D
De_Maria
Guest
Thanks, tg. From your 5 rules, I can now see why they call their hermeneutic, Scripture alone. They’re basically saying that only thing they use is Scripture.Wow De_Maria. I’m not sure how to read this. You and I have had many disagreements over the years but today we agree on something. This is great.
I’m not sure what this hermeneutic issue is all about or those who claim sola scriptura is a hermeneutic. I don’t know what they mean by this.
The word Hermeneutic comes from Greek mythology hermes. The word was borrowed only to use
as a reference to the science of interpretation. Some scholars use these skills, others do not.
I am a firm believer in them. Here’s why: Making a good bible interpretation is probably one of the most important things you will ever do when reading the scriptures. We’ve had over two-thousand years of practice and today we’ve gotten it down to a very trustworthy science.
Most, if not all doctrinal error can be traced to a flimsy and weak interpretation, or driven by a theological predisposition (or school of thought.) In other words if our hermeneutic is only controlled by our accepted theology / tradition / denominational premise, etc. … then it is very possible the bible can be misinterpreted because of bias and prejudice.
Unfortunately, some bible-teachers have either thrown out the practice of hermeneutics, or never had one in the first place.
Here are 5 basic rules to a good interpretation.
- Rule #1: Scripture never contradicts scripture
- Take Scripture in its context.
- Compare Scripture with Scripture.
- Let Scripture define Scripture
- Let Scripture interpret scripture.
If we compare to the Catholic hermeneutic, we compare the Word of God in Scripture to the Word of God in Sacred Tradition. We let the Word of God interpret the Word of God. But, it is only the discernment of the infallible Catholic Church which matters, in the end.
But, back to the hermeneutic you’ve described, you say:
We’ve had over two-thousand years of practice and today we’ve gotten it down to a very trustworthy science.
What we see, though, is that, using that hermeneutic that you’ve described, you have some who believe in infant baptism, some who don’t. Some who believe baptism is efficacious, some who don’t. Some who believe works are important, some who don’t. Etc.
So, how can it be considered, trustworthy?