You wrongly assume that death is cessation.
Thanks for answering Godrulz. Why do you think that death is not cessation? I don't think I am assuming anything about death. I never said that death is cessation, I think that death is not being alive. That isn't an assumption, it is an observation. Can you show me why you believe that people are conscious after death?
The problem is with your understanding/definition.
Honestly, I don't think so. I am reading the verse using the regular definitions of words. If the Bible makes plain sense, I don't need to go looking for any other sense.
Biblically, physical death is separation of spirit-soul from body (spirit without body is alive, while body without spirit is a shell).
You say "Biblically" death is separation of spirit-soul from body. I think the problem is your understanding of death. The Bible never says that death is the separation of spirit soul from body. Biblically, death is the condition of not being alive.
Spiritual death is relational separation and alienation from God, not cessation of existence (Eph. 2...we are spiritually dead while physically alive).
Again, the Bible does not say that death (even spiritual death) is relational separation and alienation from God. The Bible never redefines death to mean what you are saying it means.
Eternal/second death is not cessation, but conscious separation of sinner from holy God forever.
Okay, I can see that this concept is very important to your religion, but the Bible never says that death is conscious separation of the sinner from God forever. Since God is everywhere, how can a person be alive but separated from God? More importantly, where does the Bible say that death is separation from God?
At least two issues are your circular reasoning definitions of death (fail to see semantic range of meaning and your non-theological understanding) and that context determines whether physical, spiritual, or eternal death is the issue (or more than one).
I'm sorry, using the normal meaning of the word death when I read it in the Bible is not circular reasoning, and I did not take Romans 6:23 out of context. Paul is saying that death entered the world through Adam's sin. Paul is saying that everyone dies because of sin, but we can have eternal life through Christ's gift.
So, Adam did not die physically the day he ate, but spiritually (as promised).
The promise was not "spiritual death" but actual death, nd Adam actually died.
He did not seem to be condemned to eternal death (provision made), but did die physically (so did sinless Jesus).
Adam died because of sin, but because of Jesus, Adam can be resurrected from death and have eternal life. Adam will be resurrected just like Jesus, When Jesus returns.
Redemption deals with spiritual/eternal death.
Redemption deals with our sin, Jesus taking away our sin and paying the price of sin for us with his death. The wages of sin is death.
Resurrection deals with physical death.
Resurrection deals with death, by returning us to life.
Don't forget that we bring paradigms and meanings to the text, so we can quote the same verse or countless verses and come up with different understandings (we must look at cumulative evidence, not just one proof text). Equally capable, godly believers disagree despite praying and using the Bible.
If I thought you had a case, I would change my mind. This does not mean that we are not brothers in Christ.
Okay. You know that I have not reaching my understanding by only one so called "proof text". You can see that I do not use circular reasoning, I reason from the Bible using the regular definitions of words. You can see that I am not "prooftexting".
I will leave you alone now. God bless you, Brother.