Jumping Off The Postmodern Bandwagon

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115

Jumping

Off

the

Postmodern

Bandwagon

Robert P. Menzies

The

postmodern bandwagon

is

racing

into the future. And

so, Timothy Cargal explains,

if we do not want to be rendered “irrelevant” and left

behind,

we had better

jump

on.’ In the

following essay,

I would like to

explain why

I

disagree

with

Cargal’s triumphalistic

assessment of postmodernism, especially as it

pertains

to biblical

hermeneutics,

and why my

counsel

concerning

this

bandwagon is,

if already

on,

to

“jump off.”

Although

I was

given

the invitation to

respond

to

any,

or to

all,

of the four articles on Pentecostal hermeneutics

published

in the Fall 1993 issue of the

journal,

I have chosen to

respond

to

Cargal’s

article because it was

lucid, insightful,

and

ultimately disturbing.

After a barrage

of Ricoeurian rhetoric it was

refreshing

to read an article not laden with

jargon. Cargal’s

skills are evident and I commend him for communicating

his

postmodern

vision of the future in such a clear and compelling way.

I must also admit that I do not find it

particularly flattering

or

illuminating

to be called a “text,” so the articles

steeped

in this dimension of Ricoeurian

analysis

held little interest for me.

Cargal, by way

of

contrast, spoke directly

to the issue of biblical hermeneutics.

Building upon

three characteristics of Pentecostal hermeneutics as described

by French Arrington (an emphasis

on

pneumatic illumination, the

dialogical

role of

experience,

and biblical

narratives),’ Cargal

seeks to show affinities between the hermeneutic of traditional Pentecostalism and that of

postmodernism.

In

Cargal’s view,

all that is needed for Pentecostals to enter into the

postmodern age

is for them to throw off their Fundamentalist and

Evangelical

shackles. More

specifically, Cargal challenges

Pentecostals to

reject

their concern to root

meaning in history in favor of the more

dynamic

and reader-oriented

postmodern approach.

Pentecostals are called to

recognize

the

subjectivity

inherent in all

interpretation

and use this

insight

to their

advantage,

to revel in the

multiple meanings

of the text which the

Spirit may

illuminate. Indeed,

this

path

is not

only open

to Pentecostal

scholarship,

it is a path which Pentecostals must take if

they expect

to communicate to the postmodern

world.

.

‘ Timothy

B.

Cargal, “Beyond

the Fundamentalist-Modernist

Pentecostals and Hermeneutics in a Postmodern Age,” PNEUMA: The Controversy: Journal the

of

Society for Pentecostal Studies 15 (Fall 1993): 163-187; quote, p. 187. 2 French L. Arrington, “Hermeneutics, Historical Perspectives on Pentecostal and Charismatic,” in Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements, eds. Stanley

M. Burgess and Gary B. McGee (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1988), 376-389.

1

116

What shall we make of Cargal’s brave new world? I shall answer this question

with reference to

Cargal’s perception

of the

past, present,

and future.

The Past and the

Quest for Meaning

Cargal’s

article

represents

a

critique

of

Evangelical approaches

to Scripture

and a call to embrace the

postmodern interpretative paradigm. Specifically, Cargal

chides Pentecostal scholars for

working “within a

philosophical paradigm

dominated

by

historical concerns.”3 He calls for Pentecostals to follow

postmodernism

in its rejection of the notion that

“only

what is

historically

and

objectively

true is meaningful.,,4 Cargal’s

call

directly impinges upon

two

significant Evangelical

concerns.

First, Evangelicals

have

generally

insisted that

ascertaining

the historical

meaning

of a text is the central

goal

of hermeneutics. This concern for historical

meaning

is evident in the excellent textbook on hermeneutics

recently penned by

three

faculty

members of Denver Seminary.

The authors define textual

meaning

as “that which the words and

grammatical

structures of that text disclose about the

probable intention of its author/editor and the

probable understanding

of that text

by

its intended readers.”5

Here, reconstructing

the

past

is a crucial dimension of the

quest

for

meaning.

Postmodernists are

quick

to criticize this historical focus.

Attempted reconstructions of the

past

are deemed

illusionary

and

ultimately irrelevant because

they

are never

objective, always

colored

by

the interpreter’s pre-understanding.

Intellectual

honesty

demands that we move

away

from this

epistemologically

flawed

emphasis

on the

past. Cargal

notes that in

practice

Pentecostals have never been

overly concerned about historical

meaning.

Thus the move to

postmodernism should not be too difficult.

My

own fear is that

Cargal’s analysis

of Pentecostalism and its

potential

for

being significantly

influenced

by the postmodern paradigm is correct.

Certainly postmodernism

has much to contribute to those who will listen. As a result of recent

trends, Evangelicals

are more aware of their lack of

objectivity,

the nature of their

pre-understanding, and the need to listen to those with whom

they might disagree.

Yet the ahistorical stance and

epistemological skepticism

of

postmodernism

is extreme and

inevitably

leads to relativism. While it is evident that we cannot achieve

certainty concerning

authorial intent of historical

texts, we can

gain knowledge.

The hermeneutical circle is not

entirely vicious; it is in reality a

spiral.6

And it is the concern for historical

meaning

that

Cargal, “Beyond the Fundamentalist-Modernist Controversy,” 164. the Fundamentalist-Modernist

‘ Cargal, “Beyond

W. Klein, Craig L. Blomberg, and Robert L. Hubbard, Jr., Introduction

Controversy,” 171. ‘William

to Biblical 6

Interpretation (Dallas, TX: Word Books, 1993), 133.

See G. R Osbome, The Hermeneutical Spiral (Dovtmers Grove, IL: InterVarsity

2

117

allows the text to confront and transform our

pre-understanding, thereby making

the

spiral (or development

in

understanding) possible. If we loose the

meaning

of a text from its historical

moorings,

how shall we evaluate various and even

contradictory interpretations?

How shall we

keep

our own

ideologies

and

prejudices

from

obliterating

the text?’

Cargal

is silent

here,

for in the

postmodern paradigm

he describes there is no criterion

by

which to evaluate an

interpretation.

His call to embrace

multiple meanings

reflects this

reality:

all readings are valid.8 A philosophical paradigm

and a hermeneutical method which cannot distinguish

between truth and

falsehood,

valid and invalid interpretations,

will hold little attraction for most Christians. As Allan Bloom

notes,

“Historicism

[the

view that all

thought

is

essentially related to and cannot transcend its own

time]

and cultural relativism actually

are a means to avoid

testing

our own

prejudices.”9

The

postmodern paradigm challenges

a second

Evangelical perspective: Evangelicals

believe that the Christian faith is

intimately connected to the

key redemptive

events of salvation

history

recorded in Scripture. Therefore, Evangelicals

are concerned with

Scripture’s record of

past

events

(i.e.,

the

historicity

of the

text).

This hermeneutical

principle

is not to affirm that

only

that which is historical is true or

meaningful:

the

parables, though

not records of historical events,

are

meaningful

and

convey

truth.

Rather,

it is to affirm that we must take

seriously

the biblical authors’ intentions

concerning

how their texts should be

read,

whether as

history, fiction,

or some

blending

of the

two; and, furthermore,

that the

meaning

and truthfulness of those texts

purporting

to be historical cannot be divorced from their historicity.

It mattered to Paul whether the resurrection

actually happened (1

Cor.

15:12-19).

How can it be different for us?

In

short, Cargal

is

probably right: Pentecostalism,

because of its pragmatic

and

experiential focus, may

be

easily

attracted to the ahistorical vision inherent in

postmodern thought.

This however is a weakness,

not a

strength. Although,

as

Cargal notes, postmodernism “provides philosophical space

in which it is

meaningful

to

speak

of an encounter with transcendent

reality,”‘°

we must

ask,

at what

price? Postmodernism

may

allow Christians to

speak

about such

encounters, but not with

authority:

we are but one voice in a

cacophony

of unintelligible sounds.

Press, 1991), 379-380, 397-415 and Klein, Blomberg and Hubbard, Introduction to Biblical Interpretation,

114.

‘Klein, Blomberg,

and Hubbard, Introduction to Biblical Interpretation, 135: “We can apply interpretative controls only if we seek as our primary goal the that would have made sense to the

meaning

original writer and readers.”

Cargal might object to our use of “all,” but it is not clear how he would judge any reading 9 Allan

invalid.

Bloom,

The Closing of the American Mind

(New York, NY:

Simon & Schuster, ‘° 1987), 40.

Cargal, “Beyond the Fundamentalist-Modernist Controversy,” 179.

3

118

The Present and the

Quest for

Relevance

Cargal’s postmodernism

not

only

diminishes the

place

of historical investigation

in the

interpretative enterprise,

it also minimizes the role of the text itself The locus of meaning shifts from the author/text to the reader. This shift is evident in the

way Cargal emphasizes

the

“shaping influence of

[the interpreter’s] experience”

and the

multiple meanings which it yields.”

This focus on the reader reflects an admirable concern for contemporary

life.

Indeed,

this concern for relevance has led to the rise of numerous reader-oriented

approaches

to biblical

interpretation.

Yet in

spite

of noble

aspirations,

there is cause for concern. While

many forms of the new

literary criticism,

when used in conjunction with more traditional

methods,

have much to

offer,

the extreme

subjectivity

of some reader-oriented

methodologies-such

as

reader-response criticism and deconstructionism-is

disturbing.

These

approaches

strike me as the

logical

successors of a sterile biblical criticism which had so emasculated the text that it had

nothing

of

significance

to communicate. At some

point,

the

question

had to be

asked:. why

bother with all of this? The solution to this dilemma was obvious: if

significance

cannot be found in the

meaning

of the

text,

then it must be

imported

from outside the text.

Perhaps

this hermeneutical dilemma is

why many postmodernists

so vehemently

attack traditional

approaches:

these critical methods are vestiges

of a dark and

meaningless past. Cargal

is more restrained than most, though

he too

lampoons

the

quest

for “`kernels’ discovered

by critical, objective

historical reconstruction.”‘2 Yet this

critique

of the historical-critical

method,

at least as employed by Evangelicals, appears to be

misguided.

For

example,

source and redaction criticism are employed,

not to

get

behind the text to some

pristine

and authoritative ‘kernel’;

but

rather,

so that we

might

better understand the text itself (in

its final form no

less).

For the

Evangelical,

critical methods

help uncover textual

meaning.

This

quest

is

important

and relevant because the

Scripture

is God’s word to us.

Of course a focus on the

original meaning

of the text does not solve all of our

interpretative problems.

We still have to

appropriate

the message

for our culture and

age

in a

way

that is faithful and relevant. And,

as a missionary, I am all too aware of the

complexity

of this task. However,

the distinction between the

meaning

of the text and the numerous

applications

or

significances

it

may

have for various situations and cultures is

necessary

if we are to restrain ourselves from distorting

the text.

Unfortunately,

this distinction is lost in the postmodern paradigm.

Clark Pinnock

speaks forthrightly:

“I

repudiate the idea so

prevalent today

that the human

standpoint

acts as a sort of 11

12 Cargal, “Beyond the Fundamentalist -Modernist Controversy,” 181-182. Cargal, “Beyond the Fundamentalist-Modernist Controversy,” 168.

4

119

lens or

grid

on the basis of which we can understand the Bible. When this

happens,

one is not

interpreting

the Bible but

judging

and

rewriting it. “13

The Future and the

Quest for

Pentecostal

behind. But

sexism, racism,

modem Pentecostal exciting

Pentecostals Evangelical heritage.

Identity

If Pentecostals can free

promoting

the may

be

hope.

Pentecostals

are mediated

by

Pentecostals

Twenty years ago would find such

openness forward,

understanding

of

Spirit baptism today

Pentecostals

hermeneutical

than ever before to Pentecostal virtue of Pentecostalism’s as an

important bridge non-Evangelical

world.

Cargal’s

brave new world has little

space

for modem

Evangelicalism, mired as it is in Enlightenment

thinking. No, Evangelicalism

will be left

what of Pentecostalism?

themselves from those who seek to enslave them-those

Evangelicalization

of Pentecostalism-there

must also

recognize

that not all of their

interpretations

the

Spirit

and thus free themselves from “the insidious influences of

and c1assism.”14 Of

course,

how Pentecostals are to make such

judgments

and achieve this liberation is never articulated.

My

vision of the future is

quite

different. I see the assimilation of the

movement into the broader

Evangelical

world as an

and

positive

event.

Looking

back over the

past fifty years;

can affirm the

strength they

have found in their

This

legacy

from

Evangelicalism

has been especially helpful

with

respect

to biblical

interpretation.

can also

rejoice

in their own

positive

contributions to the

larger body.

who would have

thought

that

today

Pentecostals

concerning gifts

of the

Spirit? Looking

I see the

potential

for additional

theological

contributions to the

larger Evangelical

world and Christian

community.

The Pentecostal

is

important

is this

regard. Indeed,

find themselves with

many opportunities.

The

climate within

Evangelicalism

is more conducive now

experiential

between

theological

contributions.”

And, by

focus,

Pentecostals

might

serve

other

Evangelicals

and the

may

be rendered irrelevant if

In view of the

waning

Of course, as

Cargal notes,

Pentecostals

they

do not

hop

on the

postmodern bandwagon.

the

vigor

of

Evangelical scholarship,

interest in structuralism and

“Cargal, “Beyond

any

Scripture explicitly

“Clark H. Pinnock, “The Work of the Holy Spirit in Hermeneutics,” Journal

of Pentecostal Theology 2 (April 1993): 15-16.

the Fundamentalist-Modernist

for the comments on Acts in

Controversy,” 187.

note

example Klein, Blomberg, and Hubbard, Introduction to Biblical

Interpretation,

349-250: “We have

already

stated that narrative often teaches more indirectly than didactic literature without

less normative. Thus, we reject Fee and Stuart’s maxim that ‘unless becoming

tells us we must do

highlighted

something, what

is

merely narrated or described can never function in a normative

way. “‘

See also their comments

the different ways in which Luke and Paul describe the activity of the

“these descriptions are complementary rather than

contradictory. A doctrine of

proper

Scripture will not allow Acts to be subordinated to Paul” (351).

concerning Spirit:

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120

particularly

in the field

of hermeneutics, is true.

I would

argue

that the

opposite

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