God decides what is just.
Your answer above suggests that you believe that an
unknown level of obedience to the law is required as a minimum for evidence that one is abiding in Christ.
This ambiguous gospel you follow is clearly not supported in scripture.
We demonstrate our faith in God by our obedience and as sinners and imperfect it requires renewed repentance in order to stay on the straight and narrow.
How can you demonstrate your faith in God by obedience when you don't know what level of obedience is required as a minimum?
And as you are claiming that an
unknown amount of good lifestyle is proof of righteousness, does this then include
non-believers who live a good lifestyle?
You speak of repentance, but seem to misunderstand it's application in scripture.
Heb 6:1 speaks of our repentance from
"dead works".
These were dead works of self-righteousness, which is sin.
Now to repent is to have such great regret that you stop doing it.
Have you ever repented of the same offense more than once?
And getting back to repentance from dead works, we see Heb 6:4-6; explain that it's impossible to be renewed to repentance after you have fallen away.
Heb 6:4-6
For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, And have tasted the good word of God, and the powers of the world to come,
If they shall fall away, to renew them again unto repentance; seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame.
Now
only past sin was dealt with at the cross, Rom 3:25
Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins that are past, through the forbearance of God;
As
only past sin was dealt with at the cross, why are you saying we're still repenting of sin after receiving Christ.
Instead we find scripture show that Christians repented of their
"dead works"/Sin already when they received Christ. This is a
once only repentance, as described in Heb 6:4-6.
For anyone to fall in to sin again means that they have turned back to the law to determine their righteousness.
Gal 2:18
if I build again the things which I destroyed (dead works of righteousness by the law)
, I make myself a transgressor/Sinner.
This is confirmed in Heb 10:26
For if we sin wilfully (Gal 2:18)
after that we have received the knowledge of the truth (gospel of grace),
there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins,
It seems the doctrine you follow is a complicated one leading people back under the law with expectations of unknown levels of obedience to the law as proof of righteousness.
Such doctrines can only corrupt peoples minds away from the simplicity that is in Christ, 2Cor 11:3.