The point I am makling is that a statement such as
I never said you stole money can have several meanings despite its apparent simplicity. It could mean
- I never said you stole money - meaning somebody else did say it.
- I never said you stole money - meaning the words never left my lips but I may have thought you did.
- I never said you stole money - meaning you did't steal it but your friend over there may have
- I never said you stole money - meaning you may have lost it, misplaced it or something accidental resulted in its loss
- I never said you stole money - meaning you stole something other than money
If it is possible that six words in a short statement can be interpreted in five (or more) different ways but none of those ways is indicated as the
true meaning of the statement because the six words are written without voice emphasis and body language to help explain their meaning then which do you think will be more likely to legitimately produce cases of at least two (and probably many more than two) different interpretations (1) a short statement of six words or (2) a book of 1,500 pages? The bible is a book of 1,500 or more pages. If you claim the Spirit gives you the right meaning for the bible then what are you going to do when your interlocutor says the same thing about his/her interpretation which differs from yours?
How will you decide what the bible means when there are people with just as good qualifications to interpret it as you have and who nevertheless say it means something different from what you say it means?