Redemption and Qualification for Church Leadership

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No, I don't think your past fornication disqualifies you from Ministry not in and of itself, and the reason I say it like that is because it would be part of what disqualifies you if it was part of an ongoing character flaw of bondage to sensuality or pornography or lack of self-control. [00:01:33]

Past fornication need not disqualify from Ministry unless it's part of an ongoing sinful unsanctified blemish in the present. So let me step back then and give three I think it's just three Reasons from scripture why I think that's true why a man who is rebellious in the season of life commits fornication. [00:02:00]

Paul was complicit in Stephen's murder in Acts 7. Then as he became a ringleader in the efforts to Stamp Out Christianity with imprisonments and murders it got even worse and more intentional. Acts chapter 9 verse 1 Saul still breathing threats and murder against the Disciples of the Lord went to Damascus. [00:03:17]

Paul's own assessment of his pre-christian life was that he was the worst the foremost of sinners and that God saved him and used him anyway precisely as an example to others who feel hopeless about their future possibilities of forgiveness and usefulness is a precious reality in scripture. [00:03:50]

The saying is trustworthy and deserving of full acceptance that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am the foremost but I received Mercy for this reason and this this is why it's so remarkable because he himself we don't have to make this application he's making the application. [00:04:20]

I receive Mercy for this reason that in me as the foremost, Jesus Christ might display his perfect patience as an example to those who were to believe in him for eternal life so Paul gives his own experience of Mercy as an example that I think extends to a person who may not have murdered. [00:04:45]

In other words, our friend this young fellow wonders if he can qualify as a one-woman man because he committed fornication that's the way he's thinking which is which is a good way to think I mean it's a good question to ask it means he's not weaseling he's not trying to squeak out of the rigors of scripture. [00:06:30]

Paul really is dealing with marriage and whether a man is faithful to his wife, whether he commits adultery now the question then becomes what do we make of Paul's argument against fornication in first Timothy in First Corinthians 6 because some might say well Paul really does argue that in essence a sexual relationship before marriage is a kind of marriage. [00:07:57]

Paul portrays the horror of fornication for the Christian as taking the body parts of Christ because ours are his and making them body parts of a prostitute that's how intimate and profound sexual intercourse is in Paul's Apostolic inspired mind you become one body with her what makes the text look ominous. [00:10:14]

What makes fornication so horrible is that it takes the one flesh design of marriage and prostitutes it he prostitutes that part of marriage by scripping it out of the Covenant relationship of marriage and treating it as though it was designed for a prostitute it's precisely that this is not a marriage. [00:11:31]

Paul was not treating fornication as a kind of marriage there is no Covenant formed at all with this prostitute and that is precisely what makes the sexual similarity to marriage so morally and spiritually ugly therefore I don't think Paul's argument in First Corinthians 6 means that our young repentant transformed friend. [00:12:39]

In this same chapter of First Corinthians 6 Paul specifically refers to fornication as something in the church that has been cleansed and forgiven verses 9 to 11 do not be deceived the sexually immoral and he's referring to fornication there because later he refers to adulterers so he's a distinguishing adultery and sexual morality here. [00:13:24]

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