Foist of oil, let's not focus on the OT.
There are enough problems (for many/most) just with the NT.
The last time I looked, Hebrews 13:5 was in the New Testament.
God promised this to one of His extremely special people (not you)!
The writer to the Hebrews applies this promise to all true Christians (note the qualifier).
Would anyone but you postulate that:
"the indwelling of the Spirit is in fact totally ineffective"?
No need for an answer.
I am very happy to give an answer. If your interpretation of Hebrews 13:5 is that God may very well leave or forsake His own people then you are teaching that the Holy Spirit is totally ineffective.
3 things:
1) This [the promise of Hebrews 13:5] was promised to the Jews, i.e. Messianic believers. Just sayin'.
Your aversion to the O.T. is noted. As I have explained, the writer to the Hebrews applies it to all his readers (ie. us).
2) The NT doesn't promise everyone who has the indwelling Holy Spirit
that He will "cause you to walk in My statutes".
I think you'll find it does. 1 John 3:9 (which I pointed out to you in a previous thread and you ignored).
'Whoever has been born of God does not [continually]
sin, for His seed remains in him; and he cannot [continually]
sin because he has been born of God.' As explained before, the Present Tense in Greek denotes continuity. The text cannot mean sinless perfection because of 1 John 1:8-10. You may add to this Hebrews 10:16 which was also mentioned earlier and ignored by you.
3) Perhaps, He does promise this to His elect (chosen ones)
who were chosen before the foundation of the world. [/QUOTE]
That is exactly whom He does promise this to. They are called Christians.
I know the above is tough,
Tough for you, but clear to everyone else.
but I will go with the 100+ NT warnings,
and the several which actually warn believers of LOSING eternal life.
OK, let's go with one of these, which again I quoted earlier and you blithely ignored.
Matthew 7:21-23. I can't be bothered to write it out for you again. Look it up! To those who say, "Lord, Lord!" but do not obey His commands (cf. Luke 6:46), our Lord will say,
I never knew you!" Not, "I knew you once and then forgot about you." Carnal Christians, those who declare themselves to have 'accepted Christ' (yuk!) but have never repented of their sins are not Christians at all. But those who have their eyes opened by the Spirit to see themselves as lost sinners, who turn away from their sins and put their trust solely in Christ and in His finished work on the cross are His and His forever. Such a person's sins are forgiven, not just in the past, but in the future as well (1 John 1:9).
How do you like John 14, where Jesus says:
IF you obey My commands, My Father and I will come to you
(in the form of "allos/another" of us, the Holy Spirit),
and make Our home with you.
If this is perceived correctly, it surely is very selective,
and hints of the Spirit leaving upon disobedience.
Sheesh! You can't even quote the Scriptures correctly! John 14:23.
"If anyone loves Me, he will keep My word, and My Father will love him, and We will come and make our home with him." The whole thing is predicated on love. If anyone loves Christ, it is because God has loved him first (1 John 4:19). Once we understand what God has done for us in Christ, how can we not love Him? How can we not long to serve and obey Him? And if God loves us enough to send the Lord Jesus to suffer and die for us, how will He possibly abandon us?
'he who did not spare His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him also freely give us all things?' (Romans 8:32).
Hebrews 3 warns: disobedience proves unbelief.
Perhaps the toughest verse in all of the NT. Wow!
Once again, you speak about a verse, but don't say which one it is. I suppose that you mean Hebrews 3:18-19, which is two verses.
There is no problem. If someone is consistently disobeying God's commandments, it is a sign that he has not truly repented and trusted in Christ. He was never a Christian.