The truth is always the same and never changes.
No, it's not. The true number and identity of humans on the Earth at this moment is constantly changing, as "this moment" is constantly changing. The truth of my age and condition as an individual human being is constantly changing, as time passes for me, and for you. The truth of my understanding of reality is also constantly changing as I am constantly learning more and more about reality through my ongoing experience of it. The truth is 'what is', and what is (existence), is always changing.
In this day and age, the truth is like you said, what is now. I translate that as, the truth is whatever I say it is at this moment in time. Whatever suits me now.
We humans cannot know the truth,
en total, because we cannot experience the whole of 'what is'. So at any given time in our lives, the what we can know of the truth is relative to our time, place, and limited perceptual/conceptual abilities. So that all we can ever experience, then, is relative truthfulness. We cannot "know the truth", because the truth is holistic: it is the sum of all that is.
This thread is about the similarity between the third step and the Greek word "pisteuo' used 248 times in the NT. Start another thread if you want to debate what AA is now compared to what it once was, i'll participate. But lets please stick to the topic at hand. I think this is the second time I've asked you that.
The third step of AA was written and intended for the purpose of helping people to recover from alcoholism. Nothing else. Yet for some odd reason you keep wanting to tie it to your own religious ideology. Which is fine for you, personally, but is not an acceptable assertion regarding the people who wrote the steps of AA and use them to recover from alcoholism. And it's wrong for you to misrepresent them, and their 3rd step, in the way that you seem to be intent on doing.
I don't disagree with the importance of surrendering to a higher power, or to God, as a means of regaining lost faith and self-control. I know that it works.
I also don't disagree that this concept of surrender to God is a fundamental element of Christian doctrine and practice. And that it is used within that context in a similar way: as a tool for overcoming and changing one's 'self'.
I simply object to your insisting on conflating the two as if they share the same overall agenda, when they do not. They may share that same overall agenda FOR YOU, personally, but they do not share the same agenda for a great many other people. And I'm not going to let you get away with implying otherwise.
Alcoholics Anonymous is NOT a religious organization and does NOT have a religious agenda. The people in A.A. who wrote the 12 steps did not do so to help anyone find or understand Jesus. or Christ, or religious Christianity. They simply held on to and used a spiritual practice that various religions (including Christianity) have used through the centuries to help overcome the obsession with self that often causes people to become mentally, emotionally, and spiritually ill. As is the case with people suffering from alcoholism.
If you continue to try and imply that AA is a gateway to your religious beliefs simply because the 3rd step worked that way for you, then I will continue to explain to you and to others that this is NOT the intent or purpose of AA, or of the 12 steps of Alcoholics Anonymous. Because your implication misrepresents them. And that would be wrong.