You are a Suni. Which Suni are you? Well you had one school of thought 'Hanafi'. My first point on this is according to your explanation and understanding Imam Abu Hanifah was also a SHIA.WHY? I will tell you why.
Very good point! While your cut-paste (winded) posts are exhaustive, you just admitted that Surah Al-Anam verse 159 condemns you.
You have brought up Imam Abu Hanifa (rah) and that he was a "Shia". Do his followers, or the followers of Imam Shafi'i (rah), Imam Malik (rah) or Imam Hanbal (rah) call themselves "shia"? No! Do you call yourself "shia"? Yes!
Do the followers of the four Imams (rah) call each other kafir? No! Do you believe in a different line of Imams (ra) in comparison to Zaidis and Ismailis? Yes!
Does rejecting a single Imam, according to your sect, makes one kafir? Yes! So the Zaidis and Ismailis, along with Sunnis, are all kaffirs (according to your madhhab).
Therefore, you have taken a parallel path (far from being a sect) and have proudly adorned yourself with the label of "Shia". Hence, Allah (swt) informed His Messenger (saw):
"Verily, those who divide their religion and break up into sects (all kinds of religious sects), you (O Muhammad SAW) have no concern in them in the least. Their affair is only with Allāh, Who then will tell them what they used to do." (Al-An'am 6:159)
WHY? Because Abu Hanifa broke away and kicked off his own separate school of thought. This is where the first ever Sunnis emerged from and Abu Hanifa and his followers were the first Shias according to your explanation and understanding of the verse.
No because Imam Abu Hanifa (rah) or any of the other three Imams (rah) did not break away. That is why Shias are called "Rawaafidh". If he, or any one of them had broken away, as you claim, he wouldn't have taught his students that while he thought he was upon haq, the other three could be right too. Since these were Imams (rah) of fiqh, this is not an issue. However, the key point is that they all gave each other the benefit of doubt which shows that none of them broke away. They just formulated their own methodology and jurisprudence from it.
Do you say that about any other Muslim sect? "We, Ithna Asharis are upon haq, but the Zaidis, Ismailis or even Sunnis could be right too". You'll never say that!
Being a Shia is not a problem
Keep repeating that. It might help you block out the Words of Allah (swt) in Surah Al-An'am verse 159.
Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab (/wəˈhɑːb/; Arabic: محمد بن عبد الوهاب; 1703 – 22 June 1792) was a religious leader and theologian from Najd in central Arabia who founded the movement now called Wahhabism. Born to a family of jurists, Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab's early education consisted of learning a fairly standard curriculum of orthodox jurisprudence according to the Hanbali school of law, which was the school of law most prevalent in his area of birth.
Muhammad ibn Abd-al Wahhab can go to h3ll or not, as far as I'm concerned. Try him with someone else. I'm not cool with him.
Aam al-Jama’ah the year 40 A.H/A.D 660-661, so called because the Muslim Community came together in recognizing Muawiyah, ending the political division of the first civil war. Pace Caetani, 648; see Abu Zahrah al-Dimashqi, Tarikh, 188 (no. 101) and 190 (no. 105)
You so shot yourself in the foot, again! Why was this called the year of jama'ah? By the way, this has nothing to do with the term, "Ahlus Sunnah Wal Jama'ah". I will get to that in a minute but this was called the year of jama'ah because it was when Imam Hassan (ra), in a move that still torments Shias, delivered his "Divinely Ordained" Caliphate in the hands of Muawiya, a "hypocrite and nasibi" (according to you).
All the Muslims were united once again, as a community, therefore, the "year of jama'ah". However some chose to break away from the united body of Muslims. The minute these people branched off is when they were called "Rawaafidh" and the same people adopted the title, "Shia" (which is you). So thank you for proving that Surah Al-An'am verse 159 applies to none other but you.
"Verily, those who divide their religion and break up into sects (all kinds of religious sects), you (O Muhammad SAW) have no concern in them in the least. Their affair is only with Allāh, Who then will tell them what they used to do." (Al-An'am 6:159)
As for where did the term "Ahlus Sunnah Wal Jama'ah" came from? Ibn Mas’ood (ra) commenting on the verse in the Qur’an in surah A’-Imraan (which means);
“And hold fast, all of you together, to the Rope of Allah, and be not divided among yourselves.” (3:103)
explained that the rope mentioned in the verse was the Jama’ah. The derivation of Ahlus Sunnah can be made from the following verse, also in Al’ Imraan:
“On the Day (of Resurrection) when some faces will become white and some faces will become black.” (3:106)
Similar narrations have been narrated from Abdullah Ibn Umar (ra). Imam Muslim (in the Muqaddimah of his Sahih) narrates it from Muhammad Ibn Sirin and Imam Al-Darimi narrates it in his Musnad from Al-Hassan Al-Basri.
Shaykh Muhammad ibn Saalih al-‘Uthaymeen summarized Ahlus-Sunnah wa’l-Jamaa’ah as ‘those who adhere to the Sunnah and who unite upon it, not turning to anything else, whether that be in matters of belief or matters of actions which are subject to Islamic rulings. Hence they are called Ahlus Sunnah because they adhere to it (the Sunnah), and they called al-Jamaa’ah because they are united in following it.’
Also, this term has been authentically narrated by the Ahl Al-Bayt (Ibn Abbas) themselves.
https://gift2shias.com/2013/12/12/muawiyah-was-the-first-one-wh-oused-the-term-ahlussunnah-and-al-jamaah/