Clearly, you have no idea what I am saying. I did not compare faith to a battery; I used two examples of things which have power but are not power. The issue is the phraseology, not a comparison.
The word is "seriously". Why is your spelling so bad, especially when I already provided you with the correct spelling? Hebrews 11:1 specifically defines faith. It's not "cherry picking" to select such a verse.
None of which supports your assertion that faith is power.
How is that relevant to anything we're discussing?
No, we don't. Faith is defined clearly and concisely for us.
You have missed the point of the Bible... seriously.
Are you suggesting that I have cursed the law or works?
That is not what the verse says. It says, "Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the faith God has given you." What that means is, if you have great faith, then think of yourself as having great faith. If you have little faith, then think of yourself as having little faith. In context, it means that we all have value, not that we are all equal in faith.
Again, this is not what it says. It says that faith without works is dead.
Wow... you butchered that one. It says, "Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed"; it does not say anything like what you claim.
Nope. Faith is not defined in John 3:15 at all.
Wrong again. The concept of "must" is not there. It says that those who "do" endure to the end will be saved... and this is spoken within a very specific prophetic context that must be properly understood for verse 13 to be parsed correctly.
You like adding words to Scripture don't you? I really hope you aren't a preacher; you have no business trying to teach the word of God to others. This verse does not say that "prayer increases our faith" at all. It is a plea to Jesus that the disciples' faith would be increased. In context, it means that they recognized they did not have the faith required to forgive others as Jesus taught.
Wow... more invention. Jesus is saying here that even a little faith can be very effective. There is nothing in the verse about increasing faith at all. Given the previous few verses, Jesus is essentially saying, "Work with the faith you have; you might be surprised what you can accomplish."
Wrong again. There is nothing about "increasing" faith in that verse.
You're close on this one... I'll give you the point. That's 1 out of 9.
Maybe you should spend less time making "laws" out of Scripture and start looking for general principles. I would highly recommend a book on Bible study methods called Living by the Book by Howard Hendricks and William Hendricks.
The word is "seriously". Why is your spelling so bad, especially when I already provided you with the correct spelling? Hebrews 11:1 specifically defines faith. It's not "cherry picking" to select such a verse.
None of which supports your assertion that faith is power.
How is that relevant to anything we're discussing?
No, we don't. Faith is defined clearly and concisely for us.
You have missed the point of the Bible... seriously.
Are you suggesting that I have cursed the law or works?
That is not what the verse says. It says, "Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the faith God has given you." What that means is, if you have great faith, then think of yourself as having great faith. If you have little faith, then think of yourself as having little faith. In context, it means that we all have value, not that we are all equal in faith.
Again, this is not what it says. It says that faith without works is dead.
Wow... you butchered that one. It says, "Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed"; it does not say anything like what you claim.
Nope. Faith is not defined in John 3:15 at all.
Wrong again. The concept of "must" is not there. It says that those who "do" endure to the end will be saved... and this is spoken within a very specific prophetic context that must be properly understood for verse 13 to be parsed correctly.
You like adding words to Scripture don't you? I really hope you aren't a preacher; you have no business trying to teach the word of God to others. This verse does not say that "prayer increases our faith" at all. It is a plea to Jesus that the disciples' faith would be increased. In context, it means that they recognized they did not have the faith required to forgive others as Jesus taught.
Wow... more invention. Jesus is saying here that even a little faith can be very effective. There is nothing in the verse about increasing faith at all. Given the previous few verses, Jesus is essentially saying, "Work with the faith you have; you might be surprised what you can accomplish."
Wrong again. There is nothing about "increasing" faith in that verse.
You're close on this one... I'll give you the point. That's 1 out of 9.
Maybe you should spend less time making "laws" out of Scripture and start looking for general principles. I would highly recommend a book on Bible study methods called Living by the Book by Howard Hendricks and William Hendricks.
I said a prayer in the hope we can talk about the law in love and remain friends.
secondly i know 100 percent that demons reject the law because demons know that the law can lead a person to have much more obedience and become stronger in faith and help the believer to overcome evil.
God loves obedience and God loves his laws to be obeyed. God came down from heaven as Jesus and preached his law. Jesus then told his deciples to go and preach his gospel to the four corners of the world. Within the Gospel there is 1050 commandments of his law.
God loves Obedience it helps his believers to stand upright in rightousness to stand tall and overcome demons. There is holy law on training the eyes of the heart which is mostly needed to growing in faith,
Lastly i dont agree with anything youve wrote here in yet another attempt to assainate my character with conspiracy. Youve cherry picked everything ive wrote and found fault where there isnt any. Jesus christ clearly speaks about the law of love, He loves it when two people come to an agreement in his law, But sadly i think me and you will never come to one because i have given you many chances.
I will not be discouraged for repeating The laws of our mesiah by you or anyone.