Stop Spinozing
Spinoze, verb (-ed, -ing) to use language associated with a popular idea to describe a less popular idea
Baruch Spinoza was a 17th-century philosopher who was born in Amsterdam and raised in the Jewish faith. Spinoza's Big Idea™ was that everything in the universe is made of an infinite, all-encompassing, and ultimately uncaring substance. Spinoza was notoriously opaque, but he seemed to be describing what a scientist would call "matter." Instead, Spinoza called it God. The fact that he was not describing what anyone else meant by the word "God" did not deter him.
The religious authorities, naturally, immediately saw through his ruse and he was issued a writ of herem (excommunication) from his local Sephardic community. This unfortunately did not put an end to the confusion, and you can still today hear people mention Spinoza's idea that "God is in nature" without realizing that the "God" described in that manner would be completely foreign to any actual theist.
Don't be like Spinoza. Don't Spinoze your unpopular ideas to make them sound more like popular ones. Describe your ideas clearly, even if a true understanding might cause people to reject them. Spinozing your language will just create confusion about what you're actually saying.