Maybe I should consider what you're saying here about being insensitive to the word "wrong." However, I differ with you when you say there's no difference between "you're wrong" and "that's wrong." "You're wrong" is making it personal. It's pointing to the identity of the person, "you," which implies that there is much more about the person that is wrong, than merely the issue (or opinion) at hand. Saying "that" is wrong is just taking a stand on the particular thing that is in disagreement. However, it may be true that people are generally confused between the two, and the reason why it appears insulting.I have noticed a strange thing. You don't actually have to say "you're wrong, " or "that's wrong" for people to recognise that is what you are telling them. And there is really no difference between you're wrong and that's wrong. There are some things in the Bible, things like behaviors, attitudes, sins that are non negotiable and if asked should be addressed, in a kind way. The basic doctrines of Christianity are also non negotiable but there is a way to DISCUSS these things without stepping all over a person's beliefs, or them. Other things like baptism and it's meaning, free will or not, things of this sort it is important to remember that for the most part people have firmly established beliefs, ones they back up with scripture, and it is no one's job to take a stance that the other should be corrected and their mind changed. Those differences do not affect persons salvation. They don't need to be TAUGHT by someone that "that's wrong." And maybe when you suggest teaching you are only referring to the first things mentioned and not the latter. That is unclear in your posts. What it SOUNDS like is that You consider yourself to have authoritative interpretation and those who disagree,for their own good, must be corrected. If I'm wrong about that, my apologies. Just saying, that's what it SOUNDS like. I say these things as one who adheres to Reformed Theology, which I gather from a previous post by Wondering, you are too.
As far as teaching, if you have information from a reliable source that people generally don't know about, and is relevant to the thread, wouldn't you want to share that information? I consider that teaching. Well, some people would say "sharing information," but that doesn't require the information shared to be relevant to the thread or point at hand. Teaching involves reasoning for the purpose of persuading someone to see clearly. Isn't that why you share what you believe to be true? If you think that you see more clearly than the person you are communicating with, don't you try to explain your point in order to persuade (or influence) the other person?
And even if the person I am communicating with doesn't accept what I say, there are a lot of people in the forum who read the posts who are wanting to learn why people interpret the Bible the way they do, and to see the reasoning as examples for themselves. I have done this myself. So why wouldn't I want to teach others what I know, and show them how I reason out my interpretations? I have learned a lot in these forums, and why should I withhold it?
Yet, I do get your point that there could be improvements in the way people communicate, and I'm trying to make improvements myself. I'm still in the learning curve, and there is always room for improvement.
TD