Should Divorcees Be Forbidden to Teach or Lead in Local Churches?

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The constitutions and bylaws of independent Baptist churches commonly include language that forbids divorced persons from teaching Sunday School or holding church office. The restriction is so common that of the dozens of church constitutions I’ve read and filed, only one or two lack some version of it. Since many churches with these restrictions have some history of conflict over them, the topic also tends to be seen as a minefield—best to fence it off and leave it alone.

But these same church constitutions and confessions of faith also strongly emphasize the authority of Scripture, and one question should always be welcome: Is what we’re doing biblical? Is it compatible with Scripture and the revealed nature and purposes of the church?

Let’s consider some arguments pro and con.

Pro

1 Discouraging divorce

Surely we all agree that churches ought to do what they can to discourage divorce and nurture thriving marriages. I’ve frequently heard this laudable goal cited as a reason for restrictive church policy on divorcees. The desire is that the church be perceived as univocal and consistently uncompromising on this point so that the message is unmistakable: God’s design for marriage is one man, one woman, for life.

2 Prevention by shaming

Cynical readers might be quick to suggest an alternative version of argument #1: “All these churches really want to do is scare people out of getting divorced by endlessly shaming those who are divorced.” Sadly, the cynics are probably more right than wrong on that point.

At the same time, the local church discipline passages in the NT do indicate that (a) some behavior is truly disgraceful and (b) churches can fail by being too accommodating of conduct that ought to be seen as shameful (2 Cor. 5:1-2, Ephes. 5:3).

3 Rejection of social trends – “easy divorce”

It would be difficult to research, but it seems likely that many of the divorcee restrictions were added to church constitutions in a period when divorce rates were dramatically increasing in the US. Part of this trend was the relaxing of requirements for divorce proceedings, leading to the creation of family courts and culminating in no-fault divorce laws. California became the first no-fault divorce state in 1970.

Biblically-informed Christians with a high view of marriage were appalled by this trend. Many saw the principle, “be not conformed to this world,” as requiring them to stake out a counter-cultural stand in this area. “We’re not joining this mad rush toward the destruction of the family.” Who can fault them for that?

4 The “husband of one wife” passages

Constitutions with divorcee restrictions sometimes footnote supporting passages that include 1 Timothy 3:2, 12 and 5:9 along with Titus 1:6. Though most of these passages refer to qualifications for elders, 1 Timothy 3:12 does apply the standard to deacons as well.

Let deacons each be the husband of one wife, managing their children and their own households well. (ESV, 1 Tim. 3:12)

How are these passages relevant for restricting Sunday School teachers and other non-deacon leadership roles? The reasoning is that these passages establish the principle that those who are leaders the church should be exemplary individuals with exemplary families.

Con

1 The value of participation

Ephesians 4, 1 Corinthians 12, and many other passages, emphasize that each member of the body has a unique contribution to the life and growth of the whole. In Ephesians 4, the language is “joints” and “parts” that must work together (Eph. 4:16). In 1 Corinthians, Paul likens individual believers to hands, feet, eyes, etc. Nobody can be what someone else has been put there to be (1 Cor. 12:14-16).

None of this adds up to, “Divorced people must be allowed to be ministry leaders,” but it does add up to a sobering principle: preventing people from serving in ways they ought to be serving is a serious injury to the body—and therefore, a serious offense against Christ who is the Head.

Whatever case we make for excluding an entire category of people from multiple categories of ministry roles had better be a strong one. Does such a case exist? If such a case does exist, the “husband of one wife” standard for pastors and deacons is not it. Not only is it less than certain that the phrase was meant to exclude all divorce-and-remarriage scenarios, but we also have no Scripture indicating that this standard was intended to extend to roles other than pastors and deacons.

2 How divorces happen now

If LegalZoom has it straight, pure no-fault divorce is the law in 17 states and the District of Columbia. In these jurisdictions, no blame for any kind of wrongdoing may be identified as the reason for divorce proceedings. In the remaining 33 states, no-fault is an option.

In practical terms, this means that if either spouse wants to end the marriage on a no-fault basis, the other spouse has no say at all in the matter. A whole lot of legal process can go into dividing up property, custody, etc., but there is no legal basis for “fighting the divorce.”

At least one conclusion should be clear: it is possible to be a divorcee and have contributed nothing, either actively or passively, to the ending of the marriage. Should individuals in this situation be excluded from ministry leadership?

3 Example of what?

The reasoning that says “let’s make sure our leaders are exemplary individuals with exemplary families” has much to commend it. But given the realities of an easy-divorce society, the question arises, “Exemplary in what ways?” In a society that exalts and empowers individualism to an extraordinary degree, it may well be that a “good example” is sometimes a man or woman who is faithfully living the Christian life in a situation beyond his or her control. Can a divorcee be exemplary at holding to biblical attitudes and obedience while making the best of a tragedy he or she was was not able to prevent?

4 The kinds of people God uses

When we look through biblical history at the kinds of men and women God has chosen to use, even in leadership roles, we don’t find that they are always “exemplary people with exemplary families”—especially in reference to past transgressions. Badly checkered histories are common, and those histories include far worse offenses than failed marriages.

In some of our churches, as far as their constitutions are concerned, you can be a former axe murderer and teach Sunday School, but you can’t be a divorcee. Can this really be the intent of the biblical teaching?

It’s past time for churches to re-examine these policies. Yes, we want to obey Scripture. Yes, we want to discourage divorce and nurture strong marriages. Yes, we want to be counter-cultural. But is a rigid ban on divorcees in leadership really helping further these goals?

Discussion

Let’s assume we’ve got a pastor who committed adultery, decided he wasn’t saved, and than asks to return to the pastorate because he’s now saved. For that matter, let’s assume that this kind of case is common. It may, or may not, be, but for the sake of discussion here. What questions might we ask?

My take:

  • What gross theological errors were you making while you were pastoring outside of Christ? If the Counselor guides our learning of Scripture, there ought to be some.
  • What have you done to learn to avoid those errors? How have you retrained? I would dare say refresher courses in seminary would be appropriate.
  • How long do you think it’s appropriate to be on the sidelines before you resume ministry? Keep in mind Paul warns against a “novice” being a pastor; at less than two years after your conversion, how are you not a novice?
  • What have you done to fix your relationship with your family? What fallout have you seen? If a person doesn’t observe fallout from adultery, he’s either clueless or suffers NPD.
  • What did you do to support your family after you were fired for adultery? If he’s relied on his wife to earn money, isn’t he “worse than an unbeliever”?

…and the list goes on, and it strikes me that the person who is a classic narcissist, likely to re-offend, is going to stumble over these questions. It all comes down to how we look at these things.

Aspiring to be a stick in the mud.

Bert, in a case like yours, I could only support someone (and this very carefully) if it had been a sufficient period of time since their adulterous affairs. I’m thinking a minimum of seven to ten years out. Minimum.

"Our task today is to tell people — who no longer know what sin is...no longer see themselves as sinners, and no longer have room for these categories — that Christ died for sins of which they do not think they’re guilty." - David Wells

Jay, technically Ron’s (sadly real example), and in my view, resisting the urge to restore the man for a period of time is probably the easiest part. The hard part is getting willing to get under his skin and ask him what he’s learned with the situation, and what he’s done to deal with the fallout.

Aspiring to be a stick in the mud.

I don’t think anybody is recommending that the extreme cases on the “bad reputation” scale are fit for pastoral ministry (or maybe any ministry).

The question is what should happen to guys at the extreme other end, but who are still in a “disqualified” category. In other words, where should the banned category boundary be on the relatively minor issues end?

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

…Ketcham and David Hyles getting back into ministry despite repeated peccadilloes, I don’t think we can discard Jim’s challenge lightly. My take is the list I posted above, plus the proverb “fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me.” Repeated allegations after correction tell you that someone is gaming the system and should not be in a position of authority if you can help it.

Aspiring to be a stick in the mud.

Point was that the extreme cases are obvious and churches that are accepting guys under those conditions are clearly doing wrong. Nobody here is saying otherwise.

(As for the names that have been named, I don’t claim to know anything about that. I hear all sorts of allegations about people all the time, and unless I have a role in making some decision about them, or someone wants my advice, I don’t have time to follow every scandal to find out what the truth is. Better things to do. Even in the wants my advice situation, I don’t mind telling people: “I don’t follow scandals and I’m not a resource for you on this.”)

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

[Aaron Blumer]

Point was that the extreme cases are obvious and churches that are accepting guys under those conditions are clearly doing wrong. Nobody here is saying otherwise.

(As for the names that have been named, I don’t claim to know anything about that. I hear all sorts of allegations about people all the time, and unless I have a role in making some decision about them, or someone wants my advice, I don’t have time to follow every scandal to find out what the truth is. Better things to do. Even in the wants my advice situation, I don’t mind telling people: “I don’t follow scandals and I’m not a resource for you on this.”)

Can we agree on this? That there should be transparency about a pastoral candidate’s marital history?

I typically have seen it phrased as follows: Have you ever been divorced?

[Jim]

For now we know him by his fruits - and that fruit is a long history of debauchery … conclusion an unregenerate man!

So for Jay and Joel … were Donn Ketcham to “really get saved” … could he serve as Pastor?

Same goes for Jack Schaap … were he to “really get saved”?

Jim,Great question - for me cold Donn or Jack ever have a standing of “blameless” enough to serve as en elder/pastor? Maybe on Pluto…..but not our planet. What about some Godly man who prior to salvation or early in his walk with the Lord he was divorced but now is a different man and everyone in his life and ministry knows it, sees it and embraces it. Well if he is blameless today…..sure…..we would be thrilled to have guy like that on our elder or deacon team. I understand the other views…..but I reject them as being mostly superimposed on the text. My view…..shalom bro!Straight Ahead! jt

Dr. Joel Tetreau serves as Senior Pastor, Southeast Valley Bible Church (sevbc.org); Regional Coordinator for IBL West (iblministry.com), Board Member & friend for several different ministries;

[Joel Tetreau]

Jim wrote:

For now we know him by his fruits - and that fruit is a long history of debauchery … conclusion an unregenerate man!

So for Jay and Joel … were Donn Ketcham to “really get saved” … could he serve as Pastor?

Same goes for Jack Schaap … were he to “really get saved”?

Jim,

Great question - for me cold Donn or Jack ever have a standing of “blameless” enough to serve as en elder/pastor? Maybe on Pluto…..but not our planet. What about some Godly man who prior to salvation or early in his walk with the Lord he was divorced but now is a different man and everyone in his life and ministry knows it, sees it and embraces it. Well if he is blameless today…..sure…..we would be thrilled to have guy like that on our elder or deacon team. I understand the other views…..but I reject them as being mostly superimposed on the text.

My view…..shalom bro!

Straight Ahead!

jt

ps - the reader must understand that Joel’s viw is Joel’s view and because this is a controversial subject Joel is first to suggest that his view does not necesarily reflect the views of his church, his various associations, his family, any of his teachers and is not at all a statement on any of the places where Joel studied the Bible. Joel’s view is only Joel’s view and the blame of those things should not be passed on to his parents, his wife, his dog, his association with the IFCA….his former association with other nameless groups……Joel approves this message……..keep smiling!

Dr. Joel Tetreau serves as Senior Pastor, Southeast Valley Bible Church (sevbc.org); Regional Coordinator for IBL West (iblministry.com), Board Member & friend for several different ministries;