Though I agree with that statement, I've often found that two bible believers differ in interpretation. And sometimes to the point of splitting off into different churches.
I remember having what I had hoped would be a civil disagreement with a particularly dogmatic member of a church and he was getting more and more emotional and, finally, red faced and veins popping in his neck, raised up his big bible and waved it yelling, "I BELIEVE WHAT THE BIBLE SAYS!". To which I calmly said, "So do I. Where we differ is in interpretation." I left that church because I did not want to be a "dividing spirit". We'd only been there a few months.
As a music director of a large Louisville church once told me, "The more someone knows about the bible, the less sure they are about their opinion of secondary issues." His church had a lot of bible college professors and I had been lamenting about all the small churches in my area where my gospel band played. The dogmatism based on bible ignorance in that area is amazing. I didn't know about the
Dunning Kruger effect back then. But now it all makes sense.
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