I have a fascination with watching YouTube videos about theology.
Sometimes the hosts have years of study and expertise and sometimes the hosts are average believers who believe themselves to be experts.
These days, about 10% of the time I am listening to learn something new. The other 90% is "hate listening" - where I am just critiquing the arguments, the biblical interpretations, and, most of all, the attitude.
From expert to amateur, there is little epistemological humility to be found on Christian YouTube.
Almost EVERYONE is certain their doctrine is right and that the other side, if not outright heretical, is chock full of people who are profoundly blind to "what the Bible CLEARLY teaches".
And the commenters seem to eat up the confidence of the hosts.
But even the Apostle Paul - the author of 13 out of the 27 New Testament books, and expert of experts - wrote that we "see through a glass dimly" and "know in PART" on this side of the afterlife.
Yes, he included himself in that statement.
We could use more of that sort of humility in our discussions of doctrine and theology today.
Some day we will see clearly and know in full with 100% confidence.
But not today.