I’d rather he repented, restored his relationship with his wife, and resigned before the recall election so his personal problem did not ruin his state. He is quite in contrast to his fellow lost cause who lost because he had principles and stuck to them.
I agree. Cheaters shouldn’t hold public office. I’ve got personal beefs on the cheating matter. My dad cheated on my mom all the time, until they finally got a divorce. Figures, considering his dad organized unions in Wisconsin (sorry ‘bout that, guys). The proper way to deal with it, however, is repentance and renewal of the covenant relationship. We cheat on God all the time, after all, and he takes us back. That’s just my pastoral theological take on the issue.
I’m sorry, I just take the whole divorce thing way too personally every time it comes up. I just hate it so much. It should only be done after all other possible avenues to reconciliation have been taken and failed.