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HERMENEUTICS:
A PENTECOSTAL OPTION
by
Howard M. Ervin
Fundamental to the
study
of hermeneutics, as to
any
academic disci- plines,
is the
question
of epistemology. What are the
grounds
of know- ledge ?
How does one determine the limits and
validity
of knowledge? It is not our
purpose
to discuss the
subject
in any detail but
simply
to note basic
assumptions
that affect our
approach
to hermeneutics.
Two
ways
of
knowing
are so much a
part
of our Western
ways
of thinking
that
they
are received as axiomatic viz.
sensory experience
and reason.
Any theology
that limits itself
only
to these two
ways
of knowing is locked into the
perennial dichotomy
between faith and reason to which the so-called New Hermeneutic1 seeks to speak,
however,
without much success for reasons to be discussed later.
Howard M. Ervin, (Th.D., Princeton Theological Seminary), is professor of old Testament at the School of Theology, Oral Roberts University, Tulsa, Oklahoma.
lJames
McConkey Robinson, The New Hermeneutic, ed. by James M. Robinson and John B. Cobb, Jr. (New York
Harper & Row, 1964).
_
11
1
The resolution
tional hermeneutics
commitment to a critical-historical has
opted
for an
epistemology
of the
dichotomy
between faith and reason
by
tradi-
has been no less
unsatisfactory.
exegesis,
traditional
With its
strong hermeneutics
theology. Pietism,l
that either abdicated faith for
reason,
or conversely sought
to validate faith
epistemologically by
a
category
of
of a propositional
l
of sola
fidei
has tended to abdicate the role of reason in favor of faith in terms of the
immediacy
of subjective
personal
special pleading
in the interests as a
logical
extension
experience.
The
consequence destructive rationalism, others a non-rational
for hermeneutics has been in some
quarters
in others a
dogmatic intransigence,
mysticism.
matic
epistemology (a)
the
dichotomy
a
and in
yet What is needed is an
epistemology
that meets the
A pneu- a resolution of
firmly
rooted in the Biblical faith with a phenomenology
criteria of
empirically
verifiable
sensory experience (healing, miracles, etc.)
and does not violate the coherence of rational
categories.
meets these
criteria,
and
provides
between faith and reason that existentialism con- sciously
seeks to bridge, though at the
expense
of the
pneumatic;
rationalism that often
accompanies
exegesis;
and
(c)
a rational
accountability
in sola
ftdei.
To this we shall return later.
The
English
noun hermeneutics is derived from the Greek hermeneia
antidote to a destructive historical
by
a
piety grounded
meaning “interpretation.”
Something
pound,”
and
(2) “to interpret,
(b) the
a critical- for the
mysticism
of the
scope
of
meaning
is indi-
(1)
“to
explain
in
words,
ex-
of
interpretation
hermeneia
glosson, “interpretation
cated
by
the verbal
cognate hermeneuo,
i.e., to translate what has been spoken
or written in a foreign
language
into the vernacular.” The numinous
quality
of
speech
is instanced
The
range
of meaning of the Greek is
conveniently
James M. Robinson thus:
by
the
spiritual
charism of of
tongues”
in I Corinthians 12:10.
summarized
by
The Greek noun hermeneia thus embraced the whole broad
scope
from
‘speech’
that
brings
the obscure into the
of ‘interpretation,’
clarity
of
linguistic expression,
applicable
to ‘translation’
lA
colleague, Dr. Steven O’Malley has pointed
out that this would be especially
to the more mystical varieties of Pietism, e.g., Moravianism; while others, such as the Reformed Pietists Cocceius and Lampe, worked out a precisely ordered plan of salvation (Heilsordnung) for personal appropriation.
12
2
from an
obscure, foreign language
into the
clarity
of one’s own
language,
and to
‘commentary’
that
explicates
the
meaning
of
the
methodology can be illustrated
of by
obscure
language by
means of clearer
language.1
considerations,
and
commentary
of Ezra
reading
“the law of God” in
Hebrew,
while the Levites
“gave
the sense” in Aramaic “so that the
people
understood
Apart
from
etymological hermeneutics as both translation the
episode
the
reading.”2
What is
especially significant “commentary”
written text. While
interpretation ation of the oral
tradition, e.g.,
behind
prophecy Scholars have
recognized are not
merely sequential
in interpretation is that both are endemic
as “translation” and
to the
understanding
of a as “speech” is germane to the elucid-
is mediated
in a
literary
text.
during
the
early stages
of
it cannot be
gainsaid
that the oral tradition,
and
kerygma,
that oral tradition and textual transmission
but coterminous
textual tradition. The
presence
of the oral tradition
contemporaneously with the textual tradition can therefore be
mutually interpretive. the oral tradition is no longer
alive,
the task of hermeneutics is confined
to the written text.
The numinous influence be
gainsaid.
for
publication
is acutely aware
Where
can
scarcely
raised
by
of
“speech” upon meaning
Certainly anyone
who has edited an “oral”
presentation
of the
difficulty
in capturing the nuances of the human voice that affect
meaning.
A critical
question
is whether or not the numinous
effect of “speech”
can be reconstructed from the written text. The re-
contention one encounters in the literature on the New Her-
that the words
may or may
not reflect the
intentionality
into hermeneutics that if
pressed
of to the
question.
This introduces a
could
negate objective exegesis
for the determination of
the New Hermeneutic
upon meaning
peated
meneutic
the text is an
ambiguous response subjectivity
criteria such as critical-contextual meaning.
Inescapably,
provides justification,
if justification exegesis
in a sound hermeneutical
biblical hermeneutics is textual
interpretation,
hermeneutics commits us to the task of
translating sacred textual tradition, there can be no hermeneutical
from a
critical,
contextual
exegesis.
1 Robinson, op. cit, p. 6.
2Nehemiah 8:8
.
– 13-
which
is
needed,
for the critical role of methodology.
Inasmuch as biblical
and
clarifying
the
integrity apart
3
It is not
entirely
accurate to write, as Robinson
has,
that “The profound implication
that these
three
functions
i.e., speech, translation, and
commentary belong together
as interrelated
aspects
of a
single hermeneutic was lost in traditional hermeneutics, which was the theory of but one
aspect
of hermeneia,
exegesis.”!
To subsume the whole of traditional hermeneutics under the single rubric of exegesis is to
ignore the fact that traditional hermeneutics clearly accepted the
responsi- bility
for “translation” and
“commentary,”
and
furthermore,
distin- guished
textual criticism
(i.e., translation)
and
exposition (commentary) from
exegesis.
The
question
is best addressed
by
an
exponent
of an older and traditional hermeneutics whose book has been a school text for
generations
of American
theological
students.
Hermeneutics
properly begins
“where textual criticism leaves
off’ and aims to establish the
principles, methods,
and rules
which are needed to unfold the sense of what is written. Its
object
is to elucidate whatever may be obscure or ill-defined,
so that
every
reader
may
be
able, by
an
intelligent process,
to
obtain the exact ideas intended by the author.
Exegesis
is the
application
of these
principles
and
laws,
the actual
bringing
out
into formal statement, and
by
other
terms,
the
meaning
of the
author’s words.
Exegesis
is related to hermeneutics as preaching
is to homiletics, or, in
general,
as
practice
is to
theory.2
The intuition of traditional hermeneutics that
exegesis
is indis- pensable
to hermeneutical
integrity
is
sound;
where it has
erred,
if indeed it has
erred,
was in
placing
the hermeneutical
enterprise
at the service of textual and
propositional theology.
In
this,
hermeneutics has been but
responsive
to the
polemic
and
apologetic exigencies
of various currents both within and without the Church. A sound
gram- maticohistorical
exegetical
tradition has therefore been
indispensable to hermeneutical
methodology.
This has been both a
strength
and a weakness. A
strength
in that it
gave priority
to the
scriptural text,
but a weakness in that it
placed
the text at the service of rationalistic and propositional theology.
From an existential
perspective,
an
equally notable weakness of traditional hermeneutics is its relative insensi-
lrobinson, op. cit, p. 6.
2 Terry, Biblical Hermeneutics, Library of Biblical and Theological Literature, eds. George
R Brooks and John F. Hurst, Vol. II (New York: The Methodist Book Concern, 1911).
z
– 14-
4
tivity
to the numinous in the ethos mediated
perspective.
from a charismatic inclined to
agree.
or Pentecostal
by
the biblical text. And
the
present
writer is
existential nonetheless
On the other hand, the New Hermeneutic,
theological mood,
while it is
responsive
threatens the hermeneutical
rooted as it is in an
to the numinous enterprise by
its
subjectivity
of the text. Its
demythologizing
of
Scripture world view robs
exegesis facticity.
of the
intentionality
of the text
This is aided and abetted
in its efforts to reconstruct the numinous
intentionality
because of its dis-ease with the biblical
of its critical-contextual
Hermeneutics is then an exercise in
private
reconstruction
cularly
true of the
approach affirmed: “The
interpretation
historicity
and
obliteration
of the
who
categorically
is not
subject from
any
other literature.”2
.
by
the existentialist
boundaries between sacred and secular hermeneutics.l This is
parti-
of Rudolf Bultmann
of the Biblical
Scriptures
to
any
different conditions of understanding
Does this not
suppose
an
optimistic
view of humanity at odds both with the biblical view of man, and the
empirical
evidence of man’s fallenness
century?
Whether then one
says
with ortho-
are the word of God, or with
neo-orthodoxy they
bear witness to the word of God, the result is the same.
Scriptures
furnished
by
the twentieth doxy
that the
Scriptures
that
reductionism that denies their
of a de facto
rejection
of
are
subjected
to an
anthropological character
the
pneumatic
The
psycho-socio-cultural
the
demythologizing
of the
Scriptures hermeneutic,
standing
this
process
of demythologizing
as the word of
God,
a
consequence
factor that alone infuses them with divine life.
dimensions
of this
anthropology
make essential to an existentialist
to hermeneia, and if so, how? reductionism,
it is a moot
for
only
thus is it commensurable with the
pre-under-
of the modern mind. But one
may
well
ask,
do the results of
contribute
Within the context of an
anthropological
question
whether one
really
encounters the word of God, or words about
horrors to an existentialist
theology,
the latter has a
God;
and horror of propositional ring
to it.
of
Scripture
is
evangelical
This leads one to
suspect
that the
demythologizing
simply
an exercise in
futility.
On the one
hand,
the notable
growth
of
with their
ready espousal
churches,
of biblical
miracles,
lEbeling, “Word of God and Hermeneutics,” Word and Faith, translated by James W. Leitch (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1963), pp. 310, 311.
2Ebeling, op. cib, p. 311, footnote #1.
– 15-
5
and on the other the
proliferation
Scriptures.
to the miraculous existentialist
theology
of all forms of
psychic-occult my-
make it clear that the biblical
the
than either liberal or
enterprise
indeed
sticism,
even
among
the
intelligentsia,
world view is not what inhibits the modern mind from
understanding
The modern mind has
proven
itself to be far more amenable
or even the
pseudo-miraculous
has been
willing
to admit For this
reason, though
not for this reason alone, the
demythologizing
emerges
as an exercise in irrelevancy.
If, then,
it is not an “archaic” world view that
precludes
the
Scriptures
Let it be said that one must
applaud
to make the
Scriptures intelligible
to the modern mind.
However,
from
mind from
understanding
the modern and their
message,
what is it?
the existentialist’s concern
of the twentieth
century,
it becomes this “modem mind.” In the final
of the word of God that ren-
the
perspective
of the last
quarter increasingly
difficult to
identify analysis,
it is the absolute ders it incomprehensible
is the scandal
of the
cross. “Christ and
folly
to Gentiles”
(I
Corinthians man is a better than reasonable
transcendence
to the modern
temper.
In Pauline
language,
it
crucified,
a stunmhrtg block to Jews 1:23).
As a matter of fact, modem
would be better “modern man.”
facsimile of his ante-diluvian ancestor. One indeed
might
ask whether or not the cause of a biblical hermeneutic
by “demythologizing”
served
our
metaphysical
The
Scriptures
the
concept
of a
absolutes.
in itself
of our Even
as in
It is indeed the word that
sin and of
righteousness
and of judgment” and an
apocalyptic
Having spoken
of God’s word as absolute and transcendent
poses
a problem in hermeneutics. Within the cultural
pluralism day,
there are no ethical, moral, or
spiritual
systems,
transcendence is
but
absurd.
affirm, however,
that the word of God is the ulti- mate word. It is the transcendent word. It is the word
beyond
all human words,
for it is
spoken by
God
(revelation).
contradicts all human words, for it
speaks absolutely “of
(John 16:8).
It is both an
eschatological
word that
judges
all human
gnosis.
It is a word for which there are no
categories
endemic to human
understanding. word for
which,
in
fact,
there is no hermeneutic
divine hermenecctes
(the Holy Spirit)
mediates an
understanding.
The
insight
of an existential language
itself as hermeneutic
It is a unless and until the
hermeneutic that we encounter
However,
failure to dis-
reductionism of which
is
salutary.
tinguish
the transcendent nature of the
speaking subject
in the word- event leads to
confusion, i.e.,
the
anthropological
we have
already spoken.
It seems clear
that,
on the human
level,
we encounter each other as
willing, thinking,
feeling subjects
as-event. It is our common
humanity
in all its
cultural, social,
existential
16
in the
word-
6
commonality encounter
predicates
in
finiteness
point
at least, an incommensurable
that makes
understanding possible. When, however,
we
the word of
God,
there are no
egalitarian
common,
for the word is the divine
Logos
before whom we stand in the
of our creaturehood. There
is, in fact,
from the human stand-
gulf
between the Creator and the creature. The word of God is
fundamentally
incarnation).
The biblical
precondition man’s
ontological
re-creation “partakers
of the divine nature”
an
ontological reality (the for
understanding
that Word is
1:4)
that the
Holy Spirit
by
the
Holy Spirit (the
new
birth).
It is as
(II
Peter
“guides…
into all truth”
(John 16:13).
Even the new birth does not
the
boundary
between the Creator and the creature. However, the
erase
conditions for
hearing
and
understanding
the Word are now
present
for
can never
transgress
conditions for
hearing
and
understanding automatically
insure our
understanding tative distance between
we become
by grace
what He is
by
nature.
But,
and it is a large
bu?
we
the limits of our creaturehood. Even
though
the
2:10), interprets
of the word is
qualitatively
are now
present,
that does not the divine address. The
quali-
it is
the Creator and the
creature, although bridged,
is not erased. This distance renders the word
ambiguous
until the
Holy Spirit,
who “searches even the
depth
of God”
(I
Corinthians
it to the hearer. Thus the
hearing
and
understanding
more than an exercise in semantics. It is theological (theos-logos)
communication in its
deepest ontological
con- text, Le.,
the incarnational. The incarnation makes truth
personal-“I am the truth.” It is not
simply grasping
the
kerygma cognitively.
It is being apprehended by
Jesus
Christ,
not
simply
in the letter-word but the divine-human word. Herein lies the
ground
for a pneumatic
hermen-
eutic.
Before, however, proceeding
.
to a discussion of a pneumatic hermen- eutic,
there are several other concerns that must at least be noted.
among
these is the
question
of the
relationship
between the word
(II
Peter
1:21)
and the
Preeminent
word of
God,
as the
spoken
existential Scriptures,
God is indivisible from a sacred literature,
as the written word. Let it be said
then,
that the word of
the
Bible,
or the
Holy Scrip-
tures
(II Timothy 3:15).
It is as
Georges Florovsky
has so
trenchantly
observed:
The
Scriptures
are
“inspired,”
What is the
inspiration
is a
mystery
therein. It is a
mystery
can never be
properly
they
are the Word of God.
defined-there
of the divine-human en-
holy
counter. We cannot
fully
understand in what manner ‘God’s men’ heard the Word of their Lord and how
they
could articulate it in the words of their own dialect.
Yet,
even in their human
it was the voice of God. Therein lies the miracle
transmission,
17
7
transmit
of
and the
mystery
of the
Bible,
that it is the Word of God in human idiom. And in whatever the manner we understand the
inspira- tion,
one factor must not be overlooked. The
Scriptures and
preserve
the Word of God
precisely
in the idiom of man … The human idiom does not betray or belittle the
splendour
it does not bind the
power
of God’s Word. The Word
and
rightly expressed
revelation,
of God
may
be
adequately words.1
in human
literary
and historical
understanding
of the
Scriptures. rationality by
itself is inadequate of
Scripture.
And,
we
might add, precisely
because of the
incarnation,
analysis
are
indispensable
It is
only
as human
rationality joined
in
ontological with “the mind of Christ”
(I Corinthians
is understood
Spirit
that the divine
mystery
linguistic,
as a first
step
to an This is the
province
of
exegesis.
But for the task of interpreting the words
union
2:16)
is quickened by the
Holy
by
man for:
for those who love
him,
God
has revealed
What no
eye
has
seen,
nor ear
heard,
nor the heart of man conceived,
what God has
prepared
to us
through
the
Spirit.
It is the
testimony
of
Scripture2
fundamental articulated
inadequacy pneumatic
clearly
enunciated
pneumatic to a demythologizing
miracles renders
of the same coin.
Consequently,
(I
Corinthians 2:9,
10) that it is not
possible
to
pene-
trate to the heart of its
message apart
from the
Holy Spirit.
This is the
of the New
Hermeneutic,
dimension. Since the Bible
spells
clearly
the initiative of the
Holy Spirit
in the
miracles,
dimension in the New Hermeneutic
of miracles and
conversely
the
demythologizing
the
Holy Spirit
irrelevant.
the
problem
of hermeneutics
to Bultmann is the
problem
of
“demythologizing
only
within a Bultmannian
But
precisely
what is to be
demythologized?
The
problem applies
to the
mythical
statements in the New
Testament. No one can
deny
that there are such statements:
message,”3
it lacks a
clearly
out
quite
neglect
of a
leads
of
They
are
opposite
sides
according
the New Testament anthropology.
Ernest Fuchs
responds:
1 Georges Florovsky, Bible, Church, Tradition : An Eastern
Orthodox View. Belmont, ylassachusetts: Nordland Publishing Co., 1972), p. 27.
express
2 It is also the testimony of the Apostolic tradition. The definitions of the councils
the harmony of the human will with the Divine will in the Church; cf. Acts 15 :28 – “It seemed good to the
Holy Spirit and to us…”
3Ernest
Fuchs, The New Hermeneutic, p. 115.
– 18-
8
resurrection he rules
together
heavenly being. After his
Jesus is conceived of as a pre-existent
with God at God’s
right
hand. During
his lifetime he can walk on the water like a spirit. He was conceived
by the Holy Spirit
without male
participation.
1
forth.
While the events
specified similar
categories
in the Gnostic spective,
the
analogies
myth
to the
demythologizers difference is due to the role ascribed
may
bear an
analogical
literature,
are semantic and not substantive.
is
mystery
The
cogency
of
argument
eighteenth-or scientific
nineteenth-century
physics, Copernican
And so
relationship
to
from the orthodox
per-
What is
to the
orthodox,
and the to the
Holy Spirit-or
not as-
may appeal
to the
world view. But such a
scribed to the
Holy Spirit
as the case
may
be.
for
demythologizing
“modern mind” because it fits
readily
into the frame of reference of an
scientific
world view is neither self-evident nor
self-authenticating today. True,
the world view
forged
from the
postulates
celestial
mechanics,
ism
may
have
provided
a
congenial
frame of reference
lations. But does the modern scientific mind think in these
categories any longer?
With the advent of nuclear
physics,
science has made a quantum leap
forward and the older scientific materialism
As one
physicist
friend remarked standpoint,
the
theory
of
quantum understand from a scientific
viewpoint ances of Jesus.”
of Newtonian and
Lyellian
uniformitarian-
for such
specu-
is obsolete. to the writer: “From a rational mechanics2 makes it easier to
the
post-resurrection appear-
.
when he writes:
knowledge nineteenth materialism,
Morton
Kelsey
is but
echoing
a
growing
concensus
In field after field scientists have discovered that man’s
of the world is
simply
not final or static in the
way
century
science believed. The
tight, confining
box of
held
together by precise
apart
at the seams. And still the revolution
have
begun
to realize the
magnitude
1Ibid., pp. 115, 116.
natural
laws,
has come
is continuing and men and
scope
of the
change.3
Copernicanism by theology
2This does not imply that scientific theory can adequately explain the mystery of our salvation as revealed in the Christian faith. Some may provide more appropriate analogies to illumine our understanding. The preoccupation of the Church with such theories may exert detrimental effects. As Dr. O’Malley points out, such a preoccupation with
the Protestant
“Enlightment” theologians shifted the attention of
from the central concerns of soteriology to cosmology.
1972), p.
3 Morton Kelsey, Encounters With God (Minneapolis, Minnesota: Bethany Fellowship,
92.
– 19-
9
trenchant observation American Psychological psychologists,
It is
futile,
he warned the
a physics which is not there
categories.
cen- time and Does not
The scientific
phenomenology tury
is
suggesting
space, energy
and matter, the existentialist
of the nineteenth century? polemical,
but nonetheless
Lest
anyone judge
these conclusions too
sweeping, Kelsey quotes
the
of Robert
Oppenheimer
in an address to the
Association.
to model their science “after
any more,
which has been
quite
outdates.”l
of the last half of the twentieth
radically
different
ways
of
understanding
and a host of related
hermeneutic address itself to a fossilized mindset
The
question
presses
for an answer.
Once
again Georges Florovsky
has
something pertinent
bute to the discussion.
an ‘archaic
idiom’-i.e.,
is neither
rhetorical
nor
to contri-
are retained.
The modern
It has
recently
been
suggested gize’ Scripture,
of the
Holy
Writ
by something
Most of us have lost the
integrity
of the
scriptural mind,
even if some bits of biblical
phraseology
man often
complains
that the truth of God is offered to him in
in the
language
of the Bible-which is no more his own and cannot be used
spontaneously.
that we should
radically ‘demytholo-
meaning
to
replace
the
antiquated categories more modern. Yet the
question
really nothing
cannot be evaded: Is the
language
of
Scripture
else than an accidental and external
wrapping
out of which some ‘eternal idea’ is to be extricated and
disentangled,
vehicle of the divine
message,
a
perennial
delivered for all time?2 The
question may
be
phrased
substantive
it is more
apparent of a nineteenth-century view.
Sensory experience
or is it rather which was once
in another
way.
Is the
dichotomy
of the modern mind
truly
From the writer’s
perspective,
upon
the
viability
by
a materialistic world
between a Biblical faith and the
rationality
or
merely
circumstantial?
than real. Its
cogency
is dependent
mind-set conditioned
and reason
may supply knowledge adequate for one to function within such a world view. Alone
they
are
inadequate to account for the new
insights
into the nature of reality. More and
more, this
reality
takes on the character not
only
of a time-space
but of a “created -“uncreated” continuum that
predicates
It is in this new intellectual climate that a
pneumatic
epistemology. epistemology
offers a new
synthesis.
llbid., p. 93
2Florovsky, op. ciG, p. 10.
– 20-
continuum, a revised
10
in a new context
of an
Hermeneutically,
intuitive,
non-verbal
miracles.
precisely
what the biblical record
this raises the
question
communication between God and
man, namely The
reality
of a direct encounter
between God and man is of
dreams, visions, theophanies,
the
Scriptures
miracles, etc.,
is
saying
to us. Seen in this
perspective,
of God’s self-revelation. Morton
Kelsey,
from the stand-
are the ikon point
of a
Jungian
psychologist,
contemporary
validity
of dreams and visions in the
process
value for a direct encounter
tential
theology
there is no
provision
for
knowledge
mediated encounter with
God,
the
only
sources of knowledge within this
system
has
developed
in some detail the
of
revelation,
and their
with God.1 Since in exis-
by
direct
are sense
experience
and reason. being challenged
research
findings
of a psychiatrist, and
dying
with
patients
been revived must
give pause skeptics. Despite
the
preoccupation
from another direction. For
instance,
who have
experienced
to all
except
ontological analysis,
its
anthropology arbitrarily
of the
epistemological consequences communication.
Symptomatic
encounters
pothesis
Christian. kerygmatic
However,
these
assumptions
are
the
startling Raymond
A. Moody,
Jr.,2
on death
a “clinical death” and
the most
intransigent
of existential
theology
with
excludes consideration
of a
large
area of non-verbal
direct
learned
Christ, i.e.,
the before he became a
Road? Is the
keryg-
of the
epistemological myopia
that excludes
with a
spiritual
or non-material realm of
reality
is the
hy-
that “Paul was converted via the
kerygmatic
Christ known to him in the
kerygma”3
But one
might
ask: What is the difference between the
Christ and the Christ of the Damascus
matic
Christ,
after all is said and
done, merely
a “docetic” Christ? The biblical record makes it clear
that,
if Paul did know the
kerygma
it did not
produce
it seems to have’intensified his
hostility.
It was not until his encounter
Road that his conversion
before his conversion,
his conversion.
If
anything,
resulted. of a direct
(i.e.,
miraculous there-
with Christ on the Damascus
The
repudiation
of a
concept fore
“mythological”?)
in a hermeneutic
encounter with God
exposes
another weakness derived from such a theology. The
Word,
or kerygma,
1 Kelsey, op. cit
(Carmel,
2 Raymond A. Moody, Life After Life and Reflections on Life After Life, two in one voL
NY: Guideposts, 1975).
3Robert W. Funk, “The Hermeneutical Problem and Historical Criticism,” The New Hermeneutic, p. 171.
– 21-
11
upon
which existential
theology lays great
stress
in
its
hermeneutic, conceived as
spoken cognitively,
not
experientially,
with God. Does not such a
cognitive
word
predicate
revelation, tradiction therefore,
and is not
propositional for existential
God? The
question
is further
revelation
is
in direct encounter
propositional a
methodological
con-
Have
we,
by categorical
statements requires
that the
saving
event
theology
and its New Hermeneutic?
come full circle
again
so that the
kerygma
is
simply
a propo- sitional word about God (merely “God talk”) rather than the Word of
compounded
like the
following.
“Paul’s hermeneutic
be understood as word and word
only,
as the word
spoken by
God in
At the risk of
belaboring
that Word
apart
from the
Holy Spirit
cannot
produce
of Paul. “And
were in demonstration of the
Spirit
and of Power”
2:4).2
Since the
“demonstration(s)
Power” are
by
definition miraculous therefore
they
receive short shrift in
the hermeneutical
The
question
then recurs in another form. If the
saving
event is “word and word
only,”
is the New Hermeneutic
Christ
(cf. 5:19).”1 objected
Recall
again
the witness preaching…
Corinthians
New
Hermeneutic, enterprise.
the
point,
it must be
faith. my message
and
my
(I
of the
Spirit
and of “mythological”
for the
equating
Word and
that the
Scriptures
Spirit
in a
crypto-Sabellianism?3
A
pneumatic epistemology are the
product
of an
experience writers describe in
phenomenological of a
pneumatic epistemology,
posits
an awareness
with the
Holy Spirit
which the biblical
scriptive linguistics. apostolic experience, companying
language.
From the
standpoint of this
phenomeno-
phenomenology
ac-
community
that birthed
There are at least two immediate resulting
from a Pentecostal
the
interpretation
logical language
is much more than an exercise in semantics or de-
When one encounters the
Holy Spirit
in the same
with the same charismatic
it,
one is then in a better
position
to come to terms with the
apostolic
witness in a
truly
existential manner.
“Truly
existential” in the sense that a vertical dimension to man’s existence is
recognized and affirmed. One then stands in “pneumatic”
the
Scriptures.
continuity
with the faith
consequences
for hermeneutics
A recurrent
encounter with the
Holy Spirit. First,
there is a
deepening respect
for the witness of the
Scriptures
theme
among colleagues
who have
experienced
1 Funk, op. cit., pp. 172, 173.
2 Italics supplied.
to themselves.
the Pente-
31 am indebted to a colleague. Dr. Ted Williams, for this insight.
-22-
12
tautology,
the context of the
present
discussion. within,” accepting
categories
of
costal
reality
is this: “The Bible is a new Book.” At the risk of a
one
might ask,
“but
why”?
The answer is self-evident
within the
pneumatic continuity community
in They
are now
reading
it “from
are now read
and that communities of to and for the
.
its own idiom and
categories,
not
imposing
the alien
a nineteenth
century
mind-set
upon
them.
The second is a
corrolary
to the first. The
Scriptures
of the faith
community,
is much
larger
than the
post-Reformation
the West. There is a
growing
sense of
accountability
cumulative consensus of the Church to the
deposit
of the faith once for all delivered. Part of Jesus’
promise
of the
Holy Spirit
to the Church is that “he will teach
you
all things and
bring
to your remembrance all that “he will teach
you
all
things
and
bring
to
your
remembrance
he will
guide you
into all the truth”
(John 14:27; 16:13).
Thus it
seems,
at least to this
writer,
that the hermeneutical
have said unto
you …
enterprise
must entertain creeds are not
Scripture,
seriously
all that I
the
insight
in the Church.”
The
of the
gospel,
lest it
Hermeneutics needs to relate cession” in the
understanding become “another
to the whole of the Church’s individual
but neither are
they
the memorabilia of a dead past. They
are
warp
and woof of a
living
hermeneutical tradition.
its
insights
to this historical “suc-
and
proclamation
gospel.”
Care must be taken to relate hermeneutics
understanding. Loyalty
to the credos of
sects and denominations cannot be taken for the whole counsel of God. A viable hermeneutic must deal
responsibly
apostolic
witness of Scripture in terms of an apostolic experience, and in
continuity
with the Church’s
apostolic
It is the
testimony
of
Scripture
with the
traditions.
of its words is
that
understanding
not
possible apart
from the
agency
of the
Holy Spirit
who first breathed
hermeneutic with
regard
to the
them. The
ambiguity
of an existential Scripture’s pneumatic
anthropological presuppositions Le.,
the
supernatural
manifestations mythological.
A programmatic and
categories
of the
centrality
ethos is its
great
weakness. In
fact, given
the
of existential
theology,
the
miracles, of the
Holy Spirit
must
appear
as
of the biblical words
of the latter.
charismatic, or
upon
the
experi-
The contribution Pentecostal, ential
immediacy non-material
demythologization
relating
to the miraculous is
ancillary
to a
denigration
of the
Holy Spirit
in the hermeneutical task. The former is
simply
the
logical consequence
to hermeneutics of the
present
renewal of the Church is its insistence
of the
Holy Spirit.
There are direct contacts with
reality
that inform a Pentecostal
hermeneutics. This must.not be construed as a plea for a spiritualizing
Rather,
it is a truly existential and
phenome- nological response
to the
Holy Spirit’s
initiative in historical
continuity
(allegorical) interpretation.
– 23-
epistemology,
hence its
13
programmatic
development
of the Church
“following original eyewitnesses
involves
pneumatic continuity the Church’s historic understanding and individual life.
2. An
acknowledgement reconstruct a
“biography”
with the life of the Spirit in the Church.
In conclusion, there are at least four factors that must influence any
of a Pentecostal hermeneutic.
1.
Respect
for the facticity of the Biblical record as the
testimony
the traditions handed down to us
by
the
and servants of the
Gospel” (Luke
in
experience,
the reminiscences data
indispensable
the two introduces a Nestorian
3.
Acceptance
1:2, NEB).
This
faith,
and doctrine with of these elements in its
corporate
we
may
never be able to
Jesus, primarily
because of the
Gospels, nevertheless,
at this
point,
for to
separate
that, although
of the historical
of the
episodic
and
theological
nature
of the words and deeds of Jesus constitute historical
to the Christian faith. The Christ of faith is the Jesus of
history.
There can be no
compromise
cleavage
of the
Per,son
of the Son.
of both the
methodology
tions of
grammatico-historical,
critical-contextual
has no other recourse than to mistrust the
of circumstantial differences
sources and
contradictory
and substantive contribu-
exegesis. However,
a
Pentecostal hermeneutic
extrapolation
formity
of
theological
meneutical stance is
predicated collegium
in Jerusalem
(Galatians fluence
Jerusalem council-if the
suggestion – in Acts 15:6ff.
4. Pentecostal
experience awareness of the miraculous
of such a
collegium upon
doctrine is made
explicit
temporary experiences
in the narratives into
pluri-
doctrines. Its her- upon
the evidence of an
apostolic
1:18; 2: Iff).
The
normalizing
in-
in the
is
accepted,
Christian Sanhedrin
but
“objectively”
real. Con-
miracles, tongues,
of a sphere of existence with which one can
of and interaction with is axiomatic in a Pentecostal
non-material
and does have immediate the
presence
of this
spiritual epistemology
Our words “awareness limit our
understanding understanding
of Pentecostal corporately,
is
ontologically
with the
Holy Spirit gives
existential
in the Biblical world view. These events as recorded are no
longer “mythological,”
of divine
healing, prophecy,
and exorcism are
empirical
evidence of the
impingement
reality upon
our
time-space
contact Awareness
continuum
that affects
decisively
its hermeneutic.
of” and “interaction with” must
not, however,
to a
purely phenomenological
experience.
identified with this
spiritual
Writing
from an Eastern Orthodox
perspective,
us:
– 24-
and functional The Church, individually and
continuum.
Timothy
Ware reminds
14
… the Church is … charismatic
special
ordained
and Pentecostal.
‘Quench
not
(I Thessalonians v, 19-20).
priests.
In the
Apostolic ministry
conferred
charismata or
gifts
conferred mentions `gifts
the
Spirit. Despise
not
prophesyings’
The
Holy Spirit
is poured out
upon
all God’s
people.
There is a
ministry
of
bishops, priests,
and
deacons; yet, at the same
time,
the whole
people
of God are
prophets
Church,
by
the
laying
on of
hands, there were other
and besides the institutional
directly
by
the
Spirit:
Paul
xii, 28-30).
In the Church of
have been less in
later
days, evidence,
of healing,’ the working of miracles,
‘speaking
with tongues,’
and the like
(I Corinthians
these charismatic ministries
but
they
have never been
wholly extinguished.l
1
lTimothy Ware,
The Orthodox Church
(Baltimore, Maryland: Penquin Books. 1972), pp. 253, 254.
– 25-
15
Troy Day
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