HERMENEUTICS Principles and Processes of Biblical Interpretation
Date
2007-07-07
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Baker Academic
Abstract
In the study of any subject there are four identifiable but overlapping
developmental stages. The first stage involves the recognition of an area that is
important and relevant but unexplored. Initial exploration involves identifying
what is there. In the area of hermeneutics the primary question is, How do we
understand the meaning of someone else’s words?
In the second stage attempts are made to articulate certain broad principles
characterizing the area of investigation. One set of conceptual categories is
advanced, then others, as investigators try to develop conceptual systems that
organize or explain the data cogently and coherently. For example, is the
meaning of a text solely what the author intended it to mean, or does the
meaning of a text change depending on what it means to each reader or hearer?
During the third stage the focus shifts from elucidation of broad principles to
the investigation of more specific principles. Investigators with various
theoretical orientations pursue the study of specific principles, although they
may start with different presuppositions and may disagree about which set of
broad principles yields the most accurate conceptual system.