It came from this--
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I'm not sure how you got from that to "to each his own", given I noted that the person with a different view might be right (as opposed to saying they are right). There are so many denominations it's reasonable to conclude at least some of them must be wrong on something, so it's not a huge leap of faith to figure that someone might attend a denomination while not agreeing with everything they believe.
Well, almost anything can be "drawn" from Scripture, you know. The most ridiculous interpretations are derived from somebody's personal reading of, and selection of, verses taken by them from the Bible. We often see that here on this forum.
I certainly won't argue with that. There are some truly whacky conclusions notionally drawn from Scripture, usually by ripping things out of context. But my point was that if someone has a disagreement it doesn't hurt to hear them out to see if their point has any merit.
However, if it's the particular phrase I used ("to each his own") that you object to, I would guess that there are a number of other expressions that say approximately the same thing.
I'm sure there are several, although I think there's a big difference between a total free-for-all and considering arguments that might indicate a denomination is wrong about something. As I also mentioned, I'm more interested in what Scripture says than in what my denomination says Scripture says. But then I've never been one to closely identify with one denomination over another.
But the issue concerns you or me or someone else speaking up when another person expresses their belief in a doctrine that's contrary to their own church's teaching.
It certainly does, which is why I'm inclined to think if someone disagrees with what my church teaches I'd be interested to know why and to consider what merits their argument may have. It's not particularly useful to simply say that my denomination disagrees as if that were the end of the matter, unless it were some essential doctrine.
Part of my reply differentiated between essential doctrines and other ideas that might be commonly heard in that church but which aren't critical--how often to have Holy Communion, for example, or what Jesus meant when saying to the good thief that they'd both be in "paradise" that day.
There is certainly a difference between "I tell you the truth, this day you will be with me in paradise" and "I tell you the truth this day, you will be with me in paradise". Hence the point about considering what someone has to say, whether their points have merit, and whether to change my own beliefs based on their points.
I'm not one to join a denomination and assume that denomination has everything perfectly correct.