You have a huge contradiction in your understanding of faith/works.
In your previous post you also stated.....
"Yes work is evident of faith, but not requirement of salvation.
Jesus said you tell the tree by it fruit. It is figurative. Good tree is represent a man with faith in Jesus.
If a man have genuine faith in Jesus he must bear good fruit. Fruit just indicator not requirement for salvation" also a huge contradiction.
If we are being saved through faith, and works is the evidence or content of our faith, then those works are mandatory otherwise you have a dead faith or no faith. One cannot be saved by faith alone, apart from the works. They are an inseparable tandem in scripture whether OT or NT.
In your previous post you also stated.....
"Yes work is evident of faith, but not requirement of salvation.
Jesus said you tell the tree by it fruit. It is figurative. Good tree is represent a man with faith in Jesus.
If a man have genuine faith in Jesus he must bear good fruit. Fruit just indicator not requirement for salvation" also a huge contradiction.
If we are being saved through faith, and works is the evidence or content of our faith, then those works are mandatory otherwise you have a dead faith or no faith. One cannot be saved by faith alone, apart from the works. They are an inseparable tandem in scripture whether OT or NT.
Evident and mandatory is 2 different thing.
this article bellow talking about how to identified if the soil acid or alkaline.
We not talking about mandatory here. it is a matter of identification, not mandatory.
If fizzes when you put vinegar than it is alkaline.
If a man produce good fruit, than he have a faith in Jesus, but fruit is not requirement it happen naturally as soon as you have genuine faith in Jesus.
remember no body able to bear fruit/doing good work in His eyes unless he abide in Him.
If good work is requirement/ must exist before save, than no body save.
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Some plants require soil to be acidic or alkaline in order to thrive. While you can buy a pH testing kit, this DIY method gives you an idea of what kind of soil you have, using two ingredients that are probably already in your pantry: vinegar and baking soda.
This "quick and dirty" method won't give you a specific pH reading, but you'll be able to tell if your soil is more alkaline, acidic, or neutral:
Vinegar: Take a sample of dry dirt (about 1/4 cup), mix with distilled water to make a liquid "mud" and then start pouring household vinegar over top. If the mixture fizzes, it's alkaline.
With that newfound knowledge, you can plan your garden appropriately or take steps to amend the soil using Tipnut's recommendation in the link below. (So even if you have alkaline soil, you can give your azaleas the acid soil they crave.)
Baking soda: Mix dry dirt and distilled water as above then start sprinkling baking soda over top. If the mixture bubbles, it's acidic.
If neither test produces a reaction, you have fairly neutral soil.
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How To Test pH Levels In Soil | Tipnut