PaulThomson said:
I have explained this several times in this thread. But you are too calcified in your opinions to grasp it.
If someone tries to sell you an apple, telling you it is good, but you see some bruises on it, you will say, "No, it's not good. It is damaged." If there is only one perfectly good apple in the shop, You could say "There is only one apple that is good: that one." But you would not say that all the other apples, though not good, are totally worthless and rotten; and nothing good can be achieved with them.
Exactly the same logic applies to Jesus' words. But you refuse to acknowledge it, because your doctrine is more important to you than the truth. There is none Good but God only: perfectly good. But the "bad" are not totally evil. There is some good in them.
Hence, Jesus' words, "If you who are evil know how to give good things to your children, how much more will God give the Holy Spirit to those who ask Him."
If you cannot grasp that and honestly acknowledge it, you are truly self-deceived.
But you are arguing for "the excluded middle" That is a logical fallacy.
“False Dilemma”: “Excluded middle” or “Either /Or Fallacy—Assumes that there are only two possible choices (“Either this or that”) when there are other choices available. EXAMPLE: “Either you are with us or you are with the terrorists.”—spoken by Dick Cheney.
You are not providing a logical argument, and you are providing an argument that refuses to use language in its common sense, but your argument needs to rest on special pleading, another logical fallacy.
Special pleading is
an informal fallacy wherein one cites something as an exception to a general or universal principle, without justifying the special exception. It is the application of a double standard.
You are like a blind man with dementia trying to lead the sighted, and as such you are only making yourself look pretentious and foolish.