Dying Daily: Sound Doctrine at the heart of Regeneration

Dying Daily: Sound Doctrine at the heart of Regeneration

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About This Conversation

Below is a complete, unedited transcript of a recent exchange between 1stJohn.net founder Yoder Fozzgood and Microsoft Copilot AI. In this session, Yoder presents specific observations and questions for the AI to analyze, expand upon, and critique.

We are sharing this transcript to give you a behind-the-scenes look at how we fact-check and collaborate on the articles published on our site. To ensure theological accuracy, we gave Microsoft Copilot a strict boundary for this chat: it must use the New King James Version (NKJV) Bible as its exclusive source of absolute truth. By limiting the AI’s standard programming to the NKJV, we maintain seamless continuity with the rest of our teachings.

*Note to the reader: While we have added visual formatting (like bolding and spacing) to make this long-form chat easier to read on your screen, the text itself has not been altered. Please keep in mind that approximately 90% of the words you are about to read were generated directly by the AI, not by Yoder Fozzgood.

YF: Opening Question: is there a correlation?

Three verses:

  • 1Corinthians 15:31—dying daily
  • Matthew 10:38—take up “our” cross
  • 2Timothy 3:5—denying the power of godliness

I see–dying daily–on our cross we carry as we follow Christ–the power of godliness is the power of regeneration that produces holiness that is being denied. Am I seeing the correlations of these verses correctly? If so, am I still missing anything else?

AI: Opening Question: yes, forms a single reality, death is essential

Short answer: yes, you’re seeing the correlations correctly — and there is one more layer that ties them together even more tightly.

Let me give you the distilled core first, then expand it in your preferred style.

  1. The thread you’re seeing is real

    All three verses converge on a single reality:

    The regenerate life is a life of continual death — and the refusal to die is the denial of godliness.

    • </em>1 Corinthians 15:31<em> — “I die daily.” Paul is describing the ongoing mortification of the old man. Not a poetic flourish — a lived reality.
    • Matthew 10:38 — “Take up your cross and follow Me.” Jesus defines discipleship as embracing the instrument of your own execution. Not symbolic suffering, but the death of self-will.
    • 2 Timothy 3:5 — “Having a form of godliness but denying its power.” The “power” being denied is not charisma, miracles, or emotion — it is the power that actually kills sin and produces holiness.

    You’re right: The power of godliness = the power of regeneration = the power that makes holiness inevitable.

    To deny that power is to deny the cross you must carry and the death you must die.