What now of your comment on the Anointing mentioned by John:
No, John is not referring to the Spirit in this passage. You have ignored the context again. There is no mention of the Spirit at all in this chapter. Go back two verses to see what the anointing that "remains in you" actually is.
v24 "As for you, see that what you have heard from the beginning remains in you."
What they heard from the beginning was the preaching of God's Word. That is the anointing that teaches us. This is confirmed at the end of verse 27 , "just as it has taught you" where John refers to the anointing as "it", not "Him".
John would never use the neuter pronoun to refer to the Holy Spirit.
Er...um...Your misguided comments on pronouns stem from 2000 years of bad metaphysics. Suffice it to say that God is not, for example, too proud to describe Himself as Living Water, Holy Fire, Living Bread, Holy Breath/Wind, and so on - regardless of whether the associated pronouns happen to be masculine, feminine, or neuter, and regardless of whether such things normally refer to an "it" rather than a "he".
Your metaphysics isn't biblical. That's not entirely your fault. The church has been imbibed with Platonism for 2,000 years now. As a result, she still has no idea what the divine Word is. You're making a false dichotomy here. You're insisting that the Scripture always makes a sharp, fully polarized distinction between the message and the Messenger. I'll give you a couple of examples to refute that:
"The [divine] Word came to Abraham in a vision...[speaking promises]" (Gen 15).
In the above verse, God is speaking. He is delivering a message as divine Word (Isa 55:11). Because the divine Word is sonic, the message (the sound) and the Messenger
are one and the same thing. Thus your dichotomy between the Anointing (the Anointed One) and the message is a myth. (And before you go confusing the subjective with the objective, as you did in our last discussion, I'm mostly focusing on the objective side of things here).
Second example. Bear in mind that when we preach the gospel, we speak. We exhale breath from our mouth. Due to (horribly) bad metaphysics, the church STILL doesn't understand what it means to TRULY preach the Word. It literally means to have one's body and lungs charged with the Word and expelled during the preaching. (The reason most evangelism isn't effective is because it isn't true evangelism). Example:
"Jesus breathed on them, and said, 'Receive ye the Holy [
Breath]" (Jn 20):
Here again the divine Word goes forth - and any message that it happens to deposit in the minds of the listeners cannot be radically dichotomized from the Messenger.
Sorry, but 2,000 years of bad, unbiblical metaphysics based on Plato are not my fault.