I already gave you the open and shut answer.
No, you didn't. You've simply shown you don't understand how words have different definitions.
Justified carries the common definition of righteous.
Which is irrelevant to the definition that is being used.
If someone decides “shown to be righteous” or “declared to be righteous” that’s up to them.
Ah, here we are. You're teaching the false gospel of being justified by works. Paul says to consider you as one who is accursed.
I’m saying that the basic, foundational meaning of justified is righteous.
Just as murder, kill and manslaughter carry the common meaning of death.
Do you agree or disagree with my answer, that the common meaning of kill, murder, and manslaughter is death?
Which, again, is irrelevant to the definition that is being used and shows that you're failing to understand something very basic.
I take the scriptures very seriously.
You haven't shown that to be the case, as you cannot even show that words have different meanings, which is essential to understanding the Scriptures, indeed anything, properly.
As far as what you call “Theology” your free to make whatever derogatory comments about me you like.
It isn't derogatory at all. You're completely changing the meaning of a passage so that it contradicts other passages by teaching justification by works, and all because you either don't want to or can't acknowledge that words have different definitions that are contextually dependent.
I answered your question where you gave the example of killing, murder, and manslaughter.
You gave
an answer, albeit a very poor one.
Maybe you could answer my question?
Do you believe Abraham would be justified if he disobeyed God?
Already answered. Please stop asking.
Clarifying that the “work” that Abraham did was obedience absolutely works to clarify the meaning and context of the passage.
The work that Abraham did, was to obey God’s command to offer his son Isaac on the altar.
This is irrefutable.
Of course it is, but that misses the point entirely. You're relying on a single definition of justified that contradicts the context and other passages of Scripture, when there is another definition that fits and makes sense of everything.
Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he offered Isaac his son on the altar? James 2:21
He was justified in that his works were evidence of the faith he already had (James 2:23). I've given all the context previously, if you care to actually address that point by point, since you didn't the first time, in
POST #322.