Tthe Bible is full of regular people, who achieved far more than any of the people today, with their so-called credentails, and that includes me , as self -taught Bible scholar.
The greatest scholar of the New Testament was the Apostle Paul, who was not "self taught." He studied under Gamaliel, the leading Hebrew scholar of the day. Paul was an unsaved scholar, but then God saved him, yet did not rebuke his status as a genuine scholar of the OT. My pastor likes to say that Paul had the equivalent of two modern PhD's. If you had any idea of what it takes to get a modern PhD in a good Christian seminary, you would be embarrassed to call yourself a scholar.
There is a saying about lawyers: "He who defends himself in court has a fool for a client." I would not go so far with a self-taught "Bible scholar," but being self taught disqualifies you as a Bible scholar in my view.
When it comes to the things of God, what really matters is positive results and not how many degrees anyone has. I am not against education, but it does not guarantee success with in the things of God.
This still does not make you a Bible scholar. You have tried to change the meaning of "scholarship" to fit your own purpose. We recently had Dr. David Alan Black come to our college, a genuine scholar of the NT and of Greek. He was the mentor for my own son as he got his own PhD. Dr. Black wrote the textbook I teach NT Greek from. He is passionate about world missions, and regularly travels to teach in China and Ethiopia. He challenged our students to reach out to win the world to Christ, something we also are passionate about. Now that is a genuine and spiritual Bible scholar. Yet you refuse to even tell us what makes you a Bible scholar, claiming that "what really matters is positive results." Really? What people groups have you traveled to in order to win folks to Christ? I've preached the precious Word of God in seven countries, but that doesn't make me a scholar.