Strong's work is a Concordance. It is not a lexicon which provides all the lexamemes in a given language. The meaning of a lexameme is that intended by the author using it. The simple
glosses given in Strong's are not the intention of the Concordance. Using
Strong's as a lexicon ignores lexical ambiguity, as in "Robert is looking for
a match." Is Robert seeking a romantic partner or a light for a cigar? Strong's is no help here. Using Strong's ignores nuances of meaning as authors in Scripture will use the same word differently in different contexts, for example, James' and Paul's use of the word "faith".
Strongs sheds very little light on the meaning of a word in its context. Using Strong's to claim the meaning of a word in a specific context is
X, is never a reliable claim.
And please do not then claim, that well, I have a tool that links Strongs to
Thayer's Greek-English Lexicon or
Smith's Bible Dictionary for definitions. Both were published before 1895 and are considered obsolete by biblical scholars. Upgrade your tools to include
BDAG, and then you may have a chance at arguing what the Greek really means in a particular context.
Even better, forget about appealing to the Greek to make your case. If one's doctrine revolves around a locus classicus of one or two verses, requiring Greek knowledge, something is amiss and God's providential care and preservation of His special revelation apparently requires a high priest caste of Greek and Hebrew scholars. Nonsense abounds.
AMR