Zow
Footballguy
Have you ever heard of the Dunning-Kruger effect? It's the psychological concept whereby an intelligent, learned individual on a probably subject matter underestimates and thereby downplays their knowledge on a particular issue. In other words, the learned individual recognizes just how complicated the issue is and therefore just how much the individual doesn't know about it despite being relatively brilliant on the issue. In contrast, a much lesser competent exudes much more confidence and assertion when discussing the same subject because, in short, the lesser competent individual simply doesn't know enough to realize how little he knows about the issue.I'm here to teach the word of God. I am here to tell you things that you want to hear. The Bible is the word of God and if your beliefs line up with that then they are correct and if they don't they are false. Love speaks the truth and that is the truth.The key to being a truth seeker isn't constantly telling people you're right and they're wrong. Your entire attitude in these threads is completely off-putting, even to those who are already converted. I'd suggest you consider other ways to present Christianity because, IMO, you're hurting rather than helping the cause.The key is to be a truth seeker rather than trying to win an argument.
As people have implored you to understand and recognize, it is incredibly off-putting to the average reader or listener when you come into these threads with this hyper-confidence that you and only you have all of these answers and you make no effort to even try to recognize and appreciate what you don't know. The reasonably inference to be drawn by your behavior is to assume, with the Dunning-Kruger effect in mind, you therefore have very little actual knowledge on the topic you speak (or "preach" to use your word) about and immediately dismiss whatever message it is you are trying to send. I imagine the fact that the issue you raise - how to get to heaven, a topic that has been debated for centuries - only exacerbates this effect.
I'd humbly suggest that "love" speaks more to compassion and understanding of differing viewpoints than to your rigid, blackline assertions.