I think I am on firm ground when I say that the verses must be interpreted in the context of culture and time in history.
I keep posting that, yes, of course there are eternal and unmovable moral absolutes.
I have pointed out examples in this thread of God making concessions to the times and customs of societies. I am not going to repeat them.
I have asked this before; that if someone can show me, based on concrete irrefutable biblical evidence which is not a exegesis abstract, in which one can show that the bible states unequivocally that woman can not teach or preach, or pastor in times of emergency, or co-pastor or junior pastor, then I will alter my view.
But I am telling you before hand, if you throw quotes at me from what Paul and Timothy and others said from that day, I am going to reply in the context of the times.
The eternal truths described in the bible are moral, ethical, and spiritual. Woman not being allowed to preach, etc. just does not fall into that category.
And by the way the if the bible is silent on a issue, that does not always mean it condemns it.
The question if a man were married twice, can he pastor. Why not? It is out of the realm of possibility that the word is referring to a man who has more then one wife at a time? Or the first wife died or left him? Or how about this possibility, here is a novel one; he did divorce his first wife, but that man has a truly repentant heart and is forgiven by Jesus, has made himself of value to the church. So are you saying that the church can not forgive him? Or worse yet that they shouldn't?
I think that a lot of the reasoning of why woman can't do, pick your poison, is tradition. And while tradition is not always a bad thing, sometimes it can devolve into destructive dogma. Jesus was considered a radical in the time He came. He broke a lot of tradition. He berated the Pharisees because of their legalism and hard hearts.