The posts prove otherwise.
Reason dictates it.
I don't "take it." I simply observe what is stated in the text.
Your posts increasingly contradict one another.
Hmmmm..... The onus is on you, not me or anyone else, to prove Proverbs 10:19 applies. The assertion of Pr. 10:19 occurs as a fallacy of argument solely by assertion.
I don't respond to most of what you allege, because what you allege mostly exists in the form of self-serving one-liners, i.e,, you accuse my posts of increasingly contradicting each other, but without supporting argument.
But then you say the onus is on me to prove Proverbs 10:19 applies. You are correct that my mere citation of the proverb was the fallacy of argument by assertion. That's because I had expected a certain level of comprehension in my opponents here.
But since you make it an issue, I can argue for that Proverb's applicability to Paul. First, I reject biblical inerrancy, so if I interpret a verse in a way that makes it conflict with another verse, that's insufficient basis for me to fear that the interpretation is wrong. Second, as most scholars of the Proverbs recognize, "immediate context" has limited utility at best since by their aphoristic nature, the author expects them to be understood immediately as self-contained units. And as most Proverbs scholars recognize, the proverbs are often strung together without regard to context. From inerrantist Trinitarian scholar D. A. Garrett:
...each proverb is an independent unit that can stand alone and still have meaning.
Textual context is not essential for interpretation.
Garrett, D. A. (2001, c1993). Vol. 14: Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of songs (electronic ed.).
Logos Library System; The New American Commentary (Page 46). Nashville: Broadman & Holman Publishers.
So it doesn't matter if you parse through the "immediate context" and blindly presume that because you think Paul's tongue was like silver, his "many words" somehow are exempt from the unqualified warning in Proverbs 10:19. I can possibly be reasonable, in light of scholarship produced by Trinitarian inerrantists, to say that the meaning of that Proverb is not dictated by textual context, but can be found in the Proverb alone. Not only does the Proverb make no exceptions, neither does the context. It is neither expressed nor implied that when it is a holy man speaking, then suddenly, many words become righteous and good.
We can justify this interpretation of the Proverb from undeniable reality: In the last 2000 years, Christianity did little more than splinter over Paul's many words. Those many words have caused the brethren to be divided, which is a sinful refusal to obey the command to be unified in thought (i.e., you must stop saying "I'm am of Calvin!", and "I am of Arminius!", "Free Grace!", "Lordship Salvation!", i.e., divisions within Protestantism, not merely your differences with "cults" whose membership in the body of Christ you deny, like Roman Catholicism...and don't even get me started on the New Perspective on Paul), see 1st Cor. 1:10-14.
Another example: for 2000 years the church has become progressively more divided about the Synoptic Problem: whether Matthew borrows from Mark, and if so, whether his changes constitute "corrections", i.e., whether Matthew would have thought Mark's gospel was inerrant, etc, and the problems created by trying to harmonize John with the Synoptics...which has led many to either abandon bible inerrancy or seriously question it , e.g., inerrantist Mike Licona's "Why I Think the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy Is Wrong", or to adopt "limited inerrancy".
Heck, you can't even argue that Licona is an outlier. Despite that fact that he, Craig Blomberg and other conservative evangelicals adopt full biblical inerrancy, inerrantist Dr. Norman Geisler and other very conservative Trinitarian Protestants still created division of the brothers. See F. David Farnell, Norman L. Geisler, Joseph M. Holden, William C. Roach, Phil Fernandes,
Vital Issues in the Inerrancy Debate (Wipf and Stock, 2016).
And as as is well known, despite Geisler having served in the Evangelical Theological Society for 40 years and having previously been its president, he felt he had to resign because. among other things like allowing membership to open-theists, ETS didn't see the issue of inerrancy in quite the way Geisler saw it. Most such division would have been preempted if apostle Paul had simply written a single general epistle of less than two pages summarizing all the doctrines one must believe to be saved, and describing the type of misunderstanding of those doctrines that is sufficiently egregious as to warrant removal from fellowship (e.g., "if anybody says....he is anathema").
For all these reasons, I am reasonable, even if not infallible, to view the warning in Proverbs 10:19 as
intentionally unqualified, so that even "many words" by a born-again Christian could possibly make sin inevitable...and this may also imply that if an author is truly inspired by God, they will not engage in "many words"....and to thus use that Proverb to condemn the loquacious controversial fifth-wheel apostle known as Paul. You are never going to prove that my "incorrect understanding" is so evident that only fools would deny it. So I have achieved reasonableness here despite the lingering possibility that I might be ultimately wrong. Finally, the proverb itself might prove to be a bad idea since in some contexts, many words are necessary. But that is irrelevant to an unbeliever like me, YOU are the one who will be constrained to stick with the author's apparent meaning, and be disallowed by your conservative view from getting around the problem by suddenly adopting a more liberal and less constricting ndamentalist view of "god's word".