I’ve got a fair number of bound and electronic versions of Scripture and I find them all useful to varying degrees. I look to the underlying Greek & Hebrew when digging and look to the “best fit” for my audience.
I have been taught by some highly educated folks and some very spiritual folk. What I have found is that not every one has the ability to fit the “pieces” together. The Bible is wonderful above all other books, but it is a tool, and some people try to use it without without doing their due diligence in all aspects of the discipline necessary to grasps its message, and it’s applications.
Paul seemed to indicate that he did his best to communicate the gospel with the most effective words appropriate for each circumstance. If memory serves me about 80% of OT quotes in the NT came from the Septuagint, and even then they were sometimes not word for word, but were changed at times, apparently, for the audience at hand.
No doubt that without much prayer, meditation and the filling of the Spirit, our words can be like mud in ones ears or they can be life. I remember studying certain issues or doctrines for days and weeks, only to distill an answer into a simple sentence.
Our learning is as much for us, as the eyes and ears that we present our words to and our faith should be not in our knowledge, but with the Holy Spirit to make our words both encouraging and edifying.
Gnosticism was a real threat in the early church and it’s still around. Sometimes knowing too much can elevates ones opinion of self right into the gnostic clic, without even being conscious of it.
Knowledge is good, wisdom is our goal!