So, Paul's writings are pagan inspired and untrustworthy.
Did Paul quote pagan sources as confirmation of doctrinal teaching? That itself should say something.
It is not an outright lie...it is your position.
The Gospels, including Luke's YOU choose to give credibility.
You said about what my position:
Yet Luke's gospel is true but Luke's writing in Acts aren't truthful.
I stated it to you at least 3 times before on here and FB that BOTH are credible as LUKE is credible, as far as I can tell. And he recorded how he understood things
as a historian, not as a prophet or theolgian. In Acts he recorded Paul's deceit in his part of taking the vow, Paul's lie about his arrest, Paul's different spins on his testimony, Paul's rejection of Agabus, etc. Though Luke was Paul's friend and I would probably disagree with some of Luke's theology, he was brutally honest and that honesty comes through despite possible Marcionian interpolation that
may have occurred as they purposely violated 1st century Ebionite writings.
Luke, writing Acts, which he wrote before he wrote his gospel, isn't trustworthy.
Acts 1:1
In the first book, O Theophilus, I have dealt with all that Jesus began to do and teach, until the day when he was taken up, after he had given commands through the Holy Spirit to the apostles whom he had chosen.
So Luke wrote another gospel than what is recorded? Where can I find it?
Or he's gullible and dishonest....but when he wrote the gospel, he was on his game and trustworthy.
See my point above. Again, I believe Luke recorded as honestly as he understood things AS A HISTORIAN and not a prophet.
Now, Dan that's the truth, no matter how you spin it.
I hope that clarifies things for you. I don't mind being disagreed with as it is discussions like this that I learn. But I do not appreciate a purposeful malignment of my ideals in order to spin them out of context.
The just shall live by faith is repeated numerous times in the NT, which I believe to be The Truth...God breathed, infallible.
Because without faith, in Him, it is impossible to please God.
So is this an admission that Paul and Apollos (or whoever the writer of Hebrews was) "reinvented" Habakkuk's context?