With regards to proper Christian obedience after salvation, what you and I describe above is standard operating procedure (SOP) for most Protestant and non-denominational Christians. The only ones who may differ from this approach are those who belong to denominations where they dogmatically accept whatever is passed down to them, such as Catholics, Mormons, etc. The Protestant Reformation is what opened up this SOP to Christendom en masse. This is not unique to HRM, so your charge that it is a weakness of HRM is misplaced. MacBestus has done well in refuting several other false charges that have come up against HRM in this thread.
You say you study the Torah for wisdom. Ok, so I'm interested to see what you do now that you've concluded through your study that using electricity is a violation of keeping the Sabbath day. Will you discontinue your use of electricity on the seventh day in order to honor the Lord with regards to the Sabbath day, or will you continue to do what you believe is a violation of keeping the Sabbath day?
You say I present a false dichotomy, but you really only have two choices moving forward: use electricity on the Sabbath day or not. And if you truly believe that using electricity is a violation of keeping the Sabbath day, then your choice moving forward will clearly tell us Torah-observant folks which camp you belong in with regards to your "study of Torah for wisdom": (1) those who study the Torah to learn what God expects of them with regards to keeping the commands and applying them appropriately; or (2) those who do not study it with that intention. If you're just talking about wisdom generally (e.g., when G7 says below "we read the law to see Jesus in it"), then you're in camp #2. But if you're choosing to walk in God's Torah commands through application in practical manners regarding your daily life, then you're in camp #1 with us Torah-observant folks.
And to clarify, I will again repeat that with regards to electricity, your conclusion that using it is a violation of the Sabbath day is in the extreme minority of the HRM Torah-observant camp. To be honest, I've never personally conversed with another HRM person who has come to that same conclusion. It is your conclusion that it is a violation of the Sabbath day, which puts you in the bind you're in now about whether you choose to keep the Sabbath day according to the manner your studies have concluded, or to ignore it and move on with your life. You've placed yourself in the dichotomy I describe above, to which your response will tell us whether or not you believe the Sabbath command should be kept.
To sum it up simply: if you truly believe that using electricity is a violation of the Sabbath command, then your choice to discontinue use of electricity shows that you believe in keeping the Sabbath command (i.e., not violating it), but your continued use shows that you believe the Sabbath command does not need to be kept (i.e., it's alright to violate it).
For the record, I do not believe that electricity use is a violation of the Sabbath, and I believe you've made an error in judgment and should take a step back to again assess what it means to keep the Sabbath day using all the manners of recourse that I have previously described. But I'm honest enough with myself to say that I know I could be wrong. If I am wrong, though I would be stumbling in this area, I believe that God forgives me through His grace and mercy. He knows that in my heart I am not a lawless person who scoffs at His Torah commands, but someone who studies them diligently to walk as He wills and in the example of our Messiah's walk, following the leading of the Holy Spirit, in meditation on the Word, and in consultation with brothers and sisters of faith. I'm running the race, as Paul says, and I intend to end in a way where my Master will say to me, "Well done, good and faithful servant."
So, which is it for you: use electricity or not?
You say you study the Torah for wisdom. Ok, so I'm interested to see what you do now that you've concluded through your study that using electricity is a violation of keeping the Sabbath day. Will you discontinue your use of electricity on the seventh day in order to honor the Lord with regards to the Sabbath day, or will you continue to do what you believe is a violation of keeping the Sabbath day?
You say I present a false dichotomy, but you really only have two choices moving forward: use electricity on the Sabbath day or not. And if you truly believe that using electricity is a violation of keeping the Sabbath day, then your choice moving forward will clearly tell us Torah-observant folks which camp you belong in with regards to your "study of Torah for wisdom": (1) those who study the Torah to learn what God expects of them with regards to keeping the commands and applying them appropriately; or (2) those who do not study it with that intention. If you're just talking about wisdom generally (e.g., when G7 says below "we read the law to see Jesus in it"), then you're in camp #2. But if you're choosing to walk in God's Torah commands through application in practical manners regarding your daily life, then you're in camp #1 with us Torah-observant folks.
And to clarify, I will again repeat that with regards to electricity, your conclusion that using it is a violation of the Sabbath day is in the extreme minority of the HRM Torah-observant camp. To be honest, I've never personally conversed with another HRM person who has come to that same conclusion. It is your conclusion that it is a violation of the Sabbath day, which puts you in the bind you're in now about whether you choose to keep the Sabbath day according to the manner your studies have concluded, or to ignore it and move on with your life. You've placed yourself in the dichotomy I describe above, to which your response will tell us whether or not you believe the Sabbath command should be kept.
To sum it up simply: if you truly believe that using electricity is a violation of the Sabbath command, then your choice to discontinue use of electricity shows that you believe in keeping the Sabbath command (i.e., not violating it), but your continued use shows that you believe the Sabbath command does not need to be kept (i.e., it's alright to violate it).
For the record, I do not believe that electricity use is a violation of the Sabbath, and I believe you've made an error in judgment and should take a step back to again assess what it means to keep the Sabbath day using all the manners of recourse that I have previously described. But I'm honest enough with myself to say that I know I could be wrong. If I am wrong, though I would be stumbling in this area, I believe that God forgives me through His grace and mercy. He knows that in my heart I am not a lawless person who scoffs at His Torah commands, but someone who studies them diligently to walk as He wills and in the example of our Messiah's walk, following the leading of the Holy Spirit, in meditation on the Word, and in consultation with brothers and sisters of faith. I'm running the race, as Paul says, and I intend to end in a way where my Master will say to me, "Well done, good and faithful servant."
So, which is it for you: use electricity or not?
'Are you studying Torah to find out how to keep the commands, or studying them to identify what you would consider to be absurd conclusions so that you can decide to avoid keeping them?'
I believe this is the false dichotomy... those aren't the only two possible reasons to study Torah.