You can disagree all you want. From the very beginning I defined my terms. Death in the Bible means separation. Physical death is when the spirit is separated from the body. Spiritual death for an unsaved person is when the spirit is separated from God.Yes, but you said this is "spiritual death". I would disagree with this term, we do not pass into and out of spiritual life every time we sin. Once you are born again, you have spiritual life forever.
However a believer can experience spiritual death also. It is being separated from God spiritually. He doesn't lose his salvation. The Holy Spirit remains with him. But his fellowship with God is affected. He is separated by his own sin. Say what you will, but sin separates us from God. We no longer have the fellowship that we ought to have with God.
If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me. (Psalm 66:18)
--That is separation--when the Lord does not hear.
Separation = death. The two are synonymous as they are defined in the Bible. You simply don't like the definition and can't cope with it.
There you go on your temper tantrum again making false accusations. Read what I posted.Of course I sin, that is not the point, the point is that the Holy Spirit never leaves the believer, the believer does not experience "spiritual death" every time he sins. If this were so, if you died while sinning without a chance to repent, you would lose your salvation. This is what Pentacostals believe.
I never said a person loses their salvation.
I never said that the Holy Spirit leaves the believer.
I said if you sin, until you repent of your sin, you do not have fellowship with God. Sin separates you from God. That is an eternal principle taught throughout all the Bible: OT to the end of NT. Sin separates one from God. Separation is death. Death is defined in the scriptures as separation, thus it is spiritual death. Get right with God and be spiritually alive.
We have many "spiritually dead" Christians" in our churches today. Just look around and see.