IN case you have not noticed it seems e very group has their own version of textual criticism , exegesis , hermeneutics
and historical criticism and it darn sure seems to JUSITFY their own doctrines
and THEY DONT EVEN AGREE with each other .
Could you clarify who you’re referring to here? If you mean Orthodox and Catholic Christians, the primary doctrinal disagreement between them centers on the Filioque clause in the Nicene Creed. However, both Orthodox and Catholics strictly adhere to the Creed, which encapsulates the fundamental dogmas of the faith. Every Catholic and Orthodox believer is expected to accept the Creed as a unified statement of core beliefs, leaving no room for disagreement on these essentials within their respective traditions.
With Protestants, however, the situation is different. I once spoke with two Protestants from the same church, and one expressed a belief that contradicted the other’s. When I pointed out the inconsistency, they shrugged it off, saying, “Oh, that’s normal! That’s his personal faith, and this is mine. I don’t criticize his, and he doesn’t criticize mine.”
From this experience, I concluded that there are as many versions of Protestant faith as there are Protestants—each with their own unique, personal interpretation. To me, this is absurd. Truth is objective; it cannot be subjective, varying from person to person. This lack of a unified foundation makes meaningful dialogue with Protestants challenging, as they often lack a common doctrinal core.
There’s also a common myth that Protestants know the Bible well. In my experience, this is often an illusion. Many Protestants memorize a handful of verses to use in debates but rarely engage with the full scope of Scripture. Some may read the Bible but struggle to understand it deeply or study it systematically. As a result, each Protestant tends to develop their own personal, unique take on the Bible, shaped by individual interpretation rather than a shared framework.
You don’t have to look far for an example. In the thread “
Should you help the wicked and love those who hate the Lord?
Because of this, wrath has gone out against you from the Lord,”
response #194 highlights a case where a single phrase was pulled out of context from just one verse. Not from the entire Bible, not from a single Gospel, not even from a whole chapter—but from one verse!
This is why the frequent quoting of Scripture by Protestants can create the impression that they know the Bible well. In reality, many don’t truly understand it or see the bigger picture. As a result, there are as many interpretations of the Bible as there are Protestants, and behind these interpretations can be anything—sometimes even the most blatant nonsense that pops into someone’s head.