Jeff Atack - 10 June 2008 11:23 PM
Firstly as congregants we are supposed to imitate the life and faith of our leaders (Heb 13:7), and without doubt the single guy can model many aspects, being a husband and father is not one of them and for better or worse this is a massive part of many blokes lives.
Hi Jeff, hope you’re doing well out there at Stanhope.
I think this argument is limited for the following reasons…
1. When Paul asks people to imitate him, it’s because he is imitating Christ (1 Cor 11.1). It would then seem that both single and married leaders can fulfil the role of role-model, as it’s not our marital status which is essential to our modelling, but rather our Christlikeness. Furthermore, that Jesus was single means that the base model of our life and behaviour is a single man. Does it really make sense to then say that we can only see this model lived out in a married man?
2. No minister is adequately going to be able to model Christlikeness in every situation. How am I going to be an accurate model for a bricklayer or a doctor or a handicapped person?
3. In Phil 3.17 Paul instructs the church to keep in mind a group of people as role-models. The expectation is that we ought to look to a range of people who live in a Christlike way. In this way we can have the varied input we need for all the different and unique ways in which we live our lives. Following this model the limitations of every minister are met.
This is off topic for the thread, I think we should start a new one.