Sassy,
I am a child of God, saved by the power of God through the body and blood of Jesus Christ.
A belief I don't doubt you hold sincerely, even though you have provided no reason for anyone else to think you're right about that.
When it comes to the things of God and the bible I am naturally in a better position than you and Floo to decide what the bible is teaching.
Yes you are - I know as little about the contents of the Bible as you know about the contents of the Talmud, the Tao-te-ching, the Upanishads etc. You cannot though just assume "the things of God" and the contents of the Bible to be the same thing.
As I have said many time previous to this thread being written, both yourself and Floo, do not know the bible well enough to discuss it.
I agree, which is why I don't.
Ignorance is as Ignorance does and there is no surprise the blind lead the blind or support them. After all how can you see beyond the comments Floo makes when you have never supported your arguments or been able to show a good command or understanding of who Jesus Christ is, or what the bible it teaching.
But before we get to the Bible (or to an other "holy" text for the matter) you have to address the primary ignorance at play here: that is, your ignorance of the basic logical fallacy you're unwittingly attempting called the reification fallacy. Just saying "the Bible is the word of God" doesn't actually
make it the word of God. That's why I've asked you several times how you would break out of your circular reasoning of: "God is real because the Bible says so/the Bible is accurate because God made it that way" but you never answer. That's the "argument" that's actually relevant here, and ironically the person who never addresses it is you: just quoting ever-longer chunks from a book isn't an argument of any kind, it's just chunks from a book. What you're doing here in other words is equivalent to me claiming that Harry Potter is real and quoting chunks from "Philosopher's Stone" as my argument for it.
Say whatever you may, I still know more about the bible and Jesus Christ than you will ever know in a life time of unbelief.
So how would you respond if you challenged my Potterism and I replied: "Say whatever you may, I still know more about the Philosopher's Stone and Harry Potter than you will ever know in a life time of unbelief"?
I agree that you know more about the Bible, though I have no idea whether you know anything at all about Jesus Christ. I know though that you either will not or cannot explain why we should agree with your faith beliefs and so we must treat you as probably wrong until and unless you can do that without collapsing straight back into fallacious thinking.
Sorry, but there it is.