This is discouraging even to me as a sola scripturist. What good is a flawless scripture if we can’t have some method of understanding the message it holds within. Where then are **least chances **for flaws? Not in our own interpretations, because as you say they are flawed.Yes. Exactly. Man has been interpreting the Bible for thousands of years, and continues to come up with new interpretations today. No one on earth can be trusted to interpret the Bible flawlessly because none of us are flawless. The only flawless person is Jesus. This is why we need to serve Him and place our trust in Him and adhere to the commandment that He said is the most important: Love. Love your neighbor. Love your enemy. Love the Lord God with all your heart. Read your Bible to know Jesus and know His message. And above all, love.
It seems the safest bet is to turn to those very close in time to the Christ, those who wrote the early creeds and councils. ISTM that is, at least, a good starting point.
There’s a lot of folks smarter than me about what scripture says. As a Lutheran, I tend to turn to those Lutheran teachers that appear to support and accept those early councils.
What say you?
Jon