather than on outward record of marital history. The
emphasis is not so much on what a man ONCE was, but what he
NOW is.... [Stanley A. Ellisen, Divorce and Remarriage in
the Church (Grand Rapids, 1980), p. 83]
J. Vernon McGee
says in his book QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS:
“Can a man who is divorced and remarried still be eligible
for a position, such as deacon or pastor?” Answer: “...If
the deacon (or pastor) has scriptural grounds on which he
got a divorce, and the circumstances are pretty generally
known, then I see no reason for his not occupying the office
of deacon (or pastor).” [J. Vernon McGee, Questions and
Answers, Published by Thomas Nelson Inc, 1991]
M.R. Dehaan
says in his book, DEAR DOCTOR, I HAVE A PROBLEM, pg.
109);
“If a man is saved after making the mistake, and sees and
confesses his fault, I would be the last one to put up a
hindrance to his ministry.” [M. R. DeHaan, Dear Doctor: I
Have a Problem, Answers to Bible Questions Volume Two,
Published by Zondervan, Grand Rapids MI, 1961, Page 109]
H.A. Ironside
says in his book WHAT IS THE ANSWER? (question 36);
Is it permissible for a man who has been twice married, the
first wife having been divorced because of immorality....to
hold the office of a deacon (or pastor)?” Answer: “....in
the case such as you mention, the first wife has been
divorced both legally and scripturally, ....the man is
qualified for the office of a deacon if the life is
otherwise right.” [H.A. Ironside, What Is The Answer?
(Question 36), Grand Rapids, MI, Zondervon, 1944]
QUOTES FROM COMMENTARIES
Husband of one wife.
(On Titus 1:6) The traditional and most widely accepted view
of Bible-believing, soul-winning preachers has been that a
pastor must not be divorced and remarried. History has shown
it almost never works for a pastor to be divorced. If he
cannot rule his own house how can he rule the church?
[Ed Hindson, King James Version Commentary
Thomas Nelson Inc, Sept. 20, 2005] [Note
from the author of this book:
So, if you think that it is okay for a divorced man to be a
pastor, then you are not a soul winning preacher??
Incredible !!]
Polygamy
was not practiced in the Roman world outside Palestine,
though illegal bigamy and certainly adultery were. “Husband
of one wife” no doubt means a faithful husband and
presupposes marriage; such a man would be helpful in
standing against the false teachers who opposed marriage
(4:3). (The injunction that married leaders be used would
not apply to all situations; cf. comment on 1 Cor 7:8.)
“Husband of one wife” refers to one’s current marital status
and behavior; validly divorced people who remarried were
considered married to one spouse, the second one, not to two
spouses. [The
IVP Bible Background Commentary : New Testament on 1 Timothy
3:2]
husband of one wife —
confuting the celibacy of Rome’s priesthood. Though the Jews
practiced polygamy, yet as he is writing as to a Gentile
Church, and as polygamy was never allowed among even laymen
in the Church, the ancient interpretation that the
prohibition here is against polygamy in a candidate bishop
is not correct. It must, therefore, mean that, though laymen
.might lawfully marry again, candidates for the episcopate
or presbytery were better to have been married only once.
[Jamieson, Robert; Fausset, Andrew Robert ; Brown,
David J. B. A Commentary, Critical, Practical and
Explanatory, on the Old and New Testaments, Volume 4,
page 200]
The husband of one wife
(v. 2b). All of the qualifying adjectives in this
passage are masculine. While there is ample scope for
feminine ministry in a local assembly, the office of elder
is not given to women. However, a pastor’s home life is very
important, and especially his marital status. (This same
requirement applies to deacons, according to 1 Tim. 3:12.)
It means that a pastor must not be divorced and remarried.
Paul was certainly not referring to polygamy, since no
church member, let alone a pastor, would be accepted if he
had more than one wife. Nor is he referring to remarriage
after the death of the wife; for why would a pastor be
prohibited from marrying again, in the light of Genesis 2:18
and 1 Timothy 4:3? Certainly the members of the church who
had lost mates could marry again; so why penalize the
pastor?
It’s
clear that a man’s ability to manage his own marriage and
home indicate ability to oversee a local church (1 Tim.
3:4–5). A pastor who has been divorced opens himself and the
church to criticism from outsiders, and it is not likely
that people with marital difficulties would consult a man
who could not keep his own marriage together. I see no
reason why dedicated Christians who have been
divorced and remarried cannot serve in other offices in the
church, but they are disqualified from being elders or
deacons. [Be Faithful (1 & 2 Timothy, Titus,
Philemon): Warren W. Wiersbe, Jan 1, 2009 Page 48]
Husband of but one wife,
literally, a “one-woman man.” This ambiguous but
important phrase is subject to several interpretations. The
question is, how stringent a standard was Paul erecting for
overseers? Virtually all commentators agree that this phrase
prohibits both polygamy and promiscuity, which are
unthinkable for spiritual leaders in the church. Many Bible
students say the words a “one-woman man” are saying that the
affections of an elder must be centered exclusively on his
wife. Many others hold, however, that the phrase further
prohibits any who have been divorced and remarried from
becoming overseers. The reasoning behind this view is
usually that divorce represents a failure in the home, so
that even though a man may be forgiven for any sin involved,
he remains permanently disqualified for leadership in the
congregation (cf. vv. 4-5; 1 Cor. 9:24-27). The most strict
interpretation and the one common among the earliest
commentators (second and third centuries) includes each of
the above but extends the prohibition to any second
marriage, even by widowers. [Roy B. Zuck David C. Cook, The
Bible Knowledge Commentary: An Exposition of the Scriptures,
Volume 1, 1983 on 1 Timothy 3:2, Page 736]
Husband of one wife:
it does not mean “one at a time” (polygamy was unknown among
Greeks and Romans); he has not been divorced and remarried.
[Paul P Enns, The Moody Handbook of Theology, Moody
Publishers, Feb 1, 2008, Page 367] (Note
from this author: That this statement from the
Moody Handbook Of Theology is not accurate can be
ascertained from statements by the Jewish historian
Josephus, from statements by Jerome rebuking the Jews for
having multiple wives, and by the fact that multiple wives
for Jewish men did not become formally prohibited until
about 1,000 A. D.)
* See the important
discussion by Homer A. Kent, Jr., The Pastoral Epistles
, rev. ed. (Chicago:
Moody,
1982), pp. 122–26. Kent discusses the variant views and
concludes Paul is prohibiting remarriage after divorce.
The argument on divorce usually centers on the
exceptive clause of Matt. 19:9. For a careful, biblical
study of the entire subject of divorce see J. Carl Laney,
The Divorce Myth (Minneapolis: Bethany, 1981). Perhaps
the most important book that has been recently written on
the subject is William A. Heth and Gordon J. Wenham,
Jesus and Divorce: The Problem with the Evangelical
Consensus (Nashville: Nelson, 1984). They conclude that
the common suggestion that Jesus allowed the “innocent
party” to remarry after divorce is a recent view first
espoused by Erasmus and is biblically deficient and
erroneous. No study of the subject will be complete without
consulting this important work. [Paul P Enns, The Moody
Handbook of Theology, Moody Publishers, Feb 1, 2008, Page
380, on 1 Timothy 3:2] [Note
from this author: This is inconsistent with
the fact that D.L. Moody’s pastor, C.I. Scofield, was a
divorced man. We have no idea who Homer A. Kent is, but Paul
nowhere mentions divorce in 1 Timothy and Titus. It is once
again read into the passage by someone who has an
unscriptural agenda]
The
qualifications for the elders are spelled out in great
detail in 1 Timothy 3:1–7 and Titus 1:5–9. The former
passage (which is the more detailed one) lists them as
follows: blameless (not open to criticism), husband of one
wife (may mean only one wife ever, since the Greek is the
same as in 1 Ti 5:9 and since polygamy was unknown among the
Greeks and Romans, or it may bar those who remarry after
divorce) [Charles C. Ryrie, A Survey of Bible Doctrine,
Moody Publishers, June 8, 1989] (Note
from this author:
That this statement from “A Survey Of Bible Doctrine
is not accurate can be ascertained from statements by the
Jewish historian Josephus, from statements by Jerome
rebuking the Jews for having multiple wives, and by the fact
that multiple wives for Jewish men did not become formally
prohibited until about 1,000 A. D.)
It has,
indeed, been inferred from 1 Timothy iii. 2, where the
Apostle says, a bishop must be “the husband of one wife,”
that a private member of the Church might have more wives
than one. But this is in itself a very precarious inference;
and being inconsistent with Christ’s express prohibition, it
is altogether inadmissible. The meaning of the passage has
been much disputed. What the Apostle requires is that a
bishop should be in all respects an exemplary man: not given
to wine, no striker, not greedy of filthy lucre; the husband
of one wife, I. e., not a polygamist. This no more
implies that other men may be polygamists, than his saying
that a bishop must not be greedy of filthy lucre and not a
brawler, implies that other men may be covetous or
contentious. According to another and widely accepted
interpretation of the passage in 1 Timothy iii. 2, and the
corresponding passage in Titus I. 6, the injunction of the
Apostle is that a man who has been married more than once,
must not be appointed a bishop or presbyter. If this be the
true meaning of the Apostle, his language affords still less
ground for the argument drawn from it in favour of the
lawfulness of polygamy in church members. If even second
marriage was forbidden to presbyters, a fortiori must
polygamy be regarded as inconsistent with the law of Christ.
[Charles Hodge, Systematic Theology, 1871, Page 388]
Husband
of one wife: A one-wife kind of man, not a philanderer
(doesn’t necessarily rule out widowers or divorced men).
[Lawrence O. Richards, David C Cook, Bible Teacher's
Commentary, 2002, Page 973]
“The
husband of one wife.” This can be interpreted two ways. It
could mean that he ought to be married. I feel that Paul had
this in mind. You may say, “Well, Paul was not married.” I
take the position that Paul had been married and his wife
had died. He could not have been a member of the Sanhedrin
without being married. He simply had not married again,
perhaps because of his travels as an apostle.
When I
first became a pastor I was not married and I was frequently
kidded by a friend who said I had no right to be a pastor if
I wasn’t married. Using this verse, he would say, “You
should be the husband of one wife.” However, I think that
the primary meaning here is that the bishop or elder should
not have two wives. Polygamy was common in Paul’s
day, and bigamy was certainly prevalent. The officer in the
church should be the husband of one wife. [J. Vernon McGee,
1 Corinthians through Revelation, J. Vernon McGee, Thomas
Nelson Inc, Jan 6, 1984, Page 441-442 on 1 Timothy 3:2 ]
A. T.
Robertson on Matthew 19:9: Except for fornication....
Those who deny Matthew’s report are those who are opposed to
remarriage at all. Jesus by implication, as in 5:31, does
allow remarriage of the innocent party, but not of the
guilty one. Certainly Jesus has lifted the whole subject of
marriage and divorce to a new level, far beyond the petty
contentions of the schools of Hillel and Shammai. [A. T.
Robertson, The Gospel According to Matthew and the Gospel
According to Mark, Kregel Academic, April 1, 2003, Page 163]