As a post script to all of my comments:
We have just gone through an exercise that demonstrates why there is so little understanding and agreement concerning even the basic biblical doctrines (not including those doctrines developed by men).
Everyone, it seems, feels like God has have moved upon them and given them a particular revelation of truth. This then leads to our judging others for NOT experiencing that same truth, with the "same experience". While one may "experience" truth, truth is not an experience! An over statement? Look to our splits and schisms for the evidence.
Look to the "plan of salvation" as understood by the Oneness camp. There are at least three - perhaps four different competing camps.Ask some one what the gospel is and most likely they will recite
Acts 2:38. Ask them to explain the difference between the gospel of the kingdom of God and the kingdom of heaven and they relate to both
Acts 2:21 & 38 and expect a fist fight.
An error preached by a well known and respected spiritual leader is usually accepted without question. That preaching may then be turned into a teaching and published as a doctrine. Then that error will be defended unto death, rather than for anyone to admit they were wrong. Truth, on the other hand, is often times dismissed in favor of a more comfortable/acceptable doctrine. Again, I submit that our many different positions taken and held - even to the point of condemning brethren to hell - are all over differences in what we all call "the truth", and judging Trinitarians as not possessing that which we cannot, ourselves, agree on! Now, gentle folks - what is wrong with that picture? Now, consider it from God's point of view!
We judge all others according to our understanding of Scripture, with the assumed beliefs that our understanding is the "correct" and acceptable understanding. Many of use will judge others even to hell because they hole to a "false doctrine", when I demonstrated in a very small way, most of us also hold to at least one "false doctrine". Have we then not set ourselves up for judgment according to how we have judged others? It is one thing to contend for the truth as we perceive it, it is something else to compare ourselves to others and to judge them as being spiritually deficient and/or in doctrinal error, when we, ourselves, neither possess nor uphold all of the truth of (or in) the Bible.
Enough.