Yes, but I don't think you're purposely being dishonest.
You're looking at the plain words of scripture and you're making them not really mean what they say. Most Christians do this. It's for good intentions, but it's fundamentally dishonest. I used to do that. I don't anymore. What a person does once they are shown more information determines how dishonest a person truly is.
Which I can respect. This is the traditional Calvinistic view of 'once saved always saved' (in contrast to the new Hypergrace version, which is a complete joke and hardly worth discussion).
It boils down to whether the real believer can stop believing or not. Can he? Are all the warnings not to stop believing sufficient to keep one believing? From what I can see in scripture, the warnings are sufficient for the mature believer, not for the immature believer who is not grounded in the word yet.
I do not believe that either.
What happens is the believer becomes an unbeliever and is then cast into hell. If they still believed in Christ that would not happen. No believer goes to the eternal fire. Only those who never believed, or who ceased to believe go to the eternal fire.
I suppose if one was making that argument (that believers can be cast into hell) then I'd have to wonder why, too. But as it is, the argument is that unbelievers are the ones who are going to be cast into the eternal fire--those who never trusted in the blood of Jesus and those who have ceased to trust n the blood of Jesus.
Using YOUR criteria, I could just as easily accuse you of being "unintentionally" dishonest. Here is an example where you wouldn't take the text at face value, although some do.
Romans 10:13 New King James Version (NKJV)
13 For “whoever calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved.”
Taken at face value, ANYBODY can just say those words and wallah! They are saved. No questions asked!
And there are thousands of such examples. That is why it is so vital that we don't take a verse out of context. BECAUSE ALL OF SCRIPTURE IS THE CONTEXT! The WHOLE counsel of God.
Tell me, Did the Prodigal son believe he was no longer a son? Did it matter that he THOUGHT he was no longer a son? EVEN after repenting, he STILL said this:
Luke 15:21 And the son said to him, ‘Father, I have sinned against heaven and in your sight, and am no longer worthy to be called your son.’
His father had other thoughts didn't he? So it didn't matter that the son no longer thought he was his father's son. The reality was that he was BORN his father's son. It's in his DNA. AND lest we forget, the 3 parables in Luke 15 were told one right after the other. In the 1st we see the shepherd leaving his flock to retrieve HIS lost sheep.
So why would God leave His faithful, obedient Children to retrieve the son that blew his inheritance, and cavorted with harlots? BECAUSE THE LOST PRODIGAL IS HIS KID!!!!!
It seems to me, that you do not believe you are currently a born again Child of God. If I'm wrong, tell me how you can be a child of God, somehow, BECOME AN UNBORN CHILD OF GOD, because you would be admitting that at one point you WERE a Child of God.
Now if you're telling me the person was NEVER a Child of God then that's a different story.