The Use Of The Bible By Pentecostals

The Use Of The Bible By Pentecostals

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The Use of the Bible

French

L.

Arrington

prophets

101

HERMENEUTICS

by

Pentecostals

women in the

Scriptures. Pentecostal

Pentecostalism

At the heart of classical Pentecostalism is the conviction that the whole Bible is the

inspired

Word of God. This conviction affirms that the Bible is a reliable revelation of God, and that it states the exact truths the

Holy Spirit

intends to

convey.

The

writing

of

Scripture by the

and

apostles

does not detract from the divine

origin

and authority

of

Scripture.

God

joined

his Word with the words of men and

The

starting point

and

very

foundation for

faith and

praxis

has been the biblical text. The real issue in

has become

hermeneutics,

and function of

Scripture

and the roles of the

Holy Spirit,

the Christian

community, grammatical-historical the

interpretive process.

Timothy Cargal

has offered

that

is,

the distinctive nature

research,

and

personal experience

in

an assessment

of hermeneutics as

presently practiced by

classical Pentecostals. In his excellent article,

“Beyond

the Fundamentalist-Modernist Hermeneutics in the Postmodern Fee-Stronstad-Menzies

Luke-Acts

Pentecostal biblical

scholarship reality

is that Pentecostal

criticism while

maintaining

Pentecostal

to the traditional

Pentecostal

Controversy:

Pentecostals and Age,”‘ Cargal argues

that the

the

theological

intent of

of the

evangelicalization

of

of

Evangelicals

has led

preachers

remain faithful of the nature and function

debate about

is a clear demonstration

in North America. Evidence of this

scholars “have tended to

align

themselves with

Evangelicals

in their move toward

adopting

the methods of

higher

a commitment to the

reliability

of biblical narrative. ,,2 The

adoption

of the

methodology

scholars to

emphasize

the historical context of the biblical texts and to reduce their

meaning

to the intent of the authors. On the other

hand, Cargal

observes that Pentecostal

interpretation

of

Scripture

with

“emphases

on the

immediacy

of the text and

multiple

B.

Cargal, “Beyond

the Fundamentalist-Modernist

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

of the 2 Society for Pentecostal Theology 15 (Fall 1993): 163-187.

Cargal, “Beyond the Fundamentalist-Modernist Controversy,” 163.

1

102

dimensions of

meaning.”3

Indeed the traditional methods of Pentecostal interpretation

that

emphasize multiple meanings

and

applications

of a text have more

continuity

with

postmodern

modes of

interpretation than the critical-historical

methodology

of much of

contemporary Pentecostal

scholarship.

The article

by Cargal brings

into

perspective many

of the tensions and issues that are crucial to the

present

discussion and

practice

of Pentecostal hermeneutics. To

Cargal’s credit,

he does not

give

us the impression

that the issues

integral

to the discussion have been resolved or that the work with the hermeneutical

principles

that Pentecostals use in the

interpretative process

can now rest from further assessment. Let us consider some of the

questions

and concerns that are central in the development

of a constructive Pentecostal hermeneutics.

Critical-Historical-Literary

Method

The

Bible,

we are sometimes

told,

should be studied like

any

other book. This demand insists that

Scripture

must not be

exempted

from any appropriate

forms of critical

inquiry.

Such a

methodology requires the

interpreter

to consider the historical

peculiarities

that

prompted

the composition

and

literary

form and to determine

specifically

the authorial

intent,

and the

philological

and

syntactical

nuances of the text. The nature of

Scripture compels

the

interpreter

to retain

something

of a historical orientation. What God did in Christ was done in

history. Factual, verifiable,

historical information makes a contribution to the hermeneutical

process,

but a

strictly rationalistic,

fundamentalistic hermeneutic

operates

in a

closed, logical system,

similar to mathematics.

Any interpretation

that is “emotive” and deemed

contrary to the tools of historical and

literary

criticism is

suspect by

the interpreter

whose

understanding

of the

authority

and

meaning

of the biblical text is determined

solely by the

canons of reason.

However,

it cannot be denied that the use of critical-historical and literary

criticism

provides

a base from which to create a common context for

understanding.

A wide factual base enhances our understanding

of what the biblical text means.

Speaking

to this

Cargal says:

… while rationalism cannot tell us everything about the Bible and its

meaning,

it can tell us a number of important things-especially about the

historical and cultural distance that does in fact

separate

us from the

biblical texts.’ 4

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

4 Cargal, “Beyond Controversy,” 186-187.

2

processes

of

interpretation

103

and if

they were,

there is no

All such facts are not

available;

guarantee

that

they

would be handled

correctly by

the

interpreter. Any historical reconstructions of antecedents of the

body

of

literature, known as the

Bible,

are shot

through

and

through

with uncertainties. Hence,

the

attempt

to account for the

meaning

of the biblical

message merely

on the basis of rationalistic hermeneutics tends to

support

the view that the Bible is

only

a collection of documents from the ancient world to be studied and

interpreted

as any other book.

The

question

that this

approach

raises is: How do we

interpret any other book? A

legal

document is not

interpreted

in the same manner as a book of fiction. These documents exist for different

purposes,

and we address different

questions

to them in

assessing

their

meanings.

The

of the two

literary

works are

different,

but the Bible is God’s communication to men and women

through

human language, making

it unique. It is at the same time the Word of God and the words of men and women in

history.

This dual nature is the Bible’s

Among

Pentecostals the fact that the Bible is the divine Word

places

it in an absolute

position

in the life of the church.

Although

the truth of the Bible does not

depend

on our answering

historical and

literary questions,

such

study

can

enlarge

and

most

important

characteristic.

make more

precise

our

understanding

of

Scripture

as the Word of God

The

danger

is that it places

and how it has been

given

to humankind.’

the Bible in the

laboratory

of the

expert

and takes it out of the hands of the

ordinary person

who can

lay

no claim to

methodological

theological expertise.

Grammatical understanding

have

significance understanding

and analysis

of the text and historical for sound

exegesis,

but

spiritual

does not

always

wait on the

acquisition

of these tools. It is God who

opens eyes

of faith and illuminates his Word to the human

heart.

The Pneumatic

The critical-historical understanding.

method

Dimension

may

establish one level of

it both in the book to which

and

lexicographical

original meaning.

But the

interpreter the

contemporary

This level can be ascertained

by the establishment of the original

text of a

passage, contextualizing

it

belongs

and in its wider cultural

context,

and

providing philological

information needed for the elucidation of its

has not

completed

his task until

meaning

of a text has been determined. To

put

it another

way,

the

interpreter

must not

only

answer the

question:

What did it mean?, but also the

question:

What does it mean?

Wm. B. Eerdmans 5 Cf George

Eldon Ladd, The New Testament and Criticism (Grand Rapids, MI:

Publishing Company, 1967), 217.

3

104

and in

language

use

(Hebrew,

and

Greek).

It contains

a

,

The Bible was written over a

period

of a millennium

by multiple authors,

who were

very

different in

character,

in cultural

background,

Aramaic,

diversity

of

literary genre (historical narrative, parable, poetry,

wisdom literature, gospel, epistle, etc. ).

The existence of such a diverse

body

of literature with a unique,

distinctive,

and coherent

meaning

is due to the providential activity

of God and the

inspiration

and

guidance

of the

Holy Spirit.

A fundamental

been a hermeneutical

and the biblical text has

and cultural distance

alive and

speaks

to our

present personal

and social transformation.

principle

of Pentecostal hermeneutics is:

Scripture given by

the

Holy Spirit

must be mediated

interpretively by

the

Holy Spirit.

The illumination of the

interpreter by

the

Holy Spirit

is a vital part

in

elucidating

the

contemporary meaning

of a biblical text. So in the

interpretative process

the

Holy Spirit

has a broader role than

simply taking

the

things

of the incarnate Christ and

declaring

them to us

(John 16:14).

The distance between the

interpreter

problem, and, too,

the distance is even

greater

for a contemporary interpreter in a scientific culture. This distance needs to be

respected,

but the

Holy Spirit

overcomes the distance

by serving

as the common context and

bridging

the

temporal

between the

original

author and the modem

interpreter.

Put

differently, the

Spirit

establishes a continuum between the written word of the

past and the same word in the

present, thereby illuminating

what the ancient author’s words mean to us

living

in the twentieth

century

and how

they speak

to us

today.’ Through

the

Holy Spirit

the Word of God becomes

situation with new

possibilities

for

Unlike those who use the critical-historical

with

mere

cognitive knowledge,

speak

to real

problems reaches

beyond

the

objective

deeper spiritual interpretation

approach

and are satisfied Pentecostals

strive,

under the

meaning

of

Scripture

and

illumination of the

Holy Spirit,

to allow the

message

of the text to

of

persons

in their

daily

lives. This method

literal

understands that a text has

spiritual meaning

as well as the literal. The

is given not

by mere human reason but by the

Holy Spirit

and can

only

be seen

through

the fruit of Pentecostal hermeneutics is that the Word of God becomes

living

and immediate for

contemporary

Therefore,

and for their faith. For the Pentecostal role in the

interpretation

the

specifics

of this role

explained. inscripturating process

is a

mystery

and

understanding

the

eyes

of faith.

men and women the

Holy Spirit plays

a definite

of

Scripture,

but

rarely

are As the

Spirit’s

role in the so is the

Spirit’s

role in the

6 Cf. Cargal, “Beyond the Fundamentalist-Modernist Controversy,” 180-181.

4

the

interpreter the full

understanding

105

interpretative process.

But the

following suggestions may

indicate how

relies on the illumination

by

the

Holy Spirit

to come to

of the

meaning

of the text:

(1)

submission of the mind to God so that the critical and

analytical

abilities are exercised under the

guidance

of the

Holy Spirit; (2)

a

genuine openness

to the witness of the

Spirit

as the text is examined;

(3)

the

personal experience of faith as

part

of the entire

interpretative process; and, (4) response

to

the

transforming

call of God’s Word.

The

Holy Spirit

has a fundamental role in the

reading

and

interpreting of biblical texts. No one but the

Holy Spirit provides

the

bridge

that enables the ancient author and modem

interpreter

to meet and to

span the historical and cultural

gulf

between them. The heart of the biblical text remains

ambiguous

until it is illuminated

by

the

Holy Spirit.

The pneumatic

dimension is so crucial to sound hermeneutics: “No

eye

has seen,

no ear has

heard,

no mind has conceived what God has

prepared for those who love him-but God has revealed them to us

by his Spirit”

(

Corinthians

2: 9-1 Oa).

The

Experiential

through

acceptance,

God. Biblical

hermeneutics that enhances

understanding

Dimension

a

theory

and method of

of the biblical text.

Biblical studies

but for Pentecostals

real

believers and that

A believer comes to God and understands the Word of God

only

the

Holy Spirit.

One’s faith is not

merely

an intellectual

but it is a lived

response

in

relationship

to the

Spirit

of

interpretation requires

a

re-experiencing

Indeed the biblical

interpreter

needs to

speak

from faith to faith.’ It is in the context of faith that the Bible was

inspired; therefore,

it is within the context of faith that the Bible must be

interpreted.

should

yield

fruitful results for the lives of

contemporary people

and their

faith,

that

is, results

that are

experienced.

We cannot

deny

that

anyone

with sufficient rational faculties and skills can

glean

truths from

Scripture,

and

insight

into the truths of

Scripture

come as a result of faith.

They

assume that the

spiritual

and

extraordinary experiences

of the biblical characters are

possible

for

contemporary

the

Scripture

can

only

be interpreted correctly through the

eyes

of faith.

The Pentecostal hermeneutic that allows

into focus the issue of

subjectivity

is that if the biblical text is

approached from the stance of human

experience,

on the basis of

logic

and

reason,

the

interpretation brings objectivity.

The

assumption

subjective;

but if

approached

experience

to inform

versus

then the

interpretation

is more

77 ‘ Cf.

James Muilenburg, “Preface to Hermeneutics,” Journal

of Biblical Literature

(March 1958): 18-26.

5

106

interpretation

is more

objective. human mind

and, therefore, restriction of the hermeneutical take a broader

sweep

participatory

Logic

and reason occur within the

to some

degree.

The

and to encounter a

suspension

of

are

subjective

process

to reason and

logic

is to

try

to

of human

experience

stranger’s. point

of view.’

Speaking

of the deliberate

involvement in biblical

studies,

A. C. Thiselton

observes, “Scholars seek to silence their own

subjectivity, striving

for the kind of

which is not

only

an

illusion, but which also requires

`a sacrifice of the

very question

the Bible seeks to answer’.”9

have been accused of

putting

objective neutrality

Pentecostals

experience

ahead of the

Scriptures.

alone is a

temptation

of as

opposites.

From this

perspective

the

process experience.’°

of

interpretation

their own ideas and But the

response

of the human

process

can be viewed as

informs

that what

they

find in

mind alone misses the involvement with the biblical text and therefore the fullness that

Scripture presents.

Whereas the stance of

experience

to

pick

and choose

only

that which is

agreeable with former

experience. Objectivity

and

subjectivity

have been

thought

Both need to be seen as two sides of the same

coin, and both need to be seen as

falling

in the

sphere

of the

experience

of faith that has been

ignited by

the Word of God and the

Holy Spirit.

the hermeneutical

dialogical

rather that

linear,

so

that,

at

every point, experience

informs

and the fruit of

interpretation

So Pentecostals admit that their

praxis

informs what

they find in Scripture, and

they go

on to

acknowledge

Scripture

informs their Pentecostal

praxis.”

The

interpreter

does not

lay

aside

personal

beliefs about God nor the

of God on his or her life when

interpreting

However,

to

guard against personal experience displacing Scripture

as the norm or

against

excesses in

interpretation,

influence

vital in the Pentecostal

community

Scripture.

model for

interpretation and reason

(Acts 15).

bound

together by

bonds of

love, interdependence, The Jerusalem Council

exemplifies community

that includes

Scripture,

‘ Anthony Interpretation,

10 Cf

active

participation

is of faith where the members are

and

accountability.

and

provides

a biblical

experience,

tradition

Against Scripture,”

Word and

C. Thomas, “Luther’s Canon-Christ

World 8 8 Cf. Terry

(Spring 1988): 141-149. C.

Thiselton,

“The New

Hermeneutic,”

in New Testament

ed. I. Howard Marshall

(Grand Rapids,

MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1977), French L.

316.

Arrington, “Hermeneutics, Historical Perspectives on Pentecostal and Charismatic” in Dictionary

of Pentecostal

and Charismatic Afovements, eds.

M. Burgess and Gary B. McGee (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan

384.

Publishing House, 1988),

“Rick D. Moore,

“Approaching

God’s s Word

Biblically:

A Pentecostal

8 (November 1987): 4-5, 11.

Stanley

Perspective,” Seminarv Viewpoint

6

107

The

message

of

Scripture

must reach

past

the shields of reason and into the

depth

of human

life, creating self-despair

and trust in Christ alone.’2

Accordingly,

Pentecostals see the full

purpose

of biblical interpretation

as not

only

to uncover truth but to

apply

that truth to one’s own life and to the

community

of faith, and to communicate that truth to others so that their hearts are moved toward God. The

ability to communicate the truths of

Scripture originates

from our

prior commitment to hear them in their

power through

the

Holy Spirit;

that is,

to

study, read, inwardly digest

and allow them to wash and ‘ transform us.

“Thomas,

“Luther’s

Canon,” 144.

7

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