Pertinent part of your post:
Response from ChristRoseFromTheDead who you have on ignore:
lol Christ's denial means denying someone belongs to him before the father and his angels. It means eternal shame and ejection from God's presence. It means being blotted out of the book of life
He that overcometh, the same shall be clothed in white raiment; and I will not blot out his name out of the book of life, but I will confess his name before my Father, and before his angels. Revelation 3:5
My point was that both sides of the debate can tend to use Argument from Silence with certain verses.
Now, additionally, both sides of the debate can say what you say re: glaring errors.
The debate is not settled by Arguments from Silence nor from a generalized theological assertion re: works-based salvation.
I'm not sure why you would give merit to his claim about Christ's denial. If you would, please show to us all where scripture states that confession or denial before the Father and the angels is the basis for salvation. What I CAN show to you is that the names blotted out from the Book of Life is the test for the absence of salvation.
Studier, when someone comes along and inserts meaning into the scriptures, all with gleeful indifference to context and systematic parallels that actually have connections that fit, we all should write them off as aberrant professors of Christ.
Now, for the sake of conversation, I will admit that there APPEARS to be some distant ring of consistency to Christ's denial of a believer before the Father and the Angels, but we can also understand that there is shame in Heaven, even for saved believers, and that being denied by Jesus before the Father and all the Heavenly host, no, the context does not at all betray salvation as the object of determination as a result of that denial. Peter denied Christ three times, but that doesn't mean he will be cast into the blazes of Hell for it.
Let's consider this:
1 Corinthians 3:15 If any man's work shall be burned,
he shall suffer loss:
but he himself shall be saved;
yet so as by fire.
There will be those in Heaven who have nothing for treasure., which will be a shame to them. With no reward, they will forever be seen in that state because of that which they built with was hay, wood and stubble that burned in the fires of testing of their works. THAT is not injection of anything into what's actually stated, for if they suffer from it, then shame is the only descriptor, and perhaps is even a far lower cry in relation to the reality of what those people will endure as members of the body of Christ.
So all the jolly and jovial nonsense eisegetically crammed into the text the many things that simply aren't there...except in the imaginations of false teachers, who, like us, have no first-hand experience in the Heavenlies and the realities of that place and all the particulars that govern the mindset, economy and culture of those who dwell there, I tend to write the nay-sayers and their false injections off as nothing but musings from silly antagonists. I love them, but I don't keep company with them and their foolishness.
Thank you, Studier, for the conversation. I appreciate your not being as they.
MM