Grasping God’s Word A Hands-On Approach to Reading, Interpreting, and Applying the Bible
Date
2012-12-22
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Publisher
Zondervan
Abstract
This is a wonderful user-friendly book for serious readers who desire
to journey into the world of the Bible in order better to understand
and to live faithfully in today’s world. J. Scott Duvall and J. Daniel
Hays have chosen an apt title: Grasping God’s Word. The metaphor of
grasping is a useful one for thinking through what is involved in
biblical interpretation. As you embark on that lifelong journey, as
well as the shorter one of studying the present work, it may be
useful to keep four senses of the term in mind.
To begin with, “grasping” is an act of violence: “to seize
greedily.” This is not what the present authors intended! It is,
however, what many so-called “postmodern” readers think about
the process of interpretation. In our disenchanted, disbelieving age,
many no longer believe that there is a “meaning” in texts.
Interpretation is more like a power struggle in which the reader
imposes or forces his or her will on the text: This is what it means to
me. In the opinion of many contemporary readers, we can never see
beyond ourselves so as to attain an “objective” meaning. For these
postmodern readers, there is no such thing as “correct”
interpretation.
Grasping God’s Word lays great emphasis on the importance of
observing the small details and the overall design of biblical texts.
Yet Duvall and Hays are not unaware of the current skeptical trend.
They well know that the observer-reader is not an impersonal
recording device, but rather a person with a speci c identity,
history, and cultural background — all of which a ect what one
sees. Readers are not godlike, hovering in disembodied fashion over
literary creations; no, readers, like authors, are rooted in particular
historical situations — in what our authors call “towns.”