If you’re going to claim something I wrote was misrepresented, then quote it and let’s examine it directly.The dodging and unwillingness to admit things like the misrepresentation of resources is human - sadly human.

LightBearer316 said:
By saying I “misrepresent” obedience, you are redefining it away from any action that could be considered a work.
In your framework, “obedience” isn’t external effort but a conceptual “element” of faith itself — so that faith and obedience become linguistically welded together.
That’s why you keep repeating the phrase “functionally equivalent.”
You are trying to merge categories — to say faith is obedience, obedience is faith, and therefore justification includes obedience.![]()
If the WORD (John 1:1) was manifested into flesh it means He is Spirit first and foremost. So how do you not know when it says the Spirit in Genesis 1 was not talking about the WORD who would have been Spirit during that time?Sure, but that does not mean that neither we nor God are not persons. Jesus appeared in human form before the incarnation. The Holy Spirit was present at the dawn of creation. We are a spirit being, that has a soul and that inhabits a body. God is Spirit, but Jesus is the visible image of the invisible God.
If you’re going to claim something I wrote was misrepresented, then quote it and let’s examine it directly.
Vague accusations aren’t arguments — show it in context, and we’ll see who’s actually handling the text honestly.
Grace and peace.
@studier
Nothing you’ve presented overturns this — not one passage you’ve cited changes the order Scripture gives:
Faith in Christ’s blood → forgiveness and life.
Baptism follows as the outward testimony of that inner faith, not the cause of union with Christ.
Romans 6:3–4 KJV and Ephesians 1:7 KJV remain perfectly consistent with this truth.
Grace and peace.
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@studier
You’re reading hupēkousan beyond Paul’s usage. The verb doesn’t redefine faith as obedience; it describes Israel’s refusal to hear and believe the message.
Paul’s contrast in Romans 10:16–17 KJV isn’t between two forms of obedience — it’s between belief and unbelief.
Faith, by nature, includes trust and response, but Paul keeps it distinct from action. Otherwise Romans 4 collapses, where Abraham was “justified by faith, not by works.”
Grace and peace.
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@studier
That’s the difference between the two of us — I let Scripture define the framework; you let the framework define Scripture.
If “systematic theology” means forcing the text to fit a preset model, then no thanks. Paul didn’t build systems — he preached revelation.
The text is the system when it’s rightly divided.
Grace and peace.
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@studier
That’s not misleading at all — it’s simply clarifying what Paul is actually doing in the text.
He’s describing the result of unbelief, not redefining faith as obedience. The parallel between hupēkousan (“obeyed”) and episteusen (“believed”) doesn’t merge the two concepts; it shows how unbelief produces disobedience. Paul isn’t equating the terms — he’s contrasting the consequences.
Hebrews 3 makes the same point: unbelief leads to disobedience, not that faith is obedience. You’re forcing a definition the text doesn’t support. Correlation isn’t equivalence, and reading it that way reverses Paul’s entire argument.
Grace and Peace
Deflection...Stop using Ai.Strawman tactic. Waste of bandwidth.
Genesis 1 doesn’t describe the Word acting as the Spirit, but rather the Spirit and the Word acting together in creation.If the WORD (John 1:1) was manifested into flesh it means He is Spirit first and foremost. So how do you not know when it says the Spirit in Genesis 1 was not talking about the WORD who would have been Spirit during that time?
Stop using ai!Done and repeatedly requested that you deal with it. All ignored repeatedly.
You can go back 300+ posts to #624 if you'd like and put another canned statement in your Typinator to deal with it. I may or may not pay much attention to it now. I gave you many opportunities to deal with it and show some integrity. Now you're treating it like something new and my being unreasonable.
Honestly, these tactics are repetitive with the most aggressive with their systems.
The difference is simple — you’ve been relying on AI all along. I haven’t. I’ve done my own study, my own writing, and my own research. That’s why my posts have substance — they come from Scripture, not a script.Earlier it was telling mom on others. Now it's the tu quoque fallacy - essentially the adult, formal version of the childhood: “I know you are, but what am I?” deflecting blame back to the critic.
I agree with your last sentence.