You're repackaging a thing answered. See: elders.
That catch all doesn't explain why Paul was addressing an ageist attitude amongst those young Timothy, despising the youth of the young leader, who was exemplary.
Foolishness is bound in the heart of a child, a child is one who thinks like a child and acts like a child, reasons like a child, etc. Timothy was no child, having put away childish things. He was a leader and example in the faith, but some took him for granted unfairly because of his age.
Have you looked at any of the divorce numbers within Christian families?
I've heard the numbers are dismal and don't blame our Father. When God isn't obeyed we reap the fruits of disobedience. Divorce was required because of hard hearts, says God, so it's another fruit of disobedience to God.
So a lot of Christians don't walk the walk. Why would I think otherwise?
Now I have seen a study somewhere that indicated a little over half the marriages identifying as happy had God at the center of it. I find that unsurprising. But you're still talking about two individuals with free will and imperfection.
Do you think that all those claiming to make God the center of their marriage really do? Do you think the majority do?
I think there's a reason for elders and a responsibility that comes with understanding you're essentially not in your entire right mind.
Based on what you said, not only should I not have married, I was unfit to switch religions, which I did twice before hitting 25. But like Paul said, there is one mediator. 1Timothy 2:5
No, I just don't assume that only those who agree with me are.
Neither did I, so why did you say that?
So when anyone brings that up to self justify
What does that have to do with self justification? I never said they needed to believe exactly as I do, but the accepting the gospel is non-negotiable. There are many false teachers and false christs in the world, are there not?
I note that their context isn't necessarily THE context, that you can read that scripture and understand most, even all of professing Christendom could walk through that gate without altering the truth of the passage.
But that's if you only consider the one scripture in isolation.
Was Peter deceived just before Christ rebuked him?
Before his conversion? Yes.
He was also older than 25, I'd reckon. Are you trying to prove that older people get deceived just like the younger set you argue against getting married?
And do you see the difference between a fleeting moment of deception and a faith-based, reasonable choice for marriage made with great deliberation and much prayer?
Of course I do, but you can't ask God to control another human being for you and
When the wife of Isaac was chosen, the question wasn't whether God could control her and prevent her from making simple errors. She was chosen for good character. God knew she would be a faithful wife, didn't He? Do you give God credit for helping it be a good choice?
every human being is capable of error. Or, you should probably address my point about Christian congregations being taken advantage of in their love and trust by a smiling wolf.
I prayed I would not be taken advantage of. That's not an unworthy prayer, so what's the problem? Oh, I know, a lack of faith. That would do it. You can't expect results without faith. God gave me a good man based on my faith in His ability to help me choose.
So those who fail must be?
Either that or God doesn't help me and I was just a perceptive genius who's biology shouldn't have let me choose but did like the woman who lacked a cerebellum walking around. The latter theory leaves God out entirely, but still, my perceptions were about the character traits of my husband, the only qualifications that really make the difference in matters love.
No, it isn't arbitrary and doesn't function to separate among an otherwise similar set of people.
Now you are saying that young people with exceptional moral and intellectual maturity are not dissimilar in judgment from youngsters focused on childish pursuits; interested in keeping up with the crowd and "going steady" instead of building character and spreading the gospel?
And it isn't about how I see it. It's about an empirically verifiable fact that exists with or without my or your agreement and it ends for everyone at about the same age.
The only empirical fact you have is that young people under a certain age have different brain scans. You don't know what limitations those differences present. You can't show me that all 25 year olds are inherently more reasonable or wiser than all 18 year olds and show better judgment to any degree, let alone to the degree that would preclude marriage for the younger set. Divorce rates alone are simply a correlation that could have more to do with social constructs.
I think you're reading something different into that. Loving and recognizing God and His authority is wise. It is, in the life of a Christian the first truly meaningful and wise choice. It isn't a magical transformation. It won't impact your IQ or alter your biology, by way of distinguishing.
That's like saying a merry heart won't alter your physiology. The biology of wisdom is spiritual, not physical. You can even walk and talk without a cerebellum if God wills it.
And marriage stands and falls on God's love. So omit God, get a bad marriage. And if both parties stay submitted to God nothing will alienate them from each other.
I don't know the answer to that off hand.
You should figure it out.
Praying for perfection is itself a sign of an immature mind, Peace.
Then why did Jesus say "be perfect" if we weren't to pray to be perfect and expect an answer.
I am the perfect wife for him and he for me. I got the answer to my prayer just fine so don't see the problem.
...and sometimes a man who isn't doing that can become a man who is and does. Life and people are complicated and willful.
If I choose my own spouse without conferring with God I reap what I sow. Don't marry a bad man if you don't want a bad marriage. The Father in heaven wants to choose good men for his good women, if women will let Him.
It is, but I think you give it the most uncharitable reading imaginable. Some of the wolves standing in the pulpits said that. They deceived others.
Huh? Were you trying to sound like you disagreed without actually doing so? False sheep with false claims. That's indisputable, but false sheep have bad fruit and it gives them away to those who are watching with perception.
Peter was rebuked by Christ when he thought he was speaking a good and later denied Christ three times.
Before his conversion, right? And so? The point is that God doesn't want us to be deceived and so set Peter straight. He would have done the same for Peter at age 20 or 40.
I believe in prayer and what it can teach us. I think you're missing one of the lessons in this particular admission. And I believe God helped two people who wanted a particular happiness find it.
May it last you the rest of your lives and may they be happy.
What's the lesson you see and think I don't - so I can understand you more clearly?
Rather, I know it is the demonstrated part of the brain God gave us where sound judgment arises.
You don't know that and act like it's not operational at all prior to that age. Firing patterns changing is what you can see. That's not evidence of an inability to understand and make commitments.
I have all sorts of limitations. It comes with the suit.
I was just kidding. I don't actually believe the cortex limits judgment. I believe preconceptions limit judgment. But I don't believe they have to if you love the truth over a preferred narrative.
Which doesn't negate that we've demonstrated a thing about the brain we can know and how that lines up with judgments. But we always knew it. We attributed it to the experiential limitations of the young prior and there was certainly an element of that, but now we understand more. I'm sure there's a great deal left for us to discover, but knowing more will only give additional insight into an observable limitation, not negate it.
It does negate what we thought we knew. We thought we knew that without a cerebellum we couldn't walk or talk or even live. We have discovered all sorts of impossible things. A man with a tiny amount of brain tissue but nearly average intelligence, a man who was missing half a brain his whole life and never suspected it, etc.
Purpose bypasses function.
But also you are saying that God made biology unevenly so that children would have pheromones, sexual maturity, a sex drive and a desire for companionship and offspring.... without the mental capacity? Why?
No, I'm suggesting that God made us in such a way that we aren't meant or fit to make a decision at the age you did. That as a rule it's contrary to our design.
Why would God set them up with sexual maturity, then? Wouldn't that be creating a conflict and non-ideal situation? Why would God be sloppy like that? I don't buy it.
In one sense they are.....One of those abilities is the capacity for sound and reliable reason.
I think we should trust the design and plan accordingly.
If you trust the design then look and see that the 20 year olds are designed to be fully sexually mature. God would be stupid to do that without equipping their brains to cope with that reality.
And as for sound and reliable reason, there is not so much of that in the older adult population for you to make something out of it beyond what the Bible does.