It's what I've been saying for a while now.
I haven't insisted on immediacy. A believer should be willing to spend the requisite amount of time seeking God's will for his life, which includes not only prayer but also study of the sources. I have not insisted that anyone be able to simply flip through a Bible and judge it, so I'm not sure where you came up with the idea that this needed to be refuted.
Unless you can read the ancient Greek, and interpret it exegetically, which I doubt, then you are dependent on Greek and Biblical scholars to determine what is good or bad.
Maybe you made it up as a strawman?
Are you trying to be argumentative or cute?
Let me turn it back around on you: It might be possible that you are so insightful that you could immediately tell a bad man from a godly one, but I doubt it. In any case, people in general can't use a translator's personal qualifications.
Matthew 7: 17 "So every good tree bears good fruit, but the bad tree bears bad fruit.
Jesus said that you could tell a bad man from a godly one. Paul evidently thought so, or else why the qualifications set forth in Timothy if they could not be ascertained?
So the same people who can't tell Bibles apart are fit to judge dead men? I'm unconvinced.
Anyone can judge. The question is whether it is a righteous judgement. We are expected to judge those in the kingdom, (1 Corithians 5), and our ability to judge is based on our godly nature.
Yes, and it often has been. God can use whomever he chooses. Hosea was commanded to take Gomer as a wife. Balaam's
donkey, who I imagine would have made a poor elder, delivered the message.
God often uses evil and secular people to judge temporally. He NEVER uses such people to spread the Gospel! See Acts 16: 16-19 for an example.
Do you think translators win the ability to be mouthpieces for God because of their righteousness? No, it is out of his pleasure that they're able to convey the message.
Correct. God chooses whom He may. More often than not, He chooses those that not only speak His Word, but apply it to their life.
I'm sorry that your quotation doesn't seem to be hitting the mark, but again, God can use for good what men have intended for evil and often has. I'm not the one to tell him he can only use pure translators.