He did not exclude it. You are saying he did. Yet you aren't showing me where he did that in the passage.
James did not include it. *All you have is speculation. You are not showing me where James said or implied that the hypothetical person in the passage who merely "claimed" to have faith but had "no works" previously had faith, but no longer has faith. Your obsession with that doctrine has led you to that assumption.
Show me where James said he is only talking about people who never believed.
Show me where James said he is talking about people who "previously believed, but no longer believe." *Pure speculation. *The burden of proof is on you.
In James 2:14, we read of one who
says/claims he has faith but has
no works (to evidence his claim). That is
not genuine faith, but a
bare profession of faith. So when James asks, "Can
that faith save him?" he is saying nothing against genuine faith, but only against an
empty profession of faith/dead faith.
*James is discussing the
proof/evidence of faith (
says-claims to have faith but has no works/I will show you my faith by my works - James 2:14-18)
not the loss of faith and also
not the initial act of being accounted as righteous with God (Romans 4:2-3).
Even if a person 'really' believes and is justified, if they go back to their old lives that's them falling away from the word like a 2nd type of soil believer. Because the word is not deeply rooted in their hearts it is temporary and withers away quickly before it can produce any fruit. Temporary does not equal 'not real'. But that is the predetermined belief that you are projecting onto the 2nd type of soil to make it so that type of believer is not really saved.
In regards to the 2nd type of soil, even though this shallow ground hearer is said to have "believed," yet he is never said to have been "saved." How do we know that the shallow ground hearer was never actually "saved"? I will explain the reasons:
First, his heart condition is
contrasted with that of the
"good ground" hearer in the 4th soil, who's heart was
"good" and "honest." Thus, his heart was
not "good," being like the soil to which it corresponds, being "shallow" or "rocky," lacking sufficient depth. Such soil represents a sinner
not properly prepared in heart. People who "believe" and "rejoice" at the preaching of the gospel
without a prepared heart, and without a good and honest heart, and without having "root" in themselves, do not experience real salvation.
*Unlike saving faith,
temporary shallow belief is not rooted in a regenerate heart. How can
no depth of earth, no root, no moisture, no fruit, (Matthew 13:5-6; Luke 8:6; 13) represent saving belief? It's interesting to see how people who are quick to say "faith without works is dead" in James chapter 2 suddenly disregard that in this parable. Also the same Greek word for
believe "pisteuo" is used in James 2:19, in which we read that the demons
believe "pisteuo" mental assent that "there is one God," but they
do not believe "pisteuo" on the Lord Jesus Christ (Acts 16:31) and are
not saved.
John has portrayed people who "believe" to some level but are clearly not saved. There is a stage in the progress of belief in Jesus that
"falls short of genuine or consummated belief resulting in salvation." As we see in John 2:23-25, in which their "belief" was superficial in nature and Jesus
would not entrust/commit Himself to them.
Also, in John 8:31-59, where the Jews who were said to have "believed in him" turn out to be
slaves to sin, indifferent to the words of Jesus’, children of the devil, liars, accused Jesus of having a demon and were guilty of setting out to stone and kill the one they have professed to believe in. YOU CALL THAT SAVED?
That's right. That's why the person who gets justified by faith apart from works who then doesn't produce fruit and goes back to their old life is showing they don't have that justifying faith anymore.
Justified by faith, but never produces any fruit is an oxymoron. Don't forget, "faith without works is dead." Of those who are justified, how many of them will be glorified? Romans 8:30 - Moreover whom He predestined, these He also called; whom He called, these He also justified;
and whom He justified, these He also glorified. ALL of them.
*Notice how Paul uses the past tense for a future event in order to stress it's certainty.